For eight decades, the world has navigated the risk of nuclear war. But what will be required to so in the future? And because that risk is not static, how do we measure, conceptualize, and respond to changes—like when Russia rattles its nuclear saber? What challenges do so-called tactical nuclear weapons pose to deterrence models based on much larger, strategic weapons? And what dynamics influence both the creation and erosion of international arms control frameworks that aim to regulate these weapons? This episode tackles those questions and more. It features a discussion with W. J. “Bill” Hennigan, the lead writer for a new series published by the New York Times called “At the Brink.”
Scanning the Future Battlefield with Former Deputy SECDEF Robert Work
Understanding Urban Warfare
The Brain and the Battlefield
Pandemics, National Security, and Zombies
The Conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh is Giving Us a Glimpse into the Future of War
MWI Podcast: The Space Domain is Getting Crowded
Artificial Intelligence, Big Data, and the Modern Battlefield
Command on the Modern Battlefield
Crafting a US Strategy for the Twenty-First Century
The Other Foreign Fighters
Competition, Conflict, and the Future of Irregular Warfare
Security Force Assistance in an Era of Great-Power Competition
Is Great-Power Competition a Strategy?
Women in Defense and Security
The Robotic Revolution is Upon Us
Introducing the Irregular Warfare Podcast
How the Islamic State Happened
What's Going on in North Korea?
How Countries Decide to Go to War
Nuclear Weapons on a Shifting Strategic Landscape
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