Bibliography
- Blight, James G., Bruce J. Allyn, and David A. Welch, Cuba on the Brink: Castro, the Missile Crisis, and the Soviet Collapse (New York: Rowman and Littlefield 2002).
- Bundy, McGeorge, ‘To Cap the Volcano’, Foreign Affairs 48/1 (October 1969), 9–10.
- Cartwright, James and Bruce Blair, ‘End the first-use policy for nuclear weapons’, The New York Times, 15 Aug. 2016, p. A39.
- Catterall, Peter (ed.), The Macmillan Diaries, II (London: Pan Books 2011), 297.
- Debs, Alexandre and Nuno Monteiro, Nuclear Politics: The Strategic Causes of Proliferation (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2016).
- Deudney, Daniel, ‘Unipolarity and Nuclear Weapons’, in G. John Ikenberry, Michael Mastanduno, and William Wohlforth (eds.), International Relations Theory and the Consequences of Unipolarity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2011).
- Deudney, D., ‘Nuclear Weapons and the Waning of the Real-State’, Daedalus 124/2 (Spring 1995), 209–31.
- Deudney, Daniel, Bounding Power: Republican Security Theory from the Polis to the Global Village (Princeton: Princeton University Press 2007).
- Dobbs, Michael, Down with Big Brother: The Fall of the Soviet Empire (London: Bloomsbury 1996).
- Douglas Selvage, ‘Khrushchev‘s November 1958 Berlin Ultimatum: New Evidence from the Polish Archives,‘ Cold War International History Project Bulletin, Issue 11 (Winter 1988), 200.
- French Foreign Ministry (ed.), Documents diplomatiques français 1956 – Tome I (1er janvier – 30 juin) (Paris: Imprimerie Nationale 1988), 362.
- Fischer, Beth, The Reagan Reversal (Columbia: University of Missouri Press 2000).
- Fursenko, A. A., et al. (eds.), Prezidium TsK KPSS, 1954–1964, 1 (Moscow: Rosspen 2003).
- Fursenko, A. A., et al. (eds.), Postanovleniya TsK KPSS, 1954–1964, 2 (Moscow: Rosspen 2006).
- Fursenko, Aleksandr, and Timothy Naftali, Khrushchev’s Cold War (New York: Norton 2006).
- Gavin, Francis, ‘Strategies of Inhibition: U.S. Grand Strategy, the Nuclear Revolution, and Nonproliferation’, International Security 40/1 (Summer 2015), 16–17.
- Glaser, Charles and Steve Fetter, ‘Should the United States Reject MAD? Damage Limitation and U.S. Nuclear Strategy Towards China’, International Security 41/1 (Summer 2016), 49–98. doi:10.1162/ISEC_a_00248
- Goldstein, Avery, Deterrence and Security in the 21st Century: China, Britain, France and the Enduring Legacy of the Nuclear Revolution (Palo Alto: Stanford University Press 2000).
- Goncharov, G.A. et al. (eds.) Atomnyi Proekt SSSR (Moscow-Saratov: Nauka 2007–2009).
- Harrison, Hope, Driving the Soviets up the Wall: Soviet-East German Relations, 1953–61 (Princeton: Princeton University Press 2003).
- Holloway, David, Stalin and the Bomb (New Haven: Yale University Press 1994).
- Jervis, Robert, The Meaning of the Nuclear Revolution (Ithaca: Cornell University Press 1989).
- Jervis, Robert, The Illogic of American Nuclear Strategy (Ithaca: Cornell University Press 1984).
- Lieber, Keir, and Daryl Press, ‘The End of MAD? The Nuclear Dimension of U.S. Primacy’, International Security 30/4 (Spring 2006), 7–44.
- Kennan, George, The Nuclear Delusion: Soviet-American Relations in the Atomic Age (New York: Random House 1983).
- Khrushchev, Nikita, Vremya, Lyudi, Vlast', 2 (Moscow: Moskovskie Novosti 1999), 419.
- Khrushchev, Nikita Sergeevich, Edward Crankshaw, and Strobe Talbott, Khrushchev Remembers (Boston: Little Brown 1970).
- Khrushchev, Sergei, Nikita Khrushchev: Reformator (Moscow: Vremya 2010).
- Kramer, Mark, ‘Lessons of the Cuban Missile Crisis for Warsaw Pact Nuclear Operations’, Cold War International History Project Bulletin 8–9 (1995), 348–54.
- Kroenig, Matthew, ‘Facing Reality: Getting NATO Ready for a New Cold War’, Survival: Global Politics and Strategy 57/1 (Winter/Spring 2015), 49–70.
