The Best of All Possible Nuclear Worlds (or how Matthew Kroenig learned to stop worrying and love the bomb)
The Best of All Possible Nuclear Worlds (or how Matthew Kroenig learned to stop worrying and love the bomb)
Author(s): Antoine Bousquet, Jairus Victor GroveSubject(s): Political Philosophy, Governance, Security and defense, Military policy
Published by: SAGE Publications Ltd
Keywords: American nuclear strategy; nuclear weapons; military policy; high cost of nuclear weapons; nuclear forces;
Summary/Abstract: In The Logic of American Nuclear Strategy, Matthew Kroenig presents the reader with a research puzzle he sets out to resolve: ‘Why does the United States pursue military nuclear advantages if the costs are so high? Is US policy irrational? Or are these costs being exaggerated by the opponents of America’s nuclear forces?’ (2018: 190). His unambiguous answer is that American policy is not only rational but also virtuous to the extent that it has pursued nuclear superiority and pressed the advantages it confers in games of brinksmanship. Indeed, for all its rigorous application of positivist research methods, a normative commitment to nuclear primacy incontestably animates the book, counselling American leaders to seize the present opportunity to establish a new dominance in atomic weaponry. To our mind, Kroenig’s empirical and normative case for nuclear hegemony is vitiated by a radically unempirical leap of faith that supposes nuclear actors to be consistently rational and that the world obeys that same rigid apodictic account of rationality, preserving us from the worst.
- Issue Year: 28/2020
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 89-94
- Page Count: 6
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF