Skip to main content
table of contents
INDEX
Note: Paul Nitze is simply “Nitze” in subheadings. Italicized page numbers refer to photographs.
- “ABM Treaty and the SDI Program” (NSDD-192, 1985), 222
- ABM Treaty (Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, 1972): congressional approval of, 160, 161, 165–66; drafting of, 157–59; interim agreement, 146; interpretations, 222; signing of, 159–60; Soviet violation, 216; START and, 226–27, 241–42. See also NST (Nuclear and Space Arms Talks)
- ABMs. See missile defense systems
- Absolute Weapon (Brodie), 108
- academia: Cold War studies, 257; Nitze’s views of, 15, 17, 19, 27, 88–89; strategic studies, 92
- ACDA (Arms Control and Disarmament Agency), 105, 118, 141, 208
- Acheson, Dean: Nitze, association with, 51, 56, 60, 81, 91, 147; strategic policy, 65–66, 90
- Acheson-Lilienthal Report (1946), 214, 218, 226
- Adenauer, Konrad, 117
- Advisory Commission to the Council of National Defense, 29
- Afghanistan: Soviet invasion, 14, 171–72, 189, 190; US war on terror, 259, 260–61
- Africa, 75, 101, 105, 109
- aircraft. See bomber aircraft; U-2 spy plane
- Air Force Advisory Board, 99–100
- air power: national security impacts, 32–33, 34–36, 55, 93; as strategic revolution, 45; in WWII, 41, 42–43, 47
- Akhromeyev, Sergei, 221, 227–28, 230, 235–36, 241
- Allison, Royal, 154, 162
- Alsop, Joseph, 89–91
- Alsop, Stewart, 99
- anti-ballistic missile (ABM) launchers. See missile defense systems
- “Apes on a Treadmill” (Warncke article), 175
- aquarator venture, 24
- arms control: bargaining without sacrificing, 133, 142–43; congressional approval, 160, 161, 165–66; leverage, 140, 148, 180, 220; moratorium on testing, 117, 150, 151, 154; nuclear crises and, 116–17, 123–25; political will for, 153, 213, 234; qualitative vs. quantitative, 150–51. See also specific arms talks and treaties
- arms race: evolution of, 93; missile gap, 100, 101; nuclear freeze, 192, 194, 201–2, 211; US inferiority, 116–17, 162, 204
- Arnold, Henry (Hap), 38, 41
- Asia, US nuclear policy toward, 131–32. See also specific countries
- Aspen Corporation, 7–8, 188, 239
- assured destruction, 132–33. See also MAD (mutual assured destruction)
- “Assuring Strategic Stability in an Era of Détente” (Nitze article, 1976), 172–74, 175, 183–84, 190, 233
- Atlas missiles, 100
- atomic bomb, use in Japan, 41–42, 43–44, 45. See also nuclear weapons
- Atomic Energy Act (1946), 103
- Atomic Energy Commission, UN, 58, 214, 218, 226
- Bacon, William, 21, 22
- Baker, James, 5–6, 238, 240, 242, 248
- Ball, George, 122, 178
- Barnes, C. Tracy, 109
- Baruch Plan (1946), 214, 218, 226
- “Basic Strategic Judgments” (Nitze report), 105
- “Basic War Aims.” See NSC-79 (unfinished)
- “Basis for Substantive Negotiations” (memorandum, 1962), 124–25
- Bay of Pigs invasion (1961), 108–10
- Berlin Crisis (1961): development and resolution, 110–16; impacts on security policy, 116–19; lessons from, 104–5, 125–26
- Berlin Task Force, 114, 115, 121
- Berlin Wall, 114, 115, 116, 243
- Bessmertnykh, Alexander, 226–27
- Big Four summit (Geneva, 1955), 93
- Bissell, Richard, 92, 109
- Black Tom explosion (1916), 28, 29, 79
- Blessing, Lee (“Walk in the Woods” play), 250–51
- Bohlen, Charles (Chip), 20, 79, 93–94
- bomber aircraft: B-1s, 177, 178, 180; B-2s, 255; B-52s, 100, 137, 180, 246; Backfires, 183, 231
- Boverie, Richard, 203
- Brezhnev, Leonid: policies, 190, 204, 243; US and, 166, 197, 199
- “Brilliant Pebbles” program, 249
- Brodie, Bernard, 92, 108
- Brown, Harold, 154, 174–75, 180, 187
- Brzezinski, Zbigniew, 174, 178, 181–83, 185
- Buckley, William F. (Firing Line), 184, 193–95, 225, 253
- budget. See defense spending
- Bulganin, Nikolai, 94
- Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 247, 253–54
- Bullitt, William, 200
- Bundy, McGeorge (Mac), 106–9, 119, 156, 185, 201, 204
- Bureau of Economic Warfare, 37–38
- Burke, Arleigh, 95, 110
- Bush, George H.W. administration, 5, 177, 237, 238–41, 244–49
- Bush, George W., administration, 3, 259–61, 263–64
- Cahill, John T., 29
- Carlucci, Frank, 231–32, 234, 236
- Carnegie Endowment for Peace, 96, 101
- Carnegie Foundation, 84
- Carter, Jimmy, 171, 174–77, 180–81, 189, 285n6
- Carter administration: Afghanistan, 189–90; arms control policies, 171, 176–80; Nitze’s role in, 178–79, 180; policy planning, 174–77; Presidential Directive-58, 13; SALT II, 176, 180–83, 189; strategic stability and, 172–77, 178–79; Team B exercise, 177–78
- Casey, William, 148, 193, 204
- Castro, Fidel, 108–10, 123, 125
- Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), 72, 92, 144, 167, 193–94
- CFR. See Council on Foreign Relations; Senate: Committee on Foreign Relations
- Chace, James, 253
- “Chance for Peace” (Eisenhower speech), 79
- Cheney, Richard, 174, 258
- Chernenko, Konstantin, 213–14
- Chiang Kai-shek, 54, 242
- Chicago Council on Foreign Relations, 185–86
- Chicago, Illinois, 16, 17, 22
- China (People’s Republic of China): civil war, 54, 57; offshore island crisis, 101; Soviet Union and, 94–95; threat from, 73, 86, 136, 247; US and, 131–32, 147
- Chomsky, Noam, 143, 144
- Church, Frank, 167, 187
- CIA (Central Intelligence Agency), 72, 92, 144, 167, 193–94
- civil defense network, US, 77
- classified information, Nitze’s access to, 91–93, 171, 181–82, 185, 194
- Clayton, Will, 35, 50, 51–52
- Clifford, Clark, 106, 137, 139, 140, 142–43, 253
- climate change, 6, 239, 255–56, 258–59
