Re: Trident replacement

>>Why?  Deterrence is a purely defensive strategy, claiming that if an opponent fires nuclear weapons, they will respond with their own weapons.  In a world where all nuclear weapons are deterrence-tooled weapons, the world is actually quite safe because mutually assured destruction is guaranteed.<<

On the contrary, such a posture would open the world to widespread conventional warfare.  the 1970s, which were the era of greatest goodwill between NATO and Warsaw Pact, was quite explosive.

>>For deterrence to be effective, both leaders must have the understanding that each side fears the weapons of the other side.  If Britain is fielding offensive weapons which are able to nullify the opponent's capability to launch a second strike, Britain has nothing to fear from Russian nuclear weapons.<<

No. For deterrence to be effective, one side's independent offense must have a capability to do damage to the other side.  At the point where, say, China has the power to cripple the US Pacific fleet in combat with the Chinese mainland, the US is deterred from policies that might inflame a Chinese response.  There may, or may not, be a contrary deterrent of Chinese aggression out of respect for US combat potential.  There is no "mutual" deterrence, just concurrent and opposite deterrence.

>>In any realist interpretation of politics, a nation with the capability to first strike their opponent would do exactly that.<<

Realistically quite the opposite.

>>Knowing this, Russia's only chance for survival is a last ditch effort at a near-suicidal first strike against Britain, or at the very least operating under a high-alert status that risks triggering accidental nuclear wars. <<

Unless of course Russia knows that Britain has a totally defensive posture, in which case, Russia can declare for the greatest nuclear drawdown in world history, and at the same time, invade and partition its neighbors with conventional forces, without opposition from the UK.


>>At the point where a nuclear weapon no longer provides a stable deterrent force, assuming those weapons are not intended for any first strike plans, what is their use?<<

Strategic bombardment of the enemy, first, last, second, in between, post-armistice, what have you.

The core joke of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is that of course no civilization would develop personal computers with instant remote database recovery, and then waste this technology to find good drinks.
Steve Jobs has ruined this joke.

Re: Trident replacement

> The Yell wrote:

> >>Why?  Deterrence is a purely defensive strategy, claiming that if an opponent fires nuclear weapons, they will respond with their own weapons.  In a world where all nuclear weapons are deterrence-tooled weapons, the world is actually quite safe because mutually assured destruction is guaranteed.<<

On the contrary, such a posture would open the world to widespread conventional warfare.  the 1970s, which were the era of greatest goodwill between NATO and Warsaw Pact, was quite explosive.



1: Relatively, the 1970's could have been much worse.
Russia and China were in open conflict a year before, yet neither committed to full scale war due to the fear of nuclear retaliation (one note to prove my point: A year before, there are allegations that Russia had asked the United States if a nuclear strike against Chinese nuclear facilities would trigger a US response... the US came to China's defense, so the Soviets couldn't follow through).
The Vietnam War took the form of a proxy war on the parts of China and Russia, similarly to the Afghanistan war.
Your examples of conflicts during this period will involve either nuclear vs. non-nuclear powers and/or non-nuclear vs. non-nuclear nations, which aren't applicable to this debate since nobody is referring to fully denuclearizing Britain, or are referring to small conflicts which, because of deterrence, never erupted into open conflict.
2: Correlation doesn't imply causation.  How does the scenario above lead to widespread conventional war?

>>For deterrence to be effective, both leaders must have the understanding that each side fears the weapons of the other side.  If Britain is fielding offensive weapons which are able to nullify the opponent's capability to launch a second strike, Britain has nothing to fear from Russian nuclear weapons.<<

No. For deterrence to be effective, one side's independent offense must have a capability to do damage to the other side.  At the point where, say, China has the power to cripple the US Pacific fleet in combat with the Chinese mainland, the US is deterred from policies that might inflame a Chinese response.  There may, or may not, be a contrary deterrent of Chinese aggression out of respect for US combat potential.  There is no "mutual" deterrence, just concurrent and opposite deterrence.


1: So in your scenario where China can take down the US Pacific fleet, China's only reason for not being aggressive is... because they're nice guys, respectful of their enemies?  So if bad guys have a technological edge in nuclear weapons, they'll suddenly just decide they like peace?  From the perspective of that leader, the choice to not go to war in a scenario where that leader is assured victory against a strong aggressor, is utterly irrational.  In the case of nuclear weapons, where there wouldn't be issues like reconstruction to deal with, it's even more irrational to let a weak enemy survive.
Even if your scenario is true, believing the scenario means that war is inevitable under that framework.  Only a belief in mutually assured destruction has the slightest chance of obtaining peace.  The adoption of your theory creates a self-prophecizing nightmare scenario.
2: Your theory runs contrary to pretty much every nuclear strategy scholar in 50 years.  Back up your stance with some kind of justification (i.e. why mutual deterrence does not exist) or, simply put, your argument is overwhelmed by the hundreds of military scholars on deterrence.  The theory is fairly straightforward: In a scenario where two nations know that their use of nuclear weapons will result in their own annihilation, they desire to prevent that conflict from occurring due to the certainty of failure.
3: If mutually assured destruction does not exist as a theory of deterrence, how do you explain the fact at a large scale war never occurred between the US and USSR, the US and China, or the USSR and China?
4: Upon reading that... you might be simply questioning my use of the word "Deterrence" instead of "mutually assured destruction" in:
"For deterrence to be effective, one side's independent offense must have a capability to do damage to the other side."
If that's the case, fine, I meant mutually assured destruction.  Regardless of the semantic strawman you're throwing out, the thesis still stands.



