By J. Mathers

This paintings makes vast use of Soviet resources to supply an entire research of Moscow's ballistic missile defence coverage, from its origins to post-Soviet advancements. It considers the Soviets' motivations for pursuing an anti-ballistic missile strength and the level in their good fortune, and divulges that ballistic missile defence coverage used to be utilized by each political management from Krushchev to Yeltsin as a way of sending signs approximately Moscow's intentions to the West.

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Extra info for The Russian Nuclear Shield from Stalin to Yeltsin (St. Antony's Series)

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32 A stronger argument in support of BMD is contained in a devastating review of the 1962 edition of Military Strategy, in which the criticism ‘We Can Hit a Fly in Outer Space’ 27 was based in part on the author’s assertion that the book paid insufficient attention to strategic defence. Writing in the General Staff journal Voenno-Istoricheskii Zhurnal, A. 34 During the late 1950s and early 1960s the technical feasibility of missile defences was evaluated positively in Soviet military publications.

Concentrating the country’s defence effort onto nuclear weapons, which promised very high political as well as military returns, no doubt appeared by far more cost-effective than the maintenance of the full panoply of conventional forces spread across several services and including a large standing army. 18 The research and development programmes for nuclear missiles – and also missile defences – were therefore shielded from the defence cuts that Khrushchev announced in January 1960, and that he repeatedly attempted to impose on the armed forces, until very late in the period.

12 The resources allocated to defence under the Eighth Five-Year Plan were nearly double those of the previous period, while the military budget rose a further 60 per cent in the Ninth Five-Year Plan,13 and every service of the armed forces benefited. An accelerated development and deployment of ICBMs began in the summer of 1966, which rapidly doubled and then quadrupled the number of Soviet long-range missiles. The Soviets also continued to develop their air- and sea-based delivery systems during the second half of the 1960s.

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