Weapons of Mass Destruction: The No-Nonsense Guide to Nuclear, Chemical and Biological Weapons Today
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Average customer review:Product Description
Within 10 years a nuclear warhead will devastate a major city.
This is not a movie outline, but the sober consensus among intelligence analysts.
Our vulnerability to attack by weapons of mass destruction has never been greater. The Cold War may be over, but every day rogue regimes and developing superpowers are building up arsenals of chemical, biological, and nuclear arms. While everything from anthrax to botulism to dirty bombs poses a threat, most of us are ignorant of the clear and present danger. Get to "know thy enemy" with this overview of the current world situation, written by a journalist specializing in defense issues. From the mustard gas of World War I to the mushroom clouds of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, to Hussein's gassing of Iraqui Kurds, review the methodology and motivation behind historic attacks. Riveting accounts of the current crisis--from terrorist access to discarded stockpiles of deadly germs, to the potentially lethal nuclear one-upmanship between India and Pakistan, to North Korea's renewed commitment to proliferation--make it clear that long after the Iraq situation is resolved, weapons of mass destruction will remain a threat to our national security and world stability.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1870077 in Books
- Published on: 2004-06
- Format: Bargain Price
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 304 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
'The list is endless, the facts mind-boggling, the potential horror terrifying - a compelling page-turner.' GUN MART (Nov 2003) 'The book is both historical and analytical ... [the author] admits that his book makes 'grim reading' but however grim it describes the world we live in, the evils we have to fight.' CONTEMPORARY REVIEW (June 2003) 'A timely and shocking book that retraces the grim history of weapons of mass destruction. Roert Hutchinson cuts through the technical jargon to explain why these weapons, be they nuclear, biological or chemical, pose such a deadly threat to us all - today more than ever ... An astonishing book that offers a real glimpse of Pandora's Box.' ***** ('essential') EYE SPY 'Book of the Month', issue 17 'Hutchinson paints an alarming picture of just how the world could end... The book offers a good overall history of the subject... and provides some splendid nuggets of oddity... A good, readable guide to a very unpleasant subject' FORTEAN TIMES (July 2003)
About the Author
Robert Hutchinson is a leading defence analyst, formerly of Jane's Information Group and the Press Association. He is an advisor to a number of parliamentary committees.
Customer Reviews
Interesting & Useful
This short volume spends a good deal of its space on the BACKGROUND and DEVELOPMENT (including missile technology) of WMD since the end of WW2. I suppose this makes sense since one can easily find fairly reliable info on CURRENT ARSENALS from the internet (the "Nuclear Notebook" of the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists immediately comes to mind). This sort of data change all the time.
One figure from this book strikes me: Britain's total nuclear arsenal - all in SLBM's - have a combined yield of just 19 MT. (p. 122) Compare this with China's total: 530 MT. (p. 124) However, one must keep in mind the high-survivability of a first strike of the former, something China still lags behind. China has no SSBM's in operation, according to Hutchinson. (This is well known.) How can China see itself as a superpower? And to think some Americans see China as a future threat!
The following are chapter headings: 1. Dr Strangelove Lives! 2. Thunder from the Sky 3. Dawn of Deterrence 4. A Terrible Mushroom Cloud 5. Delivering the Hand of God 6. Missile Proliferation 7. The Last Ditch Defence 8. Awakening from the Nuclear Nightmare 9. Man's Inhumanity to Man - Chemical Weapons 10. Unlocking Pandora's Box - Biological Weapons Glossary Bibliography
This book has no appendixes. (Worse it lacks an index - something I consider essential in any book of this type.) This book's emphasis seems to be on nuclear rather than chem or bio weapons.
For those who enjoy a HISTORICAL tour of WMD, this book is standard fare. For those who are interested in the technical description of WMD (i.e., info that are de-classified and thus available to the public), you'd do well to look elsewhere. As for the author's credentials, I take his competence for granted since he comes from Jane's.
Overall, interesting and useful.
Fascinating, eloquent overview of nuclear weapon history
Despite the depressing subject matter and the dry title, the author (Robert Hutchinson) has created a highly readable account of nuclear weapon history. The subtitle, "The no-nonsense guide to nuclear, chemical and biological weapons today," is a bit of a misnomer. The book mostly covers the development of nuclear bombs/warheads and their delivery systems. Only one chapter each is devoted to chemical and biological weapons, respectively. This emphasis parallels the military's own probable reliance on these various weapon systems. (Chemical and biological weapons alone rarely have decisive effects on the battlefield.) The book is not a reference guide, but a truly intriguing look at man's inherent insecurity and his irresistible attraction to harness the destructive forces of the universe.
Although I read quite a lot about military history, the book revealed many little-publicized systems and nuclear close-calls. For instance, the Soviets developed a 'dead-hand' computerized launch system, so that if the Soviet (now Russian) leadership was killed in a sudden pre-emptive first strike then Russian ICBMs would launch automatically. (Gee, I hope those Russian computers don't crash their hard drives.) Both Soviets/Russians and Americans (32 Pentagon-confirmed) have had some startlingly close-calls in accidental nuclear weapons detonation or launching!
Also, the Soviets spent huge sums on developing an anti-ballistic missile (ABM) system to shield the Soviet leadership in Moscow. While the Americans did the same to protect their own ICBM fields. Interestingly enough, neither side felt it imperative to try to shield their own cities from nuclear destruction. (Which begs the question: If all your cities are destroyed in a nuclear attack, then what is the point of maintaining a national leadership? There would be no people left to govern! Such is the logic of nuclear game theory.)
The book's chapters cover: Cold War nuclear weapons and strategy, cruise missile and ICBM development, survey of nuclear delivery systems (especially missiles), nuclear weapon effects/tactics/response, nuclear missile proliferation, ABM and launch command systems, efforts to reduce nuclear proliferation, chemical weapons types/usage/covert dumping, and biological weapons. It also mentions the 'doomsday bomb', which the Soviets developed to ensure the complete uninhabitability of planet Earth for millenia, just in case they found themselves on the losing end of a nuclear war.
I heartily recommend this book to anyone remotely interested in the Cold War or nuclear weapons history. Hutchinson has a superb writing style. Just a few minor complaints: chapters could be subdivided and better organized, add tables listing the weapons and their comparative attributes, more photos. (My 2004 edition has a decent bibliography and index.)
An average book
I really do not like it when a book has a title which does not reflect what the book is about. The book states that it is a "no-nonsense guide to nuclear, chemical and biological weapons today". I would say that about 2/3 of this book is a history of these weapon systems starting from WW1 before it starts to talk about the situation today, which is about 2000.
Having said that the book itself is an average history on this topic. No major insights. The information is available in many other books too.
The current stuff, is so brief there is nothing that a decent scan though the internet could not produce just as good. Although I am sure since the book been published the writer would have changed some of his comments now.
