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From MAD to Madness: Inside Pentagon Nuclear War Planning Paperback – December 14, 2016
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length300 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateDecember 14, 2016
- Dimensions6 x 0.75 x 9 inches
- ISBN-109780997287097
- ISBN-13978-0997287097
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now.
Editorial Reviews
Review
"Johnstone, who was there, depicts the thinking inside the Pentagon -- and the thinking is sheer insanity..." -- David Swanson, War Is a Lie
About the Author
Diana Johnstone is a former European editor of In These Times and press officer of the Green group in the European Parliament from 1990 to 1996. She is the author of The Politics of Euromissiles, Fools' Crusade and Queen of Chaos: The Misadventures of Hillary Clinton.. She lives in Paris.
Product details
- ASIN : 0997287098
- Publisher : Clarity Press, Inc. (December 14, 2016)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 300 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9780997287097
- ISBN-13 : 978-0997287097
- Item Weight : 1.05 pounds
- Dimensions : 6 x 0.75 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,759,427 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #986 in Military Policy (Books)
- #1,539 in Nuclear Weapons & Warfare History (Books)
- #1,821 in War & Peace (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book readable and relevant to today's geopolitics. They appreciate the author's insights and consider it an essential resource for scholars studying nuclear war planning. The book is described as a memoir about the author's experiences in helping plan nuclear wars.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book readable. They say it's a worthwhile read for anyone interested in the historical aspects of the Cold War. The memoir is described as superb.
"The Fog of Cold War. The superb memoir, From MAD to Madness, penned by Paul Johnstone shortly before his death in 1981, is as relevant today as..." Read more
"...Still, a worthy read for whoever is interested in the historical point of view." Read more
"good researched book" Read more
Customers find the book relevant to today's geopolitics. They say it provides valuable insights into nuclear war planning and is indispensable for scholars. The book is a biography about the author's experience helping plan the first nuclear war.
"...That relevance is inescapable, because it is laid out with considerable insight in a preface and a postscript by Johnstone’s daughter, Diana...." Read more
"...This book is primarily a biography about the author's experience in helping to -seemingly accidentally-- participate in shaping what we now call the..." Read more
"...While these are events thirty to sixty years ago the relevance to today's geopolitics is stunning...." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on April 19, 2017The Fog of Cold War.
The superb memoir, From MAD to Madness, penned by Paul Johnstone shortly before his death in 1981, is as relevant today as it was during the period that it chronicles. 1949-1969. That was the initial period of the first Cold War when Paul Johnstone served in the Pentagon and when the world trembled as the Berlin Wall Crisis and the Cuban Missile Crises unfolded. It was during that time that the term Mutual Assured Destruction (MAD) was coined to describe the nuclear balance of terror between the US and USSR, a balance that hangs over our heads to this very day. Johnstone headed groups that decided the targets to be struck should that Cold War turn hot and helped design the configuration of the unholy nuclear Triad that would attack. Now that we have entered a period which Russian scholar Stephen F. Cohen calls the New Cold War with Russia, Johnstone’s experience is highly instructive. The book is in fact indispensible for scholars of “nuclear war planning,” an odious phrase, but one which is all too much with us. In fact some of what Johnstone wrote is included in the Pentagon Papers.
But the issues that Johnstone raises are relevant not only for scholars, but for each and every one of us since our very existence hangs by a thread increasingly frayed by the incessant anti-Russia drumbeat in our media. Johnstone’s first hand account of decisions during the Cold War shows how ineptly they were made, due to human limitations for getting at the truth and to the obstacles vested interests place in the way. The limited ability of intelligence agencies to ferret out the truth necessarily gives rise to what we might call a fog of Cold War. One of the best ways to appreciate how perilous this renders our existence is to read Johnstone’s depiction of how conclusions were reached and decisions were made back then.
