An Analysis Of Ward Wilson's Fog Of War

Improved Essays
There is a belief amongst those in the field of international relations that the lack of any major conflict has been due to the introduction of nuclear weapons. It is believed that the destructive power of these weapons have forced states to ponder more intently before taking a course that would lead to conflict. However, this belief is not held by all. Ward Wilson in his book “Five Myths about Nuclear Weapons” he argues that the causation between the lack of major conflict and nuclear weapons is either exaggerated in some case and in others it does not exists. This idea is further added to by the words of Former Defense Secretary Macnamara found in the documentary “Fog of War.” Each of these men use arguments depicting human nature and the …show more content…
While he does not fully agree with Pinker’s assertions he does agree with Pinker’s point that the “long peace” is not that long. That while human nature is advancing toward a society where violence and conflict will not be accepted, there are aspects of human nature, Pinker mention’s and uses religion as an example, that could end this peace and lead to major conflict. This thought is also mentioned by Former Defense Secretary Macnamera in “The Fog of War.” Macnamera states that humans can only be rational to a point and that in the end you cannot fully change human nature. As such there should be no belief that nuclear weapons will not prevent a major conflict. In this, they may be correct. It is human nature to act out of fear or anger and when such weapons can be launched at the command of one individual it must be believed that such an act could happen. However, such an act has not happened yet and it has been shown that the threat of such weapons have prevented some conflicts from expanding. It was the threat of use of nuclear weapons against China that finally brought all sides to the negotiating table during the Korean war. It was the threat of nuclear retaliation by the US that prevented India and Pakistan from escalating a series of conflicts during the late 1990’s and early

Related Documents

  • Decent Essays

    3- According to this article, there is a nuclear war predicted to happen in the near future between the U.S. and Russia. Each one of them has nuclear weapons and tries to build bigger bombs and more accurate missiles to ensure its security. In this article, Donella Meadows illustrates that there is another solution to ensure each country’s security; it is so simple that children can come up with. The solution is that both countries have to get rid of their nuclear weapons. In order to prove that, Meadows quoted two conversations from a journal called “Nuclear Concerns and Humankind”.…

    • 330 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Schlosser agrees with this point but he also states that since the deterrence is psychological and not physical it could not work in the future and bring about disastrous results. For example, if India and Pakistan used their nuclear weapons on each other, more that one billion people would be killed. The next point that examined is nuclear weapons violate international law. This is true as nuclear deterrence is like holding a nation hostage.…

    • 1248 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Containment DBQ

    • 385 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Danger flows through cities and terror floods around the world faster than any disease after World War II with the mass destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on August 6 and 9 1945. Due this world changing event everyone wanted the power of the atom bomb. The fear of the atomic bomb and communism was spreading throughout the United States and other Allied Countries. The United States had a method called “containment” and its purpose was to stop communism before it spread and to rid of it. The long “war” was held from 1945 till 1991, the United States and the Soviet Union were in this battle of who could create the better, bigger, and more powerful atom bomb and to get rid of communism and contain it out of the United States, to which this…

    • 385 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The biggest de-escalation of the Cold War happened in the late 1980s and was made of serendipity, if not outright luck. The unlikely combination of United States President Ronald Reagan and USSR Head of State Mikhail Gorbachev, two devoted nationalist respectively, created the perfect storm for easing of tensions between the longtime enemies. By addresses each leaders individual personalities, early encounters, and collaborations, we can see the major impact Reagan and Gorbachev’s relationship had on the Cold War and thus avoiding imminent nuclear war. The Personalities Fear of nuclear war had been the international climate since the late 1940s and was escalating rapidly after Ronald Reagan took office in 1981.…

    • 1053 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Cold War lasted from 1945 to 1985. Few history experts took the time to deal with or to speak about the events as they happened. Leaving most indivduals wondering about the development of the war. During this frightening period, different presidents served for the American people and each president felt the war carried a lot of dangers. In the same way that, young Americans, Soviets and other people who lawfully lived in a the country, state, etc. of the world required the services of an educated person to provide understanding of deep things.…

    • 1061 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Because deterrence best enforced through “coordinated multilateral pressure and tough economic sanctions,” nuclear proliferation can be discouraged without military occupation, which heightens tensions and drives nuclear development as a method of neutralizing American advantages (Mearsheimer and Walt 79; Posen 120). Although there is the possibility that some vulnerable states may seek nuclear weapons to bolster their security, it is likely to be a costly and ineffective endeavor with few actual implications in the international system (Mearsheimer and Walt 79). Offshore balancing is ultimately the better alternative to fighting “preventive conventional warfare against nascent nuclear powers,” which could quickly escalate into a second Cold War or even unintentional nuclear warfare itself (Posen…

    • 914 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    First, an argument against the view that the proliferation of nuclear weapons it’s inevitable and will eventually escalate to nuclear war, is that since 1945 there is not a single case recorded with the use of nuclear weapons. Second, by taking this pacifist’s position…

    • 1702 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Fog Of War Essay

    • 1395 Words
    • 6 Pages

    The Fog of War is an American film that documents the life, as well as times, of Robert. S McNamara, a former United States Secretary of Defense. In the film he illustrates his observations and experience with modern warfare (Errol, 2003). The title “Fog of War” is derived from a military concept that tends to depict difficulty that arises when making decisions especially when faced with conflict. The term Fog of War comes into mind when watching the film.…

    • 1395 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    During the war, every soldier must put themselves in their enemy’s shoes. One must truly understand their enemy's motives, fear, ticks etc. in order to empathize with them. From this, one can understand their enemy’s situation from their point of view. Then, the soldiers can predict how their enemies will react to different military attacks.…

    • 1240 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    After the U.S. dropped nuclear bombs on Japan the Soviet Union felt that they need to create their own nuclear weapon to ensure that the U.S. would not use one on them. Then in 1949 the Soviet Union set off their first nuclear weapon. The Soviet Union’s nuclear bomb test scared America because now the U.S. was not the only one with a nuclear weapon and now it felt threatened. As a result of the Soviet’s test the U.S. started to produce more nuclear weapons under the idea of deterrence. “The stockpile of both the United States and the Soviet Union increased in a nuclear arms race as each sought to develop a deterrent to the other, involving a second-strike capability” (Carlisle).…

    • 1824 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    The article chosen for the following article analysis is Ken Booth’s “Security and Emancipation”. Written in 1991, the article explores a new lens at looking at security, expanding from the traditional approach. It begins by discussing how words are extremely inclusive and constantly changing to the times, stating that past terms, such as sovereignty, superpowers, and war, and their definitions are changing and that “world politics require words which imply a more porous, inclusive, and inter-penetrating world” . The reason he says this is because he explores the idea of it being difficult to find a new name for the stage of world affairs after the Cold War.…

    • 1801 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Great Essays

    Does globalization make war more or less likely? 160009668 War has been an unavoidable human convention for thousands of years; whether it to be for land, religion, or ideology, mankind has almost always been in one conflict or another. But since World War II, inter-state war has declined during the process of globalization. Globalization is the economic, political, and social interconnecting of the world. This process has made war, the physical conflict between states, difficult to occur and therefore less likely to occur.…

    • 1856 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In “Rationalist Explanations for War,” James Fearon argues that due to war’s costly nature and states’ risk-averse, or at least risk-neutral, tendencies, there should always exist some possible prewar agreement between two disputing states that both parties would prefer to achieve over committing to war. While seeking to reveal his main claim that war is caused by information problems, commitment problems, and issue indivisibilities, Fearon critiques five traditional Neorealist explanations of war: anarchy, positive expected utility, preventive war, lack of information, and miscalculation of relative power. Although Fearon’s critique of the majority of these theories are earnest and do expose multiple logical shortcomings, his rapid dismissal…

    • 1115 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Realism And The Cold War

    • 1470 Words
    • 6 Pages

    This however is idealistic. The fact that the U.S and USSR where never in direct conflict was because both states realised that any form of nuclear war would not go in either’s favour. National interest and the security of their people was enough to motivate peace; even if it was a fragile peace. However, the fact still remains that if either the US or the USSR believed that they could have become the hegemon without severe losses to national interests there would have been a war, institutions and diplomacy did not prevent conflict. And as rightly argued by Waltz ‘a state cannot be sure that today’s friends will not be tomorrow’s enemy’…

    • 1470 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    “You and The Atomic Bomb” They say, I say George Orwell, an English novelist and essayist, wrote “You and The Atomic Bomb” on October 19, 1945. Roughly about 2 months before this essay, bombs were dropped over Hiroshima not only letting the world know who has power and who doesn’t, but also leading individuals to be oppressed. With the discovery of the atomic bomb, and the difficulty and cost of developing it, the world will simply continue on a path of destruction and will eventually separate into dominating powers. It has been common to dismiss the danger of weapons, especially if it doesn’t directly affect you. The American society doesn’t take into consideration the danger of developing new weapons because, as they say, it is not them who fear it, it is them who use it as a threat.…

    • 1220 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Great Essays

Related Topics