- Kroenig, Matthew, ‘Nuclear Superiority and the Balance of Resolve: Explaining Nuclear Crisis Outcomes’, International Organization 67/1 (Winter 2013), 141–71. doi:10.1017/S0020818312000367
- Kyle, Keith, Suez: Britain’s End of Empire in the Middle East (London: I.B. Tauris 2011).
- Lieber, KA and DG Press, ‘The New Era of Nuclear Weapons, Deterrence and Conflict’, Strategic Studies Quarterly 7/1 (Spring 2013), 3–12.
- Lieber, KA and DG Press, ‘The New Era of Counterforce: Technological Change and the Future of Nuclear Deterrence’, International Security 41/4 (Spring 2017), 9–49.
- Light, Margot, The Soviet Theory of International Relations (Brighton: Wheatsheaf 1988).
- Long, Austin and Brendan Rittenhouse-Green, ‘Stalking the Secure Second Strike: Intelligence, Counterforce, and Nuclear Strategy’, Journal of Strategic Studies 38/1-2 (Winter 2015), 38–73.
- Mandelbaum, Michael, The Nuclear Revolution: International Politics before and after Hiroshima (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 1981).
- Martin, Susan B., ‘The Continuing Value of Nuclear Weapons: A Structural Realist Analysis’, Contemporary Security Policy 34/1 (Spring 2013), 174–94. doi:10.1080/13523260.2013.771042
- MccGwire, Michael, Military Objectives in Soviet Foreign Policy (Washington: Brookings Institute Press 1987).
- Monteiro, Nuno, Theory of Unipolar Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2014).
- Morgenthau, Hans, ‘The Four Paradoxes of Nuclear Strategy’, American Political Science Review 58/1 (Spring 1964), 23–35. doi:10.2307/1952752
- Naumkin, V. V. (ed.), Blizhnevostochnyi Konflikt, 1957–1967, 2 (Moscow: Mezhdunarodnyi Fond Demokratiya 2003), 267.
- Nichols, Thomas, No Use: Nuclear Weapons and U.S. National Security (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press 2014).
- Preble, Christopher, John F. Kennedy and the Missile Gap (Dekalb: Northern Illinois University Press 2004).
- Prozumenshchikov, Mikhail et al. (eds.), Venskii Val’s Kholodnoi Voiny: Vokrug Vstrechi N.S. Khrushcheva i Dzh. F. Kennedi v 1961 godu v Vene (Moscow: Rosspen 2011).
- Radchenko, Sergey, ‘On Hedgehogs and Passions: History, Hearsay, and Hotchpotch in the Writing of the Cuban Missile Crisis’, in Len Scott and R. Gerald Hughes (eds.), The Cuban Missile Crisis: A Critical Reappraisal (Abingdon: Routledge 2015).
- Rhodes, Richard, Dark Sun: The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb (New York: Simon and Schuster 1995).
- Roberts, Brad, The Case for U.S. Nuclear Weapons in the Twenty-First Century (Palo Alto: Stanford University Press 2015).
- Russian Foreign Ministry, Serbian Foreign Ministry (eds.), Sovetsko-Yugoslavskie Otnosheniya, 1945-1956 gg (Novosibirsk: Al’fa-Porte 2010), 660.
- Salisbury, Harrison, ‘Malenkov says both sides would lose in atomic war’, New York Times, 14 Mar. 1954, p. 1.
- Stalin, J. V. Economic Problems of Socialism in the USSR (Moscow: Foreign Languages Publishing House 1952)
- Taubman, William, Khrushchev: The Man and His Era (New York: Norton 2003).
- Walt, Stephen, ‘Rethinking the Nuclear Revolution,’ Foreign Policy online, 3Aug. 2010, <http://foreignpolicy.com/2010/08/03/rethinking-the-nuclear-revolution/>.
- Waltz, Kenneth, ‘Nuclear Myths and Political Realities’, American Political Science Review 84/3 (Autumn 1990), 731–45. doi:10.2307/1962764
- Waltz, Kenneth and Scott Sagan, The Spread of Nuclear Weapons, An Enduring Debate (New York: Norton 2012).
- Wohlforth, William, The Elusive Balance: Power and Perceptions during the Cold War (Ithaca: Cornell University Press 1993).
- Wolfsthal, Jon, Jeffrey Lewis, and Marc Quint, The Trillion Dollar Nuclear Triad (Monterey: James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies 2014).
- Zubok, Vladislav and Hope Harrison, ‘The Nuclear Education of Nikita Khrushchev’, in John Lewis Gaddis, et al. (eds.), Cold War Statesmen Confront the Bomb (New York: Oxford University Press 1999).