European University Institute Library

Death by moderation, the U.S. Military's quest for useable weapons, David A. Koplow

Label
Death by moderation, the U.S. Military's quest for useable weapons, David A. Koplow
Language
eng
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Death by moderation
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Oclc number
593286859
Responsibility statement
David A. Koplow
Series statement
Cambridge Social Sciences eBooks
Sub title
the U.S. Military's quest for useable weapons
Summary
This book addresses an important but little-noticed phenomenon in the revolutionary world of military technology. Across a wide range of otherwise-unrelated weapons programs, the Pentagon is now pursuing arms that are deliberately crafted to be less powerful, less deadly, and less destructive than the systems they are designed to supplement or replace. This direction is historically anomalous; military forces generally pursue ever-bigger bangs, but the modern conditions of counter-insurgency warfare and military operations 'other than war' (such as peacekeeping and humanitarian assistance) demand a military capable of modulated force. By providing a capacity to intervene deftly yet effectively, the new generations of 'useable' weaponry should enable the U.S. military to accomplish its demanding missions in a manner consistent with legal obligations, public relations realities, and political constraints. Five case studies are provided, regarding precision-guided 'smart bombs', low-yield nuclear weapons, self-neutralizing anti-personnel land mines, directed-energy anti-satellite weapons, and non-lethal weapons.--, Provided by publisher
Table Of Contents
Revolutionary weapons and transformed war -- Deterrence and self-deterrence -- The law of armed conflict -- Precision-guided munitions -- Low-yield nuclear weapons -- Smart antipersonnel land mines -- Antisatellite weapons -- Nonlethal weapons -- What to do about useability
Content
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