- Clinton administration, 248, 252, 256, 257–58, 259
- Cold War: in Asia, 134, 138; bipolar era, 82–83, 108; chess metaphor, 95; free world coalition, 87–88; geopolitics and ideology, 67, 199; objectives, Nitze’s, 11, 13, 14, 80; objectives, Soviet, 66–67, 86, 94–95; objectives, US, 72, 74, 193–94; reflections on, 253–55; SALT as venue for, 152; winning the, 90–91, 108, 191; winning without war, 62, 70
- Cold War, end of: arms negotiation, 241–42, 243–44; political order, 5, 244–49
- command and control (C2), 182, 187–88, 195–97
- Committee on the Present Danger (CPD), 177–78, 180–82, 188–89
- Committee to Maintain a Prudent Defense Policy (CMPDP), 147–48
- Communist Manifesto (Marx), 267
- Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), 256
- Conant, James, 68, 178
- Congress, US. See specific committee names
- congressional testimonies, Nitze’s, 24–25, 27, 139, 160
- “Considerations Involved in a Separable First Stage Disarmament Agreement” (long paper, 1963), 132
- Constitution, US, 2, 64
- Container Corporation of America, 20
- containment policy, 74, 86, 105
- contingency plans: Berlin, 111–12; Cuba, 119, 123–25; in general, 128; MIRVs and, 156–57
- contracting and consulting work, Nitze’s, 81, 85, 91–93, 96–97, 103
- conventional forces: in Cold War, 80, 255; as deterrent, 104, 113, 131, 195; Europe, defense of, 57, 73, 110, 116–17, 241; force structures, 76, 101, 194; massive retaliation, 86; in Persian Gulf War, 245, 254; post-Cold War, 254–55; smart weapons, 6, 238–39; Soviet Union, 97, 201; strategic conventional weapons, 254
- Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty, 241
- Council on Foreign Relations, 85–86, 97, 101, 164
- counterforce strike: damage limitation and, 115, 133; defense against, 140; first strike vs., 131; minimal deterrent, 247; MIRVs, 149, 156–57; Nitze Scenario, 172, 183; strategic vulnerability, 13, 187. See also first-strike capability
- Crowley, Leo, 38
- Cuba, 108–10, 204
- Cuban Missile Crisis (1962): events of, 119–23; impacts of, 14, 121, 129, 136; lessons from, 11–12, 104–5, 160, 189; nuclear strategy after, 130–33, 146; resolution of, 123–26
- Czechoslovakia, Soviet invasion of (1968), 142–43
- Dam, Kenneth, 209, 213
- de Gaulle, Charles, 113, 136
- Deadly Gambits (Talbott), 210
- Declaration of Independence, 2, 64
- Decline of the West (Spengler), 26, 27, 58–59, 230
- Defense Department (DOD): Berlin Task Force, 114, 115, 121; Office of International Security Affairs (ISA), 79–80, 106–8, 152, 165
- defense spending: arms race and, 194, 200, 207; congressional approval, 160, 189; containment policy, 74, 86; Gramm-Rudman, 224–25; Korean War and, 72–73; leverage for negotiations, 201, 225; massive retaliation, 86, 91; NSC-68 and, 70, 71, 79–80; SALT and, 166, 184–85; taxes and, 79–80, 86, 111, 173, 225
- democracy, 2, 3, 30–31, 53, 91, 267
- Democratic Advisory Council, 167–68
- Democratic Party, 80, 87–88, 91, 167, 174, 189
- Democrats’ Advisory Committee on Foreign and Defense Policy, 97
- Department of Defense. See Defense Department (DOD)
- Department of State. See State Department (DOS)
- Department of Treasury, 105
- détente: instability in era of, 184–85; perception of, 113; Soviet attitude toward, 94, 163, 172
- “Deterrence and Survival in the Nuclear Age” (Gaither Report, 1957), 98–101
- deterrence policy: conventional weapons, 104, 113, 131, 195; massive retaliation and, 86; NATO and US policy, 112–13, 114–15; in nuclear era, 195–96, 247, 254–55; nuclear weapons, 57–60, 116; in peacetime, 68; retaliatory capability, 129, 130–31; strength as deterrent, 11–12, 90–91, 116–19, 190, 195; tension between opposites, 9, 113
- Dillon, C. Douglas, 102
- Dillon, Clarence, 15, 21, 22–24, 31
- Dillon, Read and Co., 22–26, 27–29
- diplomacy, 14, 34, 43, 50
- Dobrynin, Anatoly: arms negotiations, 199–200, 221; Kissinger back-channel, 153, 157, 160, 166–67; nuclear crises, 115, 123
- D’Olier, Franklin, 39, 43
- domestic politics: elections, 209, 214, 267–68; geopolitical impacts of, 166–67; impacts on democracy, 267; NSC-68 and, 66; Soviet vs. US, 150, 201–2; treaty negotiations and, 159–60, 161, 164, 169, 229–31
- Draft Act (Selective Service Act, 1940), 29, 35
- Draper, William, 25, 29, 35
- DST (Defense and Space Talks), 220–21, 232, 236
- Dual Track decision (NATO), 190, 197, 211
- Dulles, Allen, 92
- Dulles, John Foster: career, 77–80, 92; massive retaliation policy, 85–86, 87; Nitze, views of, 81, 99–100, 103
- early warning systems, 77, 93, 99
- Economic Consequences of the Peace (Keynes), 74
- Economic Cooperation Administration, 53
- Economic Defense Board (Bureau of Economic Warfare), 37–38
- economic policy, US, 51–53, 55–56. See also defense spending
- “Effect of New Weapons Systems on Our Alliances” (Nitze speech), 97
- Eisenhower, Dwight D., 78–79, 91, 99–100, 102
- Eisenhower administration: Gaither Committee, 98–101; New Look, 85–86, 89, 100; Nitze’s role in, 81, 85–88, 91–93, 95–96; policies, 80, 111; transition period, 76–79; Vietnam, 89
- elections. See domestic politics; specific presidential administrations
- Endgame (Talbott), 210
- Enewetak Atoll, 76
- Estonia, 157
- Europe: conventional defense of, 57, 73, 110, 116–17, 241; economic restoration of, 6, 52, 56; independent nuclear arsenals, 113, 223–24; INF deployment, 201–2; US commitment to, 59–60, 73–74, 109, 113, 211. See also NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization)
- Europe, Eastern. See Warsaw Pact
