Strategic thinking an introduction and farewell /

Philip Windsor explores the emergence, meaning, and significance of the Cold War mentality. Tracing the evolution of strategic thinking from its origins in medieval Europe to the demise of the Cold War, he considers the peculiar character and autonomy that strategy acquired in the nuclear age. Winds...

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Tác giả chính: Windsor Philip
Định dạng: Sách
Ngôn ngữ:Vietnamese
Được phát hành: American : Rienner , 2002
Phiên bản:In lần thứ 1
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Thư viện lưu trữ: Thư viện Trường CĐ Kỹ Thuật Cao Thắng
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520 # # |a Philip Windsor explores the emergence, meaning, and significance of the Cold War mentality. Tracing the evolution of strategic thinking from its origins in medieval Europe to the demise of the Cold War, he considers the peculiar character and autonomy that strategy acquired in the nuclear age. Windsor is concerned with changes in our understanding of war and strategy - changes, he argues, that resulted less from technological innovation per se than from the combined effects of technological, social, and political transformations. This process culminated in the nuclear age, when strategic thinking became "self-referring and self-legitimating" and strategic considerations emerged as "the decisive force in the conduct of the politics of states and blocs". The book addresses many of the themes that preoccupied Windsor throughout his academic career and on which his reflections threw such penetrating light: Soviet strategic thought, arms control, the role of alliances, the guerilla phenomenon, and the rationality and ethics of nuclear deterrence. The final chapter explores the implications of the end of the Cold War for the future of strategic studies 
650 # 4 |a Warsaw Pact 
650 # 4 |a Nuclear weapons 
650 # 4 |a NATO 
650 # 4 |a Guerrilla warfare 
650 # 4 |a Superpower