Author | Herman Kahn |
---|---|
Language | English |
Subject | Political science International security Military policy Nuclear warfare Nuclear strategy |
Publisher | Princeton University Press (1960) Transaction Publishers (2007) |
Publication place | United States |
Pages | 668 |
ISBN | 9781412815598 |
OCLC | 8546432 |
358.39 | |
LC Class | UF767 .K25 1961 |
Followed by | On Escalation: Metaphors and Scenarios |
On Thermonuclear War is a book by Herman Kahn, a military strategist at the RAND Corporation, although it was written only a year before he left RAND to form the Hudson Institute. It is a controversial treatise on the nature and theory of war in the thermonuclear weapon age. In it, Kahn addresses the strategic doctrines of nuclear war and its effect on the international balance of power.
Kahn's stated purpose in writing the book was "avoiding disaster and buying time, without specifying the use of this time." The title of the book was inspired by the classic volume On War, by Carl von Clausewitz.
Widely read on both sides of the Iron Curtain—the book sold 30,000 copies in hardcover[1]—it is noteworthy for its views on the lack of credibility of a purely thermonuclear deterrent and how a country could "win" a nuclear war.
Kahn used the term Doomsday Machine in the book as a rhetorical device to show the limits of John von Neumann's strategy of mutual assured destruction or MAD.[2]
In 1960, Mr. Kahn published a 652-page tome called "On Thermonuclear War," which sold 30,000 copies in hardcover.