- ExComm (Executive Committee of the National Security Council), 104, 119–25, 124, 142, 181
- Experts Group (INF and START negotiations), 227–29, 228, 230, 235, 237, 248–49
- extended deterrence, 11–12. See also NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization)
- Fair Deal policy, 54
- false alarms, MIRVs and, 156
- FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation), 29
- Federal Republic of Germany (FRG, West Germany), 112–13, 208
- Finland, 94
- Finletter, Thomas, 85
- Firing Line (television program), 184–85, 193–95, 225, 253
- first-strike capability: counterforce vs., 131; MIRVs and, 155, 223; opposition to, 201; preemptive strike vs., 195; SALT and, 176, 225–26; Soviet Union, 146–47, 161, 168, 190; stability and, 12, 173–74, 184; survivability, 163, 183. See also “Nitze Scenario”; nuclear policy, US; preemptive strike
- Fitzgerald, F. Scott, 3
- Ford administration, 166, 174
- Foreign Affairs (magazine), 172–74, 175, 183–84, 190, 201
- Foreign Affairs Research Center at SAIS, 106
- Foreign Economic Administration, 38
- foreign policy discussion group (New York City), 85
- Foreign Policy Institute (FPI), 92. See also SAIS (School of Advanced International Studies)
- Foreign Policy (magazine), 97, 175
- Foreign Service Educational Foundation, 84
- Forrestal, James: career, 28, 33–35, 52; death, 55; N and, 21, 23, 25, 29
- Foster, William, 105
- FPR (Washington Center of Foreign Policy Research), 96–97
- “Framework of Theory Useful to the Practice of Politics” (Nitze paper), 88
- France, 21, 113, 136, 223–24
- freedom of action, US, 12, 261
- freeze, nuclear, 192, 211. See also nuclear policy, US
- From Hiroshima to Glasnost (Nitze book), 230, 231–32, 240, 249–53
- Fulbright, William, 101, 109
- Gaither Report (“Deterrence and Survival in the Nuclear Age,” 1957), 98–101
- Gaither, Rowan, 98
- Galosh (Soviet missile defense system), 130, 151, 157, 158
- Garrison Rail Mobile, 231, 246
- Gates, Thomas, 105–6
- General Theory (Keynes), 26, 92
- Geneva Summit (1985), 221–22, 223–25
- Geneva talks: aims, evolution of, 216; central concept, 215, 225–26; DST, 218, 220–21, 232, 236; resumption of, 213–14, 217–18; strategic concept, 215–16, 221
- Germany, 17, 21, 26–27, 32, 39–41
- Germany, West (FRG, Federal Republic of Germany), 112–13, 208
- Gilpatrick, Roswell (Ros), 18, 106, 128, 133
- Glassboro, New Jersey, summit, 136
- Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 8
- Goldwater, Barry, 165
- Goodpaster, Andrew, 102–3
- Gorbachev, Mikhail: impressions of, 217, 223, 224; INF treaty rejection, 229; Nitze’s views of, 212, 225, 241, 242–43; perestroika and glasnost, 13, 240
- Gore, Al, 258–59
- government contractor work, Nitze’s, 81, 85, 91–93, 96–97, 103
- Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Balanced Budget Act (1985), 224–25
- grand package. See strategic concept (Nitze Criteria)
- Great Depression, 15, 22–24
- Gromyko, Andrei, 198, 221
- Groton School, 1953 speech, 9, 40, 82–83
- Gulf War (1990–91), 244–49
- Haig, Alexander, 159, 196, 197, 198, 200
- Halberstam, David, 135
- Hammarskjöld, Dag, 50, 71
- Harmel Report (1967), 137
- Harriman, Averell, 167
- Harvard University, 19–20, 27
- heavy bombers, 100, 227
- heavy missiles. See SS-18 “Satan” missiles (Soviet Union)
- Helms, Richard, 144
- Helsinki. See names of specific arms limitation talks
- hemispheric defense, 33, 34–35, 36
- Henderson, Loy, 50
- Heraclitus (philosopher), 8–9, 82, 250
- Herter, Christian, 81, 83–84, 100, 101, 105–6
- High Frontier (lobby group), 214–15, 220
- Hilken, Henry (grandfather), 19
- Hilken, Paul (uncle), 28, 29, 79
- Hiroshima. See Japan
- “History and Our Democratic Tradition in the Formulation of the United States Foreign Policy” (Nitze speech), 87–88
- history of strategic arms competition (ONA paper), 10
- Hitler, Adolph, 26, 37
- Hoover, Herbert, 30
- Hotchkiss School (Connecticut), 18–19
- House of Representatives, US: Pike Committee, 166–67; Un-American Activities Committee, 54
- Humphrey, Hubert, 105
- Hussein, Saddam, 244–45, 259
- hydrogen bomb, 56–62, 65, 71, 76. See also nuclear weapons
- ICBMs (intercontinental ballistic missiles): arms race, 93; arms talks, 141, 153, 183, 239, 243, 246; basing of, 239; budget issues, 164, 194, 234; MIRV issue, 207, 223; Soviet capabilities, 99, 100, 146, 150, 172; survivability, 239. See also throw weight
- ideological struggles, Nitze’s caution about, 67, 261
- “ ‘Impossible’ Job of Secretary of State” (Nitze article), 97
- India, 123
- INF (Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces) Treaty (1987), 5, 206, 230
- INF talks: criteria for limits, 199, 235; European independent forces, 200–201; leadership of, 198, 200, 202, 208–9; no first-use, 200–201; suspension of, 207–11; throw weight reductions, 199–200; zero option, 198–99, 203, 206. See also Experts Group (INF and START negotiations); strategic concept (Nitze Criteria)
- Institute for Strategic Studies (UK), 116
- intelligence community, 151, 166–67
- intelligence estimates, 72, 118–19, 142, 151–52
- interagency working group on defense policy, Nitze’s, 118–19
- intercontinental ballistic missiles. See ICBMs (intercontinental ballistic missiles)
- Interim Agreement. See SALT I (Interim Agreement, 1972)
- interim INF (Intermediate-Range Nuclear Force) Treaty, 5, 206. See also INF talks
- Iran, 75–76, 242–43
- Iran-Contra scandal, 212, 229–30
