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Book Reviews

The myth of the nuclear revolution: Power politics in the atomic age

by Keir A. Lieber and Daryl G. Press, Cornell University Press, Ithaca, 2020, $29.95 (hardcover), 1-169 pp. i-viii, ISBN 978-1-5017-4929-2

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Bibliography

  • Auten, Brian, Carter’s Conversion: The Hardening of American Defense Policy (London: University of Missouri Press 2009).
  • Cirincione, Joe, ‘How a Hearing on nuclear weapons shows all that's wrong with US foreign policy making,’ Responsible Statecraft, 20 May 2021.
  • Deudney, Daniel, ‘Nuclear Weapons and the Waning of the Real-State’, Daedalus 124 ( Spring 1995), 209–31.
  • Glaser, Charles and Steve Fetter, ‘Should the United States Reject MAD? Damage Limitation and US Nuclear Strategy toward China’, International Security 41 ( Summer 2016), 49–98.
  • Green, Brendan Rittenhouse, The Revolution that Failed: Nuclear Competition, Arms Control, and the Cold War (New York: Cambridge University Press 2020).
  • Lieber, Keir and Daryl Press, ‘The End of Mad? The Nuclear Dimension of US Primacy’, International Security 30 ( Spring 2006), 7–44. doi:10.1162/isec.2006.30.4.7.
  • Lieber, Keir and Daryl Press, ‘The New Era of Nuclear Weapons, Deterrence, and Conflict’, Strategic Studies Quarterly 7 ( Spring 2013), 3–14.
  • Mearsheimer, John J., Interview in the Asahi Shimbun, 17 August 2020, http://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/13629071.
  • Mearsheimer, John J. and Stephen Walt, The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy (New York: Norton 2007).

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