>>In any realist interpretation of politics, a nation with the capability to first strike their opponent would do exactly that.<<

Realistically quite the opposite.


No, realist as in "a realist framework of international politics," meaning "the political system is a state of anarchy, nations primarily focus on promoting their own interests first."



>>Knowing this, Russia's only chance for survival is a last ditch effort at a near-suicidal first strike against Britain, or at the very least operating under a high-alert status that risks triggering accidental nuclear wars. <<

Unless of course Russia knows that Britain has a totally defensive posture, in which case, Russia can declare for the greatest nuclear drawdown in world history, and at the same time, invade and partition its neighbors with conventional forces, without opposition from the UK.


1: The fact that Russia keeps its nuclear forces on launch-on-warning status empirically disproves your stance.
2: If there is no defensive role for submarines, then it undermines the assumption that Britain has a totally defensive posture, by the very fact that those weapons exist.


>>At the point where a nuclear weapon no longer provides a stable deterrent force, assuming those weapons are not intended for any first strike plans, what is their use?<<

Strategic bombardment of the enemy, first, last, second, in between, post-armistice, what have you.


So... you're admitting that the submarines are purely offensive, and not deterrent forces?  Great, that means I win.

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: Trident replacement

MAD was not a goal, and nobody ever sets out to be caught in stalemate.  MAD is not a balance of power.  MAD is not peace.

MAD is the result of two competing offensive systems developed to the point that the political class does not feel an advantage even if they ordered a first-strike. 

In other words, the USA, having developed the means to assault the Soviet Union by land, air and sea, was confronted by Soviet development of its own assault capability.  In certain arms, like submarines, the United States was predominant.   The USSR because of its political system had a better land arsenal.  Neither the USA nor the USSR could report a satisfactory solution to the other's offensive power.  Defensive systems were always rudimentary.

The ballistic missle submarines, the 24-hour aerially-refueled bombers, the rail-mounted ICBMS were NOT build with the idea "gee if we have this crap they cannot dare attack us".  they were built to be used.  Only after it became obvious that using them was going to be a coin toss, did the pinstripe pants start talking about MAD.

And what this led to was the development of global warfare, by 1st rank powers against 2nd rank powers and by 2nd rank powers against 2nd rank powers and by 3rd rank powers against 2nd rank powers and by 3rd rank powers against 3rd rank powers, without involving 1st rank powers against 1st rank powers. Global, conventional warfare of the sort that in 1914 and 1939 led to total world wars, was instead permitted to burn as low-key conflict.

If a 1st rank power says "ok now we have nuke subs, but we wont use them, because they are there to deter not assault" then other 1st rank powers can proceed to wage war on 2nd rank powers and 3rd rank powers, even those aligned with that other 1st rank power, as happened in the 1970s and 1980s.  A strike against the other 1st rank power might be weighed, as the target may lack the balls to use its "deterrent" fleet even after being attacked.  If you will not employ the offensive weapon no matter what, or rather, if you are PERCEIVED as being unwilling to employ the ultimate weapon, it has no deterrent value.  It must be credible as an offensive force -- Strategic Air Command could have been over russia 2 hours after the Word was given, our Ohio boats could have launched in 30 mins.   if it is supposed to ward off polar bears just by sitting there it will not impress anybody, like Clinton's F-18s buzzing the Serbs in Kosovo.


and I don't see how arguing "correlation doesn't equate to causation" promotes a theory as more "rational" than the historical record

The core joke of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is that of course no civilization would develop personal computers with instant remote database recovery, and then waste this technology to find good drinks.
Steve Jobs has ruined this joke.

Re: Trident replacement

nukes didnt help the US in 'nam. they didnt help the Soviets in Afghanistan & they didn't deter the Argies from invading the British falklands.