- IRBMs (intermediate-range ballistic missiles): arms talks, 5, 157, 192, 199, 204, 209; budget issues, 179; in Europe, 190, 206
- ISA (Defense Department, Office of International Security Affairs), 79–80, 106–8, 152, 165
- Jackson, Henry (Scoop), 148, 160–62, 169, 174, 182–83
- Japan, 11, 32, 41–46, 198
- Javitz, Jacob, 187
- Jervis, Robert, 12, 131, 168, 190
- Johns Hopkins University. See SAIS (School of Advanced International Studies)
- Johnson, Lyndon B. (LBJ), 128, 137, 139
- Johnson administration: “Daisy Ad,” 165; Nitze’s role in, 127–29, 130, 134, 137, 143–44; policy priorities, 133; San Antonio formula, 138; Vietnam task force, 135, 136
- Johnson, Alexis, 120, 125, 164
- Johnson, Louis, 55–56, 66, 69
- Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS): on arms control, 151–52, 205, 232, 234–36; budget, 71; on force requirements, 132–33
- Joint Strategic Bomber Study (Team B exercise), 177–78
- Joint Strategic Target Selection Board, 41
- Jupiter missiles, 121–23, 125, 202
- Kampelman, Max, 218, 227, 234
- Keating, Frank, 119
- Kennan, George: career, 54–56, 60, 65, 70; Nitze, shared stance, 14; retirement, 62; Vietnam opposition, 135
- Kennedy, John F. (JFK), 102, 105, 110–11, 123, 128
- Kennedy administration: Berlin Crisis response, 116–19; cabinet selection, 106; CMC response, 119–23, 124; Nitze’s role in, 105–6, 125
- Kennedy, Paul (Rise and Fall of the Great Powers), 230
- Kennedy, Robert F., 104, 119, 120, 123, 139
- Keynes, John Maynard, 26, 74, 92
- Khrushchev, Nikita: 1961 Vienna Summit, 110–11; domestic politics, 94–95, 136; letter to JFK, 123; US, confrontations with, 110, 116
- Kido, 43, 44
- Kissinger, Henry A.: career, 149–50; Dobrynin back-channel, 153, 157, 160, 166–67; Nitze, rivalry with, 97–98, 164, 168, 185
- Knox, Frank, 33, 37
- Knudsen, William S., 38
- Korea, North, 137–38
- Korean War (1950–1953), 64, 72–73, 79, 85–86
- Kosygin, Alexei, 136, 142–43
- Kunsberg, Philip, 222
- Kvitsinsky, Yuli, 192, 198, 199, 202–5
- Laird, Melvin, 148, 162
- Landon, Truman, 69
- Landsdale, Edward, 109
- Larocque, Eugene, 184
- Lawrence, Ernest, 68
- LeMay, Curtis, 108, 122
- Lenin, Vladimir, 86
- Leningrad, Russia, 94–95
- lessons learned: on clear statement of threats, 100; from CMC and Berlin Crisis, 125–26, 127–28, 144, 160; from Korean War, 85–86; on preparedness, 12–13; from SALT I, 210; from WWII, 41, 45–48
- levers of influence, Nitze and: early interest in, 15, 17, 19; ideas about, 31, 32, 89; proximity to power, 81–82, 100–101, 103, 106
- Lilienthal-Acheson Report (1946), 214, 218, 226
- Lilienthal, David, 58
- Limited Test Ban Treaty (1963), 141, 155
- limited war, 74, 108, 115, 116, 250
- Linhard, Robert, 227, 231
- linkage, 153, 209–10, 240
- Lippmann, Walter, 122
- logic-driven rationality, Nitze and: logic chains, 3, 29–30, 44, 90, 202; policy making, 59, 130, 219–20; problem-solving and, 50–51, 52, 73, 222; USSBS reports, 42, 43–44, 47; writing style, 97–98. See also Nitze, Paul, character traits
- “Long Telegram” (Kennan), 55, 260
- Lovett, Robert, 68, 106, 148
- MacArthur, Douglas, 42–43, 47, 72, 73
- MAD (mutual assured destruction): central tenet, 131; Nitze’s rejection of, 12, 148; SDI and, 216–17; US acceptance of, 160, 161
- Manhattan Project, 58
- Mao Zedong, 57, 73
- Marshall, Andrew, 10, 169
- Marshall, Charles Burton, 85, 152
- Marshall, George, 35–36, 51–52, 53–54
- Marshall Plan (Economic Recovery Act, 1948), 51–52, 53, 113
- Marx, Karl (Communist Manifesto), 267
- Marxism-Leninism, 67, 143, 241
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), 93
- massive retaliation, 85–86, 87, 91, 97, 111
- Master of the Game (Talbott), 249–50, 253
- McCarthy, Eugene, 139
- McCarthy, Joseph, 66, 79, 84, 231
- McCone, John, 120
- McFarlane, Robert (Bud), 209, 213–14, 217, 221–22
- McGovern, George, 184
- McNamara, Robert: career, 115, 137, 147; on Cuba, 109, 124; on deterrence, 130–31; Nitze’s work with, 106, 107–8; on peace in nuclear age, 126
- Menshikov, Mikhail, 112
- Midgetman missiles, 206–8, 231, 236–37, 246. See also Minuteman missiles
- militarization. See outer space, militarization of
- military-industrial complex, 14
- military spending. See defense spending
- Millikan, Max, 17, 92
- Minuteman missiles: limitation of, 132–33, 142–43, 150–51, 186–87; MIRVs and, 130, 156; production, 12, 180; silos, 136, 140, 161; vulnerability of, 151, 172, 173, 185. See also Midgetman missiles
- mir, meaning of, 94
- MIRVs (multiple independent reentry vehicles): cost-benefit of, 200; problems with, 156–57, 164; restrictions on, 163, 165; US and, 149–51, 155–56
- missile defense systems: area vs. point defense, 130, 140; problem of, 156–59. See also Galosh (Soviet missile defense system); Sentinel (US missile defense system); Talinn (Soviet missile defense system)
- Missile Experimental (MX, Peacekeeper), 161, 185, 186, 205, 206–7, 236
- missile gap, Soviet-US, 100, 101
- Missile X, road-mobile system, 105–6
- MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), 93
- modernization, strategic, 160–61, 171, 178, 187, 206
- “Monday Package” (Nitze criteria), 10–11, 218–20, 226–27
- moratorium on testing, 117, 150, 151, 154
- Morgenthau, Hans, 88–89
- Mosaddegh, Mohammad, 75
- Moscow, Russia, 93–95, 152, 157–58, 159–60, 227
- Moscow Summit (1972), 159–60, 230
- Moscow Summit (1988), 232–35
- Moses, Robert, 25, 40
- “Mr. X” (Kennan article), 55
- Multilateral Force (NATO), 125
- Munich Conference (1938), 32–33
- Mutual Defense Assistance Act (MDAA, 1949), 56
