Cold Calculations: Case Studies in Cold War Nuclear Strategy
MTA
Operational crises, brinkmanship, and lessons from the crises that defined superpower deterrence
2nd Edition
*Cold Calculations: Case Studies in Cold War Nuclear Strategy* provides a comprehensive historical and analytical overview of how the United States and the Soviet Union managed existential risks from 1945 to the end of the Cold War. Through declassified archives and practitioner interviews, the book examines the evolution of nuclear doctrines—transitioning from "Massive Retaliation" to "Flexible Response"—and the development of the Single Integrated Operational Plan (SIOP). It probes high-stakes confrontations, including the Berlin Crises, the Cuban Missile Crisis, and the 1983 Able Archer "war scare," alongside lesser-known episodes like the Sino-Soviet border clashes and nuclear signaling during the Korean and Vietnam Wars.
A central theme of the work is the "paradox of control," exploring how leaders attempted to manipulate risk through brinkmanship while simultaneously constructing safeguards to prevent inadvertent escalation. The book details the technical and human machinery of deterrence, such as the implementation of Permissive Action Links (PALs), fail-safe procedures, and the establishment of "hotlines" for crisis communication. It highlights the critical role of individual judgment in preventing catastrophe, exemplified by officers like Stanislav Petrov, and analyzes how mirror-imaging, intelligence failures, and bureaucratic incentives often magnified systemic dangers.
Ultimately, the book argues that while the Cold War has concluded, the logic and risks of nuclear deterrence remain relevant in a multipolar age. It distills enduring lessons on escalation management, emphasizing the necessity of clear signaling, the value of backchannels and third-party mediators, and the inherent fragility of automated warning systems. By documenting historical accidents, false alarms, and near-misses, the text serves as a cautionary guide for modern policymakers to navigate a landscape defined by compressed decision times and emerging technologies that continue to blur the line between conventional and nuclear conflict.
This book is designed for scholars specializing in strategic interaction and deterrence theory who seek empirical case studies to test academic models, as well as policymakers and practitioners in national security, defense planning, and diplomacy who need operational lessons for managing nuclear risks. The cases provide analysts with granular evidence to evaluate theories of coercive diplomacy and bounded rationality, while offering practitioners concrete guidance on designing crisis communication, aligning military posture with political objectives, and building off-ramps into potential conflicts. It serves as a bridge between academic research and real-world statecraft in the nuclear age.
January 23, 2026
122,653 words
8 hours 35 minutes
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