The Origins of SDI, 19441983
Donald R. Baucom
296 pages, 16 photographs, 6 x 9
Modern War Studies
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1100-3, $19.95
Most people think Star Wars was
Reagan's idea, but its roots reach decades farther back. Military
historian Don Baucom traces them to the dawn of the atomic age
in 1944.
In this first scholarly account of the origins of SDI, Baucom
brings together the political, technological, and strategic forces
that have shaped the history of ballistic missile defenses from
World War II to the present day. He chronicles major technological
developments and shows how SDI emerged in 1983 from the technological
and strategic legacies of the ICBM, ABM, SALT, and SAFEGUARD
programs.
Surprisingly, Baucom concludes that arms control was the primary
impetus for Star Wars. He argues that the SDI program grew out
of Reagan's desire to see the country defended against nuclear
attack, his strong faith in technology, his concern about the
impact of Soviet SS-18 missiles, and most importantly, his realization
that the policy of offensive nuclear deterrence was increasingly
unpopular.
The Origins of SDI is not an evaluation of the Star
Wars program. Instead, it is both the story of a policy and a
case study of presidential decision making. Baucom bases his
conclusions on historical research as well as interviews with
the participants in the decision making process. As a result,
he provides both the broad historical context for the emergence
of Star Wars program and an insider's account, unique in its
level of detail, of presidential decision making and the search
for consensus.
"This book is more than just an analysis of the events
leading up to President Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative.
It is a remarkably well-informed and clearly written account
of ballistic missile defense in the whole post-war period. I
think anyone interested in the history of American nuclear weapons
policy will find this book very much worth reading."--Marc
Trachtenberg, author of History and Strategy
"Baucom has done some real spade work and has come up
with the most thorough and most accurate version of events that
I've seen-or the closest we are likely to get for some time."--Gregg
Herken, author of The Counsels of War and The Winning
Weapon: The Atomic Bomb in the Cold War
"This work will take its place as a standard and important
reference work in the field."--Stephen J. Cimbala,
author of The Technology, Strategy, and Politics of SDI
DONALD R. BAUCOM received his Ph.D. in history from
the University of Oklahoma in 1976 and is currently the historian
for the Strategic Defense Initiative Organization. During twenty-eight
years as an officer in the U.S. Air Force he completed tours
as a communications-electronics officer in Spain and Thailand;
taught military history and a course on the interaction between
science, technology, and warfare at the U.S. Air Force Academy;
taught military history and strategy at the Air War College;
and edited the Air University Review. He has also been
an associate historian for the Space Station History Project
at NASA Headquarters. He retired from the Air Force in 1990.
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