- mutual destruction. See MAD (mutual assured destruction)
- MX missile (Peacekeeper), 161, 185, 186, 205, 206–7, 236
- Nagasaki. See Japan
- National Defense Authorization Act (1997), 258
- national emergencies, US, 74, 112
- National Press Club, 198
- National Security Study Directive 6–83 (NSSD 6–83, 1983), 207
- National Security Act (1947), 48, 52–53, 56, 65
- National Security Action Memorandum-109 (NSAM-109, 1961), 114–16
- National Security Commission, Special Committee, 58
- National Security Council. See ExComm (Executive Committee of the National Security Council)
- National Security Council Reports (NSCR): NSC-20/4, 54–56, 70; NSC-79, 64, 79, 80, 90; NSC-135/3, 75; NSC-141, 75–76. See also NSC-68 (1950)
- National Security Decision Directive (NSDD): NSDD-160, 218–19; NSDD-192, 222
- National Security Decision Memorandum (NSDM): NSDM-148, 213; NSDM-242, 183
- National Security Planning Group (NSPG), 209–10, 215, 219, 234
- national security policy: definition, 7; policymaking, 65–66, 107–8, 167–68; politics of, 229–31, 264; security risks in general, 87–88; shortcomings of, 75, 77
- National War College, 6, 252
- NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization): alliance deterioration, 136–37, 142–43; Dual Track decision, 190, 197, 211; expansion of, 239, 258; extended deterrence, 112–13; founding of, 56; FRG membership, 112–13; independent nuclear arsenals, 113, 223–24; Multilateral Force, 125; US commitment to, 73, 114–15, 121, 211. See also Europe
- Navy, Office of the Secretary, 128–29, 129
- Nazis, 26–27, 34, 40
- negotiations. See arms control; names of specific tracks or treaties
- New Deal policy, 24
- New Look policy, 85–86, 89, 100, 245
- New START (2011), 5
- “New World Order,” 5, 245
- New York City: Council on Foreign Relations, 85–86, 101; foreign policy discussion group, 85; Wall Street, 22–26, 27, 50, 51, 68
- New York Herald Tribune, 122
- newspapers and journals, 99, 135, 152, 168, 180. See also specific publication titles
- 9/11 Commission, 260
- 9/11 terror attacks, 1, 4, 259, 263, 267
- 1976 Foreign Affairs article on strategic stability, 172–74, 183–84, 190
- Nitze, Anina Sophia Hilken (mother), 16, 17–18
- Nitze, Charles (grandfather), 16
- “Nitze Criteria” for strategic defense. See strategic concept (Nitze Criteria)
- Nitze, Elizabeth Hilken (sister), 16, 18
- Nitze, Paul: academia, views of, 15, 17, 19, 88–89; childhood, 16–18; death, 6, 262; denunciations against, 29, 79, 128, 231; dinner party incident, 28, 29, 30; economics, gravitation toward, 19, 20–26; education, 18–20; expertise, 10–13, 170, 181–82, 200; on ideological struggles, 67, 261; on interim agreements, 149, 153, 202, 210, 213; Kissinger, rivalry with, 97–98, 164, 168, 185; legacy, 5, 14, 48, 62–63, 103, 264–68; marriage, 24, 249; memoir, 230, 231–32, 240, 249–53; original idea, goal of, 27; patriotism, 30, 35–36, 178–79; policy objectives, 11, 13, 14; politics, views on, 37, 97; on public service, 239; security clearances, 91–93, 181–82, 185, 194; Tension between Opposites (book), 7, 8–9, 253; tension between opposites (concept), 82–83, 113, 167, 265; theory of international politics, 7, 8, 9, 35, 81; wealth, 7, 25, 63, 264–65; worldview formation, 15, 30–31, 36–37, 53. See also levers of influence, Nitze and; Nitze, Paul, career moves; Nitze, Paul, character traits; “Nitze Scenario”; strategic concept (Nitze Criteria); titles of specific documents and publications
- Nitze, Paul, career moves: overview, 2–3, 4–8, 10–13, 14, 103, 259; Wall Street, 22–28; move to Washington, DC, 28–30; S/P deputy director, 56; S/P director, 60, 61; NSC-68, drafting of, 65–69; ISA nomination, 79–80; SAIS, 81–82, 84–85; contracting and consulting, 91–93, 96–97, 98–101, 181–82, 190; ISA, policy and diplomacy, 106–8, 114–15, 125; ExComm, 104, 120–24; secretary of navy, 127, 128, 134; deputy secretary of defense, 136, 143–44; SALT delegation, 148, 149, 165–66; Democratic Advisory Council, 168–69; INF talks, 192–93, 198; arms negotiations, 212, 217, 227, 238; retirement, 238–41
- Nitze, Paul, character traits: action orientation, 38–40, 82, 212, 250–51; ambition, 95, 253; appetite for risk, 26, 217; argumentative tendency, 29; competition, 53; confidence, 18, 23, 47; decisiveness, 22, 38, 40, 53; efficiency, 38, 40–41; Kissinger, compared with, 97; political acumen, 54; problem-solving, 49–51, 128; self-view, 53, 100, 189; stubborn convictions, 20, 43–44. See also logic-driven rationality, Nitze and
- Nitze, Phyllis Pratt (wife), 24, 83, 230
- “Nitze Scenario”: central issue, 223, 239, 244; legacy of, 258; preemptive strike, 3, 195–96; Soviet first-strike, 3–4, 183, 185; strategic stability, 172–76, 204
- Nitze, William (father), 16–17, 18
- Nixon, Richard, 148, 153, 155, 159
- Nixon administration: attitudes toward Soviets, 151; détente strategy, 146; Nitze’s resignation, 165–66; Nitze’s role in, 146, 147–48, 149, 159–60; power dynamics of, 149–50; reelection campaign, 159–60, 161, 162–63; Vietnam, 148, 153, 155, 159, 167; Watergate scandal, 163–66, 167
- Nobel Institute (Norway), 239–40
- nonproliferation, nuclear, 105, 118, 133
- Norstad, Lauris, 113, 114
- North Atlantic Council, 151
- North Atlantic Treaty Organization. See NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization)
- NPT. See Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT, 1968)
- NSAM-109 (1961), 114–16
- NSC-20/4 (1948), 54–56, 70
