Russia Likely Has At Least 10,000 Tactical Nuclear Weapons
What about the possibility of nuclear weapons being developed for the specific purpose of “being used?”
Kris Osborn · March 14, 2025
By Kris Osborn, President, Warrior, Center for Military Modernization
Would any use of nuclear weapons, in any capacity or tactical circumstances, invariably lead to massive global destruction? Or is there conceptual space for a military commander to actual envision a “winnable” or “limited” nuclear exchange? This is indeed an intensely debated and critical question informing US deterrence posture, and it has at times in history led US leaders to proclaim that any use of nuclear weapons, in any circumstances, should be met with the Eisenhower-era promise of “massive retaliation.” This is no longer a formal US policy, yet the question of potential “response” to a Russian use of nuclear weapons has in recent years been again thrust into a spotlight of danger. Warrior training programs
Ultimately, the foundation of nuclear deterrence rests upon a paradox, meaning it introduces the promise of massive, catastrophic death and destruction …. for the sole purpose of “keeping the peace.” This concept, and the fundamental juxtaposition or irony it involves, was famously articulated during the dawn of the Nuclear Era by Yale Scholar Bernard Brodie. Brodie makes the clear, unambiguous point that, unlike the prevailing approach throughout human history, weapons in the nuclear realm will be built and deployed for the specific purpose of “NOT” being used. A weapon … to not be used .. may seem like a contradiction in terms, yet the premise is the conceptual foundation of strategic deterrence.
https://warriormaven.com/nucleacast-future/russia-likely-has-at-least-10000-tactical-nuclear-weapons