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Nuclear Bargaining

Nuclear Bargaining. PLSC 379R Lecture 3. Shall We Play a Game?. Some News. Putin said about US development of a national missile defense that “U.S. Policies Are Undermining Global Stability”

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Nuclear Bargaining

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  1. Nuclear Bargaining PLSC 379R Lecture 3

  2. Shall We Play a Game?

  3. Some News • Putin said about US development of a national missile defense that “U.S. Policies Are Undermining Global Stability” • Mr. Putin joked that he worried the United States was “hiding extra warheads under the pillow” despite its treaties with Moscow to reduce strategic nuclear stockpiles. *What does that sound like? • He expressed alarm that an effective antimissile shield over the United States would upset a system of mutual fear that kept the nuclear peace throughout the cold war. “That means the balance will be upset, completely upset,” he said. • Iran • North Korea

  4. Do Nukes Change Everything • Should we study nuclear bargaining separately from conventional bargaining? • Nukes can do more damage than conventional weapons • Firebombing of Japan • Are nukes morally objectionable? • So are other types of weapons (napalm, flame throwers, etc.) • Military victory not necessary to destroy a population • Conventional aerial bombing • Total destruction of society (a far more “effective” punishment strategy) • No real defense

  5. Mutual Assured Destruction • If one side launches a nuclear attack, the other side will retaliate • Both sides will be destroyed • No possible gain that outweighs the cost (total destruction) (issue importance not enough to outweigh e(costs) and p(win) • Nuclear confrontations won with threats alone. Actual use = loss for all. So credibility of threats is important! • Commitment • The commitment problem is perhaps at its thorniest with nuclear weapons • Threats need to be that one will respond, not that one might respond …right?

  6. Managing Risk • Remember the balance between commitment and risk? • Total commitment may result in a “Dr. Strangelove” catastrophe • Lack of commitment may also be catastrophic • Making “will” threat may result in having to carry it out or having the threat discredited • Rocking the boat / Brinkmanship

  7. First Strike • Countervalue vs. counterforce strikes • Counterforce threaten target’s second strike ability • Countervalue holds target’s population hostage • First-strike advantage • So if there is an advantage to striking first, and you think an opponent might strike in the future … uh oh! • Second strike capability • Inadvertent nuclear war • National missile defense

  8. Nukes and Conflicts • Among the great powers • Stakes may be very high (more credibility) • Prevents small conflicts from escalating • May make low levels of conflict more likely to escalate into limited fighting • Between great power and minor power • No effect • Why?

  9. Proliferation and Stability • Nukes promote peace • Nukes make war more likely • Nukes are irrelevant

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