- NSC-68 (1950): content of, 65, 69–72, 128, 268; defense spending, 70, 71, 79–80, 178; drafting of, 2, 64, 65–69; Korean War, 64, 72–73; speech about, 6, 252; war on terror, 260–61. See also State Department, Policy Planning Staff (S/P)
- NSC-79 (unfinished), 64, 79, 80, 90, 245, 247
- NSC-135/3 (1952), 75
- NSC-141 (1953), 75–76
- NSC (National Security Council): Principals Committee, 116–19. See also ExComm (Executive Committee of the National Security Council)
- NSDD-160 (1985), 218–19
- NSDM-148 (1984), 213
- NSDM-242 (1974), 183
- NSPG (National Security Planning Group), 215
- NSSD 6–83 (1983), 207
- NST (Nuclear and Space Arms Talks): DST, 218, 220–21, 232, 236; “Monday Package,” 218–20; obstacles, 235; zero option, 220
- nuclear balance. See arms control; MAD (mutual assured destruction); strategic stability
- nuclear crises, 11, 101, 104. See also Berlin Crisis (1961); Cuban Missile Crisis (1962)
- nuclear disarmament. See arms control
- Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT, 1968), 133, 140, 141, 161
- nuclear policy, US: toward arms talks, 101, 140–43; toward Asia, 131–32; capabilities vs. commitments, 99; critiques of, Nitze’s, 168–69; difficulty of, 265–66; initial debates on, 59–60; methodology for crafting, 219–20; minimal deterrent, 247–48; “no cities” plan, 130–31; peace in nuclear age, 126, 132; post-Cold War, 247–49; Soviet policy vs., 11; theory vs. practice, 89–91; unilateral freeze debate, 192, 211. See also first-strike capability; preemptive strike
- nuclear superiority. See strategic superiority, US
- nuclear “theology,” 11, 150
- nuclear war, limited vs. total, 11, 152, 157–58, 172–73, 175–76
- nuclear weapons: effects of, 41–42, 43–44, 45, 57; elimination of, 101–2, 216–17, 225, 226; geopolitical impacts, 10–13, 76, 81, 151, 163; hydrogen bomb, 56–62, 65, 71, 76; as leverage, 140, 148, 180, 220; role after Cold War, 6, 247; theater nuclear forces, 197–98. See also strategic superiority
- Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy (Kissinger), 97, 98
- Odom, William, 182, 183, 185
- Office of Net Assessment (ONA), 10
- Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs (OCIAA), 29, 34–36
- Offshore Islands Crisis (China-Taiwan, 1958), 101
- oil industry, 25
- on-site inspections. See verification
- Operation Zapata (Bay of Pigs invasion), 108–10
- Oppenheimer, Robert, 58–59, 68
- Osgood, Robert, 96
- outer space, militarization of, 209, 213. See also NST (Nuclear and Space Arms Talks)
- Outer Space Treaty (1967), 141
- Paepcke, Walter (brother-in-law), 18, 20, 260, 264
- Pan American Airways, 34
- parity. See strategic stability
- Partial Test Ban Treaty (1963), 125
- Paul Nitze and Company (New York), 27
- Paul Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, 240, 253. See also SAIS (School of Advanced International Studies)
- Pax Americana, 74, 90, 91, 246
- peace movements, 137, 143, 201–2
- Peacekeeper (MX missile), 161, 185, 186, 205, 206–7, 236
- Pearl Harbor, Japanese attack on (1941): lessons from, 36–37, 44–45, 47–48, 59, 125–26; Nitze’s recollections, 36, 42
- Pecora, Ferdinand, 24–25
- Pentagon, protest at, 137, 143
- Perera, Guido, 38
- Perle, Richard, 148, 198, 212, 227
- Pershing II missiles, 197–98, 202, 206, 208
- Persian Gulf War (1990–91), 244–49
- Philadelphia World Affairs Council (speech, 1985), 219–20
- photographic intelligence, 92, 119, 159
- “Plan Dog” (memorandum), 33
- Poland, 28, 72, 193–94, 196–97, 200, 243
- Polaris submarines, 100, 142, 178
- “Policy for Planning the Employment of Nuclear Weapons” (NSDM-242, 1974), 183
- Policy Planning Staff. See State Department, Policy Planning Staff (S/P)
- “Poodle Blanket” (NSAM-109, 1961), 114–16
- Porter, Elizabeth Scott (wife), 249
- Potsdam Conference (1945), 40
- Powell, Colin, 262
- Pratt, Ruth, 24, 30
- preemptive strike: counterforce capability, 131, 151; first-strike vs., 195; Nitze Scenario, 3, 195–96; option of, 115, 156–57, 181; strategic balance, 129. See also first-strike capability; nuclear policy, US
- “Preparing for Negotiations with the Soviet Union” (NSDD-160, 1985), 218–19
- Present at the Creation (Lovett), 148
- Presidential Directive 58 (1980), 13
- Presidential Medal of Freedom, 223
- President’s Commission on Strategic Forces, 205–6
- preventive war, 89–91
- Project for a New American Century, 258
- Project Lamplight, 93
- Project Nobska, 95–96
- RAND Corporation, 90, 92
- Reagan, Ronald: assassination attempt, 196–97; letter to Gorbachev, 225–26, 227; N as link to Truman, 188–90, 205, 211; Nitze’s alignment with, 10–11, 189
- Reagan administration: arms buildup, 204, 210–11; Nitze’s role in, 192–93, 212, 213–14; SDI, 205–8, 229–30; strategic forces commission, 205–6. See also INF talks
- “Recent Soviet Moves” (Nitze study), 66
- “Red Team” exercise, 152
- “Report by the Committee on Nuclear Proliferation” (1965), 133
- Republic of China (Taiwan), 91
- Republican Party, 30, 53, 61, 80, 257
- research and development. See technology
- retaliation. See counterforce strike; second-strike capability
- Revlon, 25
- Reykjavik Summit (1986): agreements, 235, 241; Experts Group, 227, 228; “Monday Package,” 11; reflections on, 14, 227–29
- Rice, Condoleezza, 1, 263
- Richardson, Elliot, 163
- Rise and Fall of the Great Powers (Kennedy), 230
- risk-taking behavior: Soviet Union, 146–47, 162, 164, 171–72, 173; strength as deterrent, 13, 67–68, 108, 110–11, 120–21
- RISOP (Red Integrated Strategic Offensive Plan), 188
