Deterrence

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Revision as of 19:16, 5 December 2008 by imported>Howard C. Berkowitz (New page: '''Deterrence''' is a set of actions or positions that persuade an opponent not to take some action. While its most common usage is in military and political strategy, its roots are in [[g...)
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Deterrence is a set of actions or positions that persuade an opponent not to take some action. While its most common usage is in military and political strategy, its roots are in game theory. The opposite, and less commonly discussed approach is compellence, a set of actions that forces an adversary to take some action.

Legal context

Restraining orders are deterrence mechanisms implemented through courts.

Mutual assured destruction

Perhaps the most famous, or infamous, deterrence strategy apparently succeeded in preventing nuclear warfare between the Soviet Union and the United States. Mutual assured destruction, with the rather appropriate acronym MAD, required each side to have a sufficiently invulnerable set of nuclear weapons, such that any conceivable attack by one side would leave the other with enough weapons to do unacceptable damage to the original attacker.