Abstract
The doctrine of nuclear deterrence and a belief in its importance underpins many aspects of United States policy; it informs strategic force structures within the military, incentivizes multi-billion-dollar weapon-modernization programs within the Department of Energy, and impacts international alliances with the 29 member states of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). The doctrine originally evolved under the stewardship of some of the most impressive minds of the twentieth century, including the physicist and H-bomb designer Herman Kahn, the Nobel Prize-winning economist Thomas Schelling, and the preeminent political scientist and diplomat Henry Kissinger.
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CITATION STYLE
Epifanovskaya, L., Lakkaraju, K., Letchford, J., Stites, M., & Reinhardt, J. (2018). Toward a Quantitative Approach to Data Gathering and Analysis for Nuclear Deterrence Policy. In Springer Proceedings in Complexity (pp. 245–252). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-96661-8_26
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