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January 28, 2008

Albert Wohlstetter's Writings (1980-1989)

The Bibliography Project. This latest installment provides a partial list of Albert Wohlstetter's published (and a few unpublished) writings from 1980 to 1989.

The 1980s marked Wohlstetter's fourth decade in the field of nuclear-age strategy. Although he had already passed the age of retirement (December 1980 marked his 67th birthday), he nonetheless chose to remain active throughout the decade both as an outside adviser to decision-makers in the US government and as a public intellectual of national security affairs.

Wohlstetter, in his capacity as a public intellectual, continued to stake out controversial positions in fierce national debates over the direction of America's nuclear and non-nuclear strategy. In particular, in the pages of Commentary he critiqued the logic and conclusions of the American Catholic bishops' 1983 pastoral letter on war and peace in the nuclear age; and in the pages of Foreign Affairs and The National Interest he sparred with opponents of qualitative improvements to America's nuclear arsenal and delivery vehicles.

Moreover, in his capacity as an outside adviser to the US government, Wohlstetter not only made contributions in policy analysis to, but also was honored by, the Reagan administration.

To begin with, early in the decade he and his colleagues at PAN Heuristics completed a series of studies on various Persian Gulf contingencies for the US Department of Defense. One contingency that these 1980/1981 studies considered was of an invasion of Kuwait by Ba'athist Iraq.

In November 1985 both Albert and Roberta Wohlstetter were awarded by President Ronald Reagan the Medal of Freedom, America's highest civilian honor. (During the same award ceremony, Reagan also awarded the Medal of Freedom to Paul H. Nitze.)

And in the mid-to-late 1980s, Albert and Fred C. Iklé (who at the time was the Undersecretary of Defense for Policy) co-chaired the Commission on Integrated Long-Term Strategy (CILTS), the mandate of which was to reassess America's approach to foreign policy and propose "adjustments to US military strategy in view of a changing security environment in the decades ahead."

The membership of Commission drew from a wide range of bipartisan expertise:

The Commission's final report, Discriminate Deterrence, was released in January 1988, and was received in the US and Western Europe with a mixture of support and opposition.

Albert Wohlstetter's Writings (1980-1989)

Posted by Robert on January 28, 2008 6:00 PM