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The study of surprise attacks

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 October 2009

Extract

During the years following the Second World War, intensive research was undertaken on the subject of response to threat. Confronted with the baffling yet recurrent inability of nations to respond adequately to warnings of an impending attack, many scholars concentrated on such events as the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour and the outbreak of the Korean War, and produced a voluminous empirical literature, as well as a considerably meagre body of theoretically oriented works. Thus alongside the plethora of works that sought explanations solely in terms of certain specific conditions operating at the time of the event analyzed, a few other inquiries attempted to integrate the case under scrutiny into a broader theoretical context in order to better elucidate the patterns by which nations cope with situations of crisis and threat.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British International Studies Association 1979

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References

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page 134 note 1 See, for example, Hoist, op. cit.; Whaley, op. cit.; Handel, op. cit., and Shlaim, Avi, ‘Failures in National Intelligence Estimates: The Case of the Yom Kippur War,’ World Politics, xxviii (1976), pp. 348380CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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page 140 note 2 George and Smoke, op. cit. p. 176.

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page 141 note 4 Klein, op. cit. p. 132.

page 141 note 5 Herzog, op. cit. p. 53.

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page 143 note 1 Brenner, M. J., ‘Bureaucratic Politics in Foreign Policy,’ Armed Forces and Society, ii (1976), p. 331Google Scholar. See also Stein, ‘Freud and Descartes,’ op. cit, p. 444.

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page 144 note 2 Wohlstetter 3 Pearl Harbor, op, cit. pp. 322–323.

page 145 note 1 George and Smoke, op. cit. p. 172.

page 145 note 2 Ibid.

page 145 note 3 Ibid., p. 155. See also Hammond, P. Y., ‘NSC-68: Prologue to Rearmament,’ in Schilling, W. R., Hammond, P. W. and Snyder, G. H. (eds.), Strategy, Politics, and Defense Budgets (New York, 1962), pp. 271278Google Scholar.

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page 146 note 1 Ibid. p. 166.

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page 147 note 1 Schiff, op. cit. p. 41; Herzog, op. cit. p. 52; Handel, op. cit. pp. 51–52.

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page 147 note 4 Schiff, op. cit. pp. 50–52; Herzog, op. cit. p. 72.

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page 148 note 2 Ben-Zvi, Abraham, ‘The Outbreak and Termination of the Pacific War: A Juxtaposition of American Preconceptions,’ Journal of Peace Research, xv (1978), pp. 4344Google Scholar

page 148 note 3 R. Tanter andJ. G. Stein, ‘Surprise Attacks and Intelligence Estimation’ (forthcoming).

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page 148 note 5 Jervis, Perception and Misperception, op. cit. p. 417: Shlaim, op. cit. p. 375.