part of the School of Strategic Studies

Deterrence, in military terms, is the dissuasion of hostile activity by working to make such activity appear unprofitable. This can be obtained by threatening the adversary either to suffer prohibitive costs if he tries to achieve his aims by force (deterrence "by punishment") or to deny him the ability to do so (deterrence "by denial")[1].

The term is most often used since the Second World War in regards to nuclear weaponry, but deterrence as such may also be obtained by other weapons of mass destruction (biological or chemical weapons) or by armies organized for waging conventional war[2]. That is why, following Patrick Morgan (1977, 2003), some scholars have made a distinction between "general deterrence", which rests on dissuading any potential agressor by implicit threats, and "immediate deterrence", backed by explicit conventional and/or nuclear threats.

The chief idea of deterrence by the threat of punishment is to guarantee that, in the event of an engagement in which nuclear devices are employed, the aggressor would be as thoroughly devastated as the conquered party.

Bibliography edit

  • Freedman Lawrence (2004), Deterrence. Cambridge:Polity Press.
  • Morgan Patrick (1977), Deterrence: A Conceptual Analysis. Beverly Hills:SAGE Publications.
  • Morgan Patrick (2003), Deterrence Now. Cambridge:Cambridge University Press.
  • Mearsheimer John J. (1983), Conventional Deterrence. Ithaca:Cornell University Press.
  • Snyder Glenn H. (1961), Deterrence and Defense. Towards a Theory of National Security. New York:Princeton University Press.

Additional Resources edit

  • Kenneth Boulding, Conflict and Defense
  • Bernard Brodie, Strategy in the Missile age
  • Bruce Bueno de Mesquita, The War Trap
  • Bruce Bueno de Mesquita and David Lalman, War and reason
  • Keith B. Payne (ed), Understanding Deterrence
  • Freedman, Lawrence, The Evolution of Nuclear Strategy

Robert Powell, Nuclear Deterrence: The search for Credibility

References edit

  1. On the difference between deterrence by denial and punishment, see Snyder (1961)
  2. See Mearsheimer (1983)