- Roberts, Chalmers, 99
- Rockefeller Foundation, 96
- Rockefeller, Nelson, 29, 35, 36
- Roosevelt, Franklin D. (FDR), 20, 30, 40
- Roosevelt administration: hemispheric defense, 34–35; national security approach, 32–33; New Deal, 24; war and defense preparation, 28–29, 33, 36
- Rostow, Eugene, 189, 197–98, 200, 202–4
- Rostow, Walt, 107, 109, 141
- Rowny, Edward, 219
- Rumsfeld, Donald, 6, 128, 258, 260, 262
- Rusk, Dean, 96, 106, 115, 118–19, 142
- S/P. See State Department, Policy Planning Staff (S/P)
- Safeguard (US missile defense system), 147–48, 150, 153, 157, 224
- SAIS (School of Advanced International Studies): Foreign Affairs Research Center, 106; Foreign Policy Institute, 92; founding and mission, 6, 81, 83–85; Nitze’s instruction at, 88–89, 96; proximity to power, 100–101, 103; S/P, parallels with, 81, 85, 92, 96; Washington Center of Foreign Policy Research, 96–97
- SALT (Strategic Arms Limitation Talks): early stages, 149–50, 153–54; failure to stop Soviet activity, 162, 164, 173, 213; INF and, 199; Kissinger-Dobrynin back channel, 153, 157, 159; leverage, 133, 192; MIRV ban, 163; Nixon’s goals for, 153, 155; Soviet position, 158; SS-9 missiles and, 151–52, 153; survivability, 159, 163; undersea testing, 140, 141, 164; US delegation, 148, 154; US goals for, 140–43, 152–54, 155; Verification Panel, 155, 158, 160, 162, 163–64; Vienna Option, 157
- SALT I (Interim Agreement, 1972): congressional approval of, 160, 161–62, 165–66; imperfections of, 159–61; Jackson Amendment, 162, 163, 169; Nitze’s opposition to, 146, 149, 182
- SALT II Treaty (1979): opposition to, 162–63, 180, 183, 184–86, 199; original objectives, 161–62, 186; signing and ratification, 180–83, 186–88; Watergate scandal and, 164
- San Antonio formula, 138
- Savage, Carlton, 77
- SBSC. See Strategic Bombing Survey (USSBS)
- Schelling, Thomas, 11, 114, 121
- Schlesinger, Arthur, Jr., 89–91, 164
- Scowcroft, Brent, 165, 205, 241, 242, 245
- Scowcroft Commission, 206–7
- SDI (strategic defense initiative): arms talks and, 205–8, 216, 229; criteria for, 219–20; as destabilizing, 217; importance of, 239; Nitze’s formulas for, 214, 221–22
- second-strike capability, 99, 129, 142, 168
- Securities Act (1933), 24
- “Security Challenges Facing NATO in the 1990s” (Nitze speech), 239–40
- security dilemma, model of, 68
- security studies (academic field), 90
- Selective Service Act (Draft Act, 1940), 29, 35
- Senate, US: Church Committee, 166–67; Committee on Banking and Currency, 24–25; Committee on Foreign Relations, 99–100, 139, 153; Subcommittee on African Affairs, 105
- Senior Arms Control Policy Group, 209
- Sentinel (US missile defense system), 136, 147
- September 11 terrorist attacks (2001), 1, 4, 259, 263, 267
- Shevardnadze, Eduard, 221
- Shultz, George: arms talks, 209, 222, 223–24, 227–30, 235–37; Dobrynin and, 221; Gromyko and, 214, 218; JCS meetings, 232; Nitze, bond with, 208, 211–12, 215, 257; role, Reagan administration, 205, 217, 219
- Sino-Soviet cooperation, 94–95
- SIOP (Single Integrated Operations Plan), 113, 188
- SLBMs (submarine-launched ballistic missiles), 100, 164, 168, 180, 187
- Smith, Gerard, 151, 157, 158, 159, 162
- Sorokin, Pitirim, 27
- Souers, Sidney, 52, 65
- Soviet Union: atomic pursuit, 56, 67; buildup, analysis, 12–13, 133; civil defense system, 94, 158, 172, 176; collapse of, 5, 238, 244–49; coup attempt, 246–47; loss, capacity for, 152, 157–58; political system, 150; Supreme Soviet, 94–95; threat analysis of, 14, 243–44; treaty noncompliance, 215. See also Cold War, end of; Moscow, Russia
- space, 209, 213. See also NST (Nuclear and Space Arms Talks)
- Speer, Albert, 40–41
- Spengler, Oswald (Decline of the West), 26, 27, 58–59, 230
- Sputnik I and II, 98
- SS Lutzo, 19
- SS-9 missiles (Soviet Union), 136, 151–52, 153
- SS-20 missiles (Soviet Union), 197–98
- SS-18 “Satan” missiles (Soviet Union): capabilities, 146–47, 168, 169, 190–91; psychological consequences, 172; US focus on, 182, 244
- stability. See strategic stability
- Stages of Economic Growth (Rostow), 107
- Stalin, Joseph, 40, 79, 92
- Star Wars (defense system). See SDI (strategic defense initiative)
- Star Wars (movie), 7–8, 188
- Stark, Harold, 33
- START (Strategic Arms Reduction Talks): basic formula, 230; Nitze’s advocacy for, 216, 235–36, 239; obstacles, 231–36, 241–42; ratification, 5, 245, 246. See also Experts Group (INF and START negotiations)
- START I, 6, 246
- START II (1993), 248–49, 256–57
- State Department (DOS), Nitze’s early career, 34, 49–53, 66
- State Department, Policy Planning Staff (S/P): deputy director, 56–60; director, 10, 60–63, 78; SDI infighting, 229–30. See also NSC-68 (1950)
- Stevenson, Adlai, 75–77, 85, 91, 96
- Stimson, Henry, 33, 36, 38
- Strategic Air Survey for the Pacific, 59. See also Strategic Bombing Survey (USSBS)
- strategic arms competition. See arms race
- Strategic Arms Reduction Talks. See START (Strategic Arms Reduction Talks)
- Strategic Bombing Survey (USSBS): conclusions, 43–46, 59, 76, 98; creation of, 38–39; Germany, 39–41; Japan, 11, 41–46; Pacific campaign, 108, 128
- strategic concept (Nitze Criteria): central goals, 212–13, 216–17; concerns over, 224; end of, 238; Gorbachev and, 225–27; Midgetman missiles, 231; as negotiating position, 223, 227–29
- strategic forces. See nuclear weapons
- strategic policy. See nuclear policy, US