Buddugoliaeth neu Marwolaeth

Re: Trident replacement

This discussion has become somewhat historical, but the question is, is MAD relevant in a post - cold war era when there are no two major powers with any desire to destroy each other?

tweehonderd graden, dat is waarom ze me mr. fahrenheit noemen, ik reis aan de snelheid van het licht, ik ga een supersonische man van u maken

Re: Trident replacement

Hez, that is because the USA, USSR and UK are/were all rational nations. Let's face it, you have to be pretty insane to start firing nukes around even (or especially?) against non-nuclear armed nations. Which I guess leads to a contradiction in the effectiveness of MAD. MAD only works when the nations involved are rationally controlled. But if those nations are rational then they wouldn't use their nuclear weapons anyway. However if your "opponent" is not rational, then they may not pay any attention to MAD and just nuke you anyway.

tweehonderd graden, dat is waarom ze me mr. fahrenheit noemen, ik reis aan de snelheid van het licht, ik ga een supersonische man van u maken

Re: Trident replacement

"This discussion has become somewhat historical, but the question is, is MAD relevant in a post - cold war era when there are no two major powers with any desire to destroy each other?"
Russia is a major power and so is china. Both are unreliable dictatorships.

Re: Trident replacement

"MAD only works when the nations involved are rationally controlled. But if those nations are rational then they wouldn't use their nuclear weapons anyway. However if your "opponent" is not rational, then they may not pay any attention to MAD and just nuke you anyway."
They are rational to the point that they are not suicidal.

34 (edited by Little Paul 16-Oct-2010 14:00:49)

Re: Trident replacement

"1: Extended deterrence makes the Trident systems obsolete.  As a member of both NATO and the EU, Britain has close alliances with two nuclear powers: the US and France.  Alone, either nation provides a strong deterrent force.  Together, its credibility in launching a deadly retaliation is pretty much guaranteed, short of some advance in missile defense systems.  In addition, Britain has non-submarine missile systems, such as aircraft and ICBMs.  Britain just doesn't need the Trident subs."
Adding another nation increases the chances on a successful deterrence and a failed first preventive first strike that destroys all capability to retaliate. Next to that, would any of those nations risk self-destruction for another nation? Or try to make an agreement with the enemy and survive? They would make any effort to tell their enemies they would retaliate if their ally is under attack but if it is true is another question.

Britain has aircraft's, but it is not very cost-effective compared to subs. And its success is not always guaranteed. An ICBM can be destroyed on the ground in a first strike. If they place 100 or 1000 won't make any difference.

"2: Nuclear submarines are risky business.
A: Accidents.  Historically, there have been multiple instances of nuclear submarines colliding into one another.  There's a number of reasons for why these accidents happen, but they undeniably occur.
http://www.findingdulcinea.com/news/int

Re: Trident replacement

"Come on, someone argue with me!  You know, like the people who were favoring the other side of the argument?"
Anything for you zarfy, anything!

Re: Trident replacement

One essay, volunteer work, and an online class right now.  I'm comin, I'm comin... (the only reason I made that statement earlier was that people who disagreed with me were posting, yet non-responsive to contrary arguments, which indicates blatant dodgery of my stuff) tongue

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: Trident replacement

lol, gl with your essay.

38 (edited by Justinian I 17-Oct-2010 18:59:14)

Re: Trident replacement

Only suckers volunteer. Go move to a new location Zarf, with a better economy.

Re: Trident replacement

"they didn't deter the Argies from invading the British falklands"

and why not?

The inmates are running the asylum

Re: Trident replacement

cause they didn't realize Baroness Thatcher had more balls than teats and would just as soon drown a thousand wogs as give up British pasture\

to paraphrase Churchill, either you have balls or you have them not

if you have balls you need fewer nukes

if you have them not you need to grow a pair

The core joke of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is that of course no civilization would develop personal computers with instant remote database recovery, and then waste this technology to find good drinks.
Steve Jobs has ruined this joke.

41 (edited by Little Paul 18-Oct-2010 14:08:39)

Re: Trident replacement

@justinian:
Being a volunteer can get you a better job. It depends on what you volunteer for. But a lot of student-leaders work for free. Yet every single person who did it in my home town has a job high-up.

Re: Trident replacement

As traditional I am posting my thoughts long after they would do any good.
__________

The economy has gone to crap and the government of the UK wants to save some pennies by cutting defence: Should we get rid of "Trident"?

Short answer: No.

Long answer: The Trident nuclear submarine system is a replacement in itself, a replacement of a largely land based missile system which was expensive and made much of the UK a prime target, and needlessly so at that.
  With our nuclear weapons at sea the only reason one would have for a full-scale nuclear strike on the UK would be to kill millions of civillians. Such an attack would decimate the UK, turning it into a cauterised death-zone awash with radiation, but it would not make us incapable of retaliation, or "Taking the bastards with us" as I like to think of it. Having our nuclear weapons hidden at sea means that we can get you even when we're dead.
Think about it.
  We NEED trident.
  You want to save some money, look at the Aircraft Carrier problem; We sell them after 3 years, and 75% of the time they've never seen an aircraft. Our tech doesn't need that kind of turnover, we're not America, and we can't keep up with them, so why don't we just do  the best with what we've got until we absolutely have to replace the WHOLE ship?
mumble
grr
mumble

"So, it's defeat for you, is it? Someday I must meet a similar fate..."

Re: Trident replacement

"As traditional I am posting my thoughts long after they would do any good."
lol.