The Evolution of Arms Control: From Antiquity to the Nuclear Age (Praeger Security International) Buy on Amazon
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The Evolution of Arms Control: From Antiquity to the Nuclear Age (Praeger Security International)

Publisher By
Category History
71.27 USD

Usually ships within 8 to 9 days

Book Details
Publisher By
ISBN / ASIN 0313375747
ISBN-13 9780313375743
Availability Usually ships within 8 to 9 days
Category History
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
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Description

Drawing on his knowledge of the comparative history of warfare and arms control across preliterate, ancient, medieval, and modern polities, Richard Dean Burns focuses longitudinally on such perennial arms control issues as negotiation, verification, and compliance. Although he does not, for example, allege that war elephants and nuclear weapons are of equal destructive potential, he does discern instructive similarities between Carthage in 202 BCE and Iraq in 1991 AD.

Arms control and disarmament measures have been pursued and adopted throughout the history and prehistory of human warfare: sometimes as protocols recognizing evolving humanitarian taboos; sometimes as terms imposed by the victors on the vanquished; and sometimes as accords negotiated between rivals fearful of mutual destruction. Arms control measures ramped up in significance and urgency at the dawn of the 20th century by the introduction of rapid-fire weapons, aircraft, chemical agents, and submarines, and again at mid-century with the advent of weapons of mass destruction—nuclear, chemical, and bacteriological—with sophisticated delivery systems. As Burns makes clear, the enormous increase in destructive potential brought about by thermonuclear weaponry essentially changed the nature of war and, therefore, of arms control.

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