- strategic stability: CMC as turning point, 126; importance of, 160, 172–77, 179; logic of, 12; 1976 article on, 183–84; nuclear balance and, 10, 129, 159, 175; post-Soviet, 247–48
- strategic superiority, US: after Cold War, 247; credibility of, 11–12; decline of, 12, 110–11, 125–26, 173, 190–91; geopolitical stability, 76, 90–91, 108, 126, 129–32, 144; net assessment on, 193; parity, 152; Soviet buildup, 12–13, 133
- strategic triad, 100, 239. See also heavy bombers; ICBMs (intercontinental ballistic missiles); submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs)
- strength. See deterrence policy; strategic superiority, US
- “Study on Eliminating the Threat Posed by Ballistic Missiles” (NSSD 6–83, 1983), 207
- submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs), 100, 164, 168, 180, 187
- submarines, nuclear, 95–96, 128–29, 150. See also Polaris submarines
- Summary Report (Pacific War), 43–46, 76, 98. See also Strategic Bombing Survey (USSBS)
- Supreme Soviet, 94–95
- survivability: of C2, 182, 186, 196–97; as deterrence, 99, 175–76, 195; nuclear submarines, 128–29
- Sweden, 50, 71
- Symington, Stuart, 53
- Taiwan (Republic of China), 91, 101
- Talbott, Strobe, 210, 230–31, 249–50, 253
- Talinn (Soviet missile defense system), 157
- Taylor, Maxwell, 124, 131
- Team B exercise, 177–78
- technology: Nitze’s study of, 56, 58–59; role in national defense, 48, 93, 95–96
- Teller, Edward, 58
- tension between opposites (concept), 82–83, 113, 167, 265
- Tension between Opposites (Nitze book), 7, 8–9, 253
- terrorism. See September 11 terrorist attacks (2001); war on terror
- Thatcher, Margaret, 217
- theater nuclear forces, 197–98
- theory of international politics, Nitze’s, 7, 8, 9, 35, 81
- think tanks, 81, 92, 96, 241–42
- Thompson, Kenneth, 242
- Thompson, Llewellyn E. (Tommy), 59–60, 72
- Thompson, Nicholas (grandson, biographer), 124, 170, 178, 259
- 303 Committee, 144
- throw weight: criterion for control, 141, 162, 164, 178; INF talks and, 199–200; trends in Soviet-US ratios, 173; Vladivostok formula, 166
- Thurmond, Strom, 128
- Timbie, James, 210
- “To Cap the Volcano” (Bundy article), 156
- Treasury Department, 105
- Treaty Banning Nuclear Weapon Tests in the Atmosphere, Outer Space, and Under Water (1963), 125
- Trinity Test (1945), 58
- Truman, Harry S., 5, 75, 80, 167
- Truman administration, 83, 88; aid to free peoples, 50, 74; budget policies, 55; Cold War policy, 50, 74, 188–89; Fair Deal, 54; hydrogen bomb, 10, 56–62, 65, 71, 76; Marshall Plan, 53, 54; NSC-68 approval, 64
- Tsongas, Paul, 210–11
- Turkey, 121–23, 125, 202
- U-2 spy plane, 92, 119, 123, 124
- UN (United Nations): Atomic Energy Commission, 58, 214, 218, 226; Charter, 55; 1960 conference on disarmament, 101–2; police force, 96
- Undersea Long-Range Missile System (ULMS) and ULMS II, 164
- undersea nuclear testing, 140, 141
- United Kingdom (UK), 50, 56–57, 113, 223–24
- United Nations. See UN (United Nations)
- “United States Objectives and Programs for National Security.” See NSC-68 (1950)
- United States (US). See Central Intelligence Agency (CIA); Defense Department (DOD); FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation); House of Representatives, US; Senate, US; State Department (DOS); Treasury Department
- Ural Mountains, 198, 204, 208
- “US Policy on Military Actions in a Berlin Conflict” (NSAM-109, 1961), 114–16
- USS Pueblo incident (1968), 137–38
- USSBS. See Strategic Bombing Survey (USSBS)
- USSR (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics). See Soviet Union
- Vance, Cyrus, 180, 186–87
- verification: as criterion for control, 141; inspections, 123, 141; mobile missiles, 183, 233; monitoring vs., 187; obstacles, 231, 235; proliferation problem, 118; technicalities of, 169, 185, 223; test limitations, 110
- Verification Panel, 155, 158, 160, 162, 163–64. See also SALT (Strategic Arms Limitation Talks)
- Vienna Option (1970), 157. See also SALT (Strategic Arms Limitation Talks)
- Vienna Summit, Kennedy-Khrushchev (1961), 110–11
- Vienna talks, 158, 210, 228
- Vietnam War (1954–1975), 89, 134–35, 138–39, 143, 148, 159
- Vladivostok formula (1974), 166, 183
- Vladivostok Summit (1975), 182–83
- Wagenfuhr, Rolf, 40
- walk in the woods, Nitze-Kvitsinsky (1982), 192, 202–5, 211. See also INF (Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces) Treaty (1987)
- Wall Street (New York City), 22–26, 27, 50, 51, 68
- Wallace, Henry, 34
- “war aims” paper (NSC-79), 64, 79, 80, 90, 245, 247
- war on terror, 256–59, 260–61, 263, 267. See also September 11 terrorist attacks (2001)
- Warnke, Paul, 174, 178
- Warsaw Pact, 124, 201, 215, 243, 257. See also Czechoslovakia, Soviet invasion of (1968); Poland
- Washington Ambassadorial Group, 114–15
- Washington Center of Foreign Policy Research (FPR), 96–97
- Washington, DC, Nitze’s early career, 28–29, 32–33
- Washington Post, Gaither Report in, 99
- Washington Summit (1987), 230
- Watergate scandal (1972), 163–66, 167
- Webb, James, 59
- Weinberger, Caspar, 198, 212, 214–15, 221–22
- Western Europe. See Europe
- “Why Nuclear Superiority Doesn’t Matter” (Jervis article), 190
- Wiesner, Jerome, 93
- Wilson, Charles, 79
- Winthrop, Frederick (Freddie), Jr., 20
- Wohlsetter, Albert, 100, 140, 148
- Wolfers, Arnold, 96, 100
- Wolfowitz, Paul, 148, 257–58, 259, 260–61
- World Bank, 137, 147
- World War I (WWI), 1, 17, 183–84
- World War II (WWII), 33–38, 41, 62–63. See also Strategic Bombing Survey (USSBS)
- World War III (WWIII), 70, 91