I recently read about Nixon's and Kissinger's 'madman theory'.Originally Posted by Richard Nixon
North Korea's Kim Jong Il seems to have reinvented it. And is Bush Trying Out the Madman Theory too?During the cold war, nuclear strategic doctrine was riven by a fundamental contradiction. Governments thought it sensible to threaten nuclear war--the better to "deter" a foe from doing something unwanted--yet it obviously made no sense actually to wage nuclear war, for this led to the famous "mutual assured destruction." But if carrying out the threats was senseless, then how could it be frightening? What use were they? Wouldn't the foe, supposing that no country would be demented enough to "assure" its own destruction, disbelieve the threats and do what it pleased in spite of them?
The high strategists of nuclear defense scratched their heads and came up with answers. One was to take technical and other steps that deliberately put your nation on what the strategist Thomas Schelling called a "slippery slope." That is, if you visibly arranged to make yourself a little bit out of control, the foe would no longer be able to imagine that you might desist from nuclear war in a last-minute fit of sanity. They'd think that you might plunge into the abyss in spite of yourself. And so they would fear you, as hoped.
Playing 'Madman theory' is either incredibly stupid or bloody brilliant. I seriously can't make up my mind.
But the great thing about 'madman theory' is that it could explain Bush' behaviour so perfectly well.
To play it convincingly, you have to be a fantastic strategist of great intelligence. Or you must be a genuine complete nutter.
Though I'm confused as to whether that leaves the right, the left, or both correct in their assesment of him.
So is Bush playing it? And is playing it the right course to take when dealing with Iran and other threats?
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