ABSTRACT

The development of U.S. Army nuclear doctrine—policies, plans, procedures, tactics, and techniques—since World War II, its impact on Army forces, and its role in future wars is the subject of this policy-oriented analysis. The definition of Army nuclear doctrine advanced by the author clearly implies a distinction between policy for the employment of nuclear weapons as determined by the president and the role adduced by the Army. Dr. Rose suggests that developments—both nuclear and conventional—in U.S. Army tactical doctrine have been more responsive to political preferences held by national authorities than to the real nature of the potential threat and rigors of the nuclear battlefield. Further, he argues that the type of war preparations favored by U.S. political authorities over the last fifteen years and the type of war for which the Soviet Union is preparing differ markedly, making the U.S. Army poorly prepared for a major war.

chapter 1|15 pages

The Two Worlds of Military Policy

chapter 2|10 pages

Military Doctrine as a Theory of Combat

chapter 3|28 pages

Nuclear Weapons: Image Versus Reality

chapter 6|13 pages

Vision of the Modern Battlefield

chapter 8|10 pages

“How to Fight” Doctrine and the Threat

chapter 10|21 pages

Concept for a Nuclear Warfighting Doctrine 1

chapter 11|12 pages

Myths and Military Realities