Hacker: “It’s a bluff. I probably wouldn’t use it.”
Humphrey: “Yes, but they don’t know that you probably wouldn’t.”
Hacker: “They probably do.”
Humphrey: “Yes, they probably know that you probably wouldn’t. But they can’t certainly know.”
Hacker: “They probably certainly know that I probably wouldn’t.”
Humphrey: “Yes, but even though they probably certainly know that you probably wouldn’t, they don’t certainly know that, although you probably wouldn’t, there is no probability that you certainly would.” — Yes, Prime Minister via the Guardian
...do you think there's good reason to keep them on as a deterrent and therefore implicitly believe there are circumstances that their use would be justified? — Benkei
Isn't war outlawed? I guess somebody like the UN has outlawed it.Do you think nuclear weapons should be outlawed as well because, like mustard gas and other outlawed weapons, their use would be inhumane or do you think there's good reason to keep them on as a deterrent and therefore implicitly believe there are circumstances that their use would be justified? — Benkei
To me it's more interesting though that the legality of the use of nuclear weapons isn't questioned, whereas it does highlight that all weapons act as a deterrent. Yet, in that sense mustard gas would work as a deterrent too but we outlawed that; just like ordnances designed to maim instead of kill. Outlawed. Biological weapons. Outlawed. — Benkei
It seems rather counter-intuitive to "allow" nuclear weapons as an option on the table, as the most gruesome, where it concerns the fall-out, and deadliest and most destructive weapon when lesser weapons were banned for, well, less. — Benkei
all weapons act as a deterrent. — Benkei
But even the assumption of the other side having a mass of chemical weapons has acted as a deterrent.Well, mustard gas doesn't lead to a Cold War and MAD. — darthbarracuda
During the war, Germany stockpiled tabun, sarin, and soman but refrained from their use on the battlefield. In total, Germany produced about 78,000 tons of chemical weapons.[4] By 1945 the nation produced about 12,000 tons of tabun and 1,000 pounds (450 kg) of sarin.[4] Delivery systems for the nerve agents included 105 mm and 150 mm artillery shells, a 250 kg bomb and a 150 mm rocket.
This seems to be the only way we know of to fight a "winnable war" and we haven't seen it since. — Monitor
A bit off the topic, but I disagree here, because of the objectives, really:The reason for this is political, not military. Korea, Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan are all winnable if you don't care about casualties. — Marchesk
I think here the most startling thing is how the late Robert McNamara wrote about the dangers of nuclear weapons in his last years. Robert McNamara is a crucial figure here, because he was a person that actually had made the decision to go to WW3 during the Cuban Missile Crisis (which at the last moment was avoided). During the Cuban Missile crisis WW3 was truly on the table. Furthermore, it was viewed for example by general Curtis LeMay as winnable because the amount of nuclear weapons Soviet Union had were still few: there was no MAD yet.↪ssu Yup. Here's another near-armageddon.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanislav_Petrov — Arkady
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