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Normalizing the Atomic Bomb

Normalizing the Atomic Bomb Nuclear Counterproliferation and the Making of a Doctrine

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SpringerBriefs in International Relations

Normalizing the Atomic Bomb

Nuclear Counterproliferation and the Making of a Doctrine

Eric Chauvistré

Political Science / Public Policy / Military Policy

This book contends that a pivotal effort to challenge the presumed uniqueness of the atomic bomb emerged with the United States’ adoption of the counterproliferation doctrine in 1993. For the first time, U.S. armed forces were explicitly tasked with preparing for limited wars against nuclear‑armed adversaries—an approach that marked a profound shift in how nuclear weapons were conceptualized.

Building on an extensive review of U.S. government documents that defined and shaped the doctrine, the book also draws on interviews conducted shortly after its launch with senior analysts and officials directly involved in its development. Together, these sources offer an unparalleled view into the doctrine’s origins, rationale, and internal debates.

In addition to tracing the doctrine’s evolution, the book situates it within its broader historical moment. It examines the academic and foreign‑policy discussions of the early 1990s that influenced the doctrine’s emergence and assesses the extent to which it reshaped strategic thinking inside the Pentagon. The analysis shows that, despite fostering a new mindset, the doctrine ultimately failed to achieve its core promise of improving U.S. military preparedness for limited wars against nuclear‑armed opponents.

The book concludes that—even amid dramatic shifts in global power dynamics over the past three decades—early understandings of the atomic bomb as a uniquely devastating and fundamentally undefendable weapon remain compelling. Yet the counterproliferation doctrine left an enduring imprint: by asserting that wars against nuclear‑armed states are winnable and that the effects of nuclear weapons can be contained, it helped normalize the atomic bomb in U.S. strategic thought.

Eric Chauvistré is a professor of journalism studies at Magdeburg-Stendal University of Applied Sciences. He holds a PhD in international relations from the Free University of Berlin and has published extensively on a broad range of questions related to nuclear weapon proliferation and force projection. For nearly two decades, he worked as a news editor, reporter, and analyst with major German news outlets, focusing on military-political affairs.

He is the author of Wir Gutkrieger: Warum die Bundeswehr im Ausland scheitern wird (published in 2009) and The implications of IAEA inspections under Security Council resolution 687 (a study for the United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research, published in 1992).


Publication Date: 28 July 2026
Publisher: Springer Nature Switzerland
Imprint: Springer
ISBN-13: 9783032279743
Format: Paperback / softback
Page Count: 149

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