That relevance is inescapable, because it is laid out with considerable insight in a preface and a postscript by Johnstone’s daughter, Diana. Diana Johnstone, a journalist residing in Paris, a frequent commenter on French and U.S. Politics and formerly a Green representative in the EU Parliament is also the author of The Politics of Euromissiles (1984), Greens in the European Parliament - A New Sense of Purpose for Europe (1994), Fool’s Crusade: Yugoslavia, NATO and Western Delusions (2003), and Queen of Chaos: The Misadventures of Hillary Clinton (2015). Obviously father inspired daughter. In addition, Paul Craig Roberts’s Foreword adds a further dimension to the book since he worked with some of Paul Johnstone’s colleagues of the period and inside the Reagan cabinet when the first Cold War finally came to an end.
Two major contributions of this work stand out. First the danger we face today is even greater than the one we faced in the first Cold War. As Diana Johnstone points out, the collapse of the USSR took us abruptly back to the period between Hiroshima and 1949 when the US had unrivalled power and was often on the brink of using nuclear weapons in an attempt to destroy the USSR and China, a holocaust beyond imagination. Then, when the USSR unexpectedly exploded its first nuclear bomb on August 29, 1949, a balance of nuclear terror replaced the U.S. monopoly on it. When that period of balance came to an end with the collapse of the USSR, the U.S. reverted to the pre-1949 position of sole “superpower” and this led to the doctrine of Paul Wolfowitz and his fellow neoconservatives that the U.S. could and must remain forever in that globally dominant position. And so the idea of using nuclear weapons to preserve the hegemonic status quo gained new currency at that moment. Now the idea floats about again that perhaps the U.S. can assert control of the planet by developing the capacity for a knockout First Strike if only it can invent that lucrative will-o'-the-wisp, an ABM system that actually works. The MAD doctrine that gave rise to the maxim that “nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought,” articulated by Robert McNamara, John F. Kennedy and Nikita Khrushchev may now be in peril, Diana Johnstone instructs us. The US is at present suffering from a hangover of the decade of America as sole superpower, the 1990s, even though the world is no longer America’s oyster.
Second, the failure of national “intelligence” and the frail reeds upon which that “intelligence” is based are all too apparent in Paul Johnstone’s work. The conclusions reached by the intelligence community are shaped by beliefs and prejudices to which mere facts are subservient. And in addition all too often relevant facts are unattainable. To this we must add the prejudices that grow out of greed or lust for power or the interests of an “ally.” This is clear when we remember that the “intelligence” agencies told us that there were WMD in Iraq or that Iraq was behind 9/11 or now without a shred of evidence that Putin is determining the outcome of U.S. and European elections and somehow hypnotizing Donald J. Trump into subservience. Simply put, Johnstone’s book shows us in detail why the “intelligence” agencies are not to be believed sans convincing evidence. For even when they do not lie outright, they regularly do not have the capacity to get to the truth. So when making existential decisions we are frequently running on empty. The only way forward is to abandon the notion that we can make such existential decisions in a rational way and to get rid of the WMD that can all too easily take us from MAD to madness and on to Armageddon. And one of the best ways to understand that is to read Johnstone’s account of how such decisions were made during the last Cold War. For, unfortunately, it does not appear that much has changed.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 11, 2024The author makes a good point about why organizations seem to stumble into odd dilemas. It's not that our experts and leaders are idiots. It's more elementary than that. It's like we're still a bunch of primates in the trees reading each other's expression to gather the best clue of what to do when an unexpected threat appears. Yikes!! I've seen it around me in top management... suspected it occured in our response to particular geopolitical events and have now blandly accepted it as the most likely explanation for the brinkmanship policies taking place in hotspots around the world.
This book is primarily a biography about the author's experience in helping to -seemingly accidentally-- participate in shaping what we now call the atomic age and our military stance within it. Like the stories you might read as to how large power companies stumbled into building their nuclear power plants boondoggles... through a process of vague decision making and total lack of understanding from top management as to what they were committing to... this same foggy thinking seems to have epitomized America's nuclear arms race. Maybe in the year 3,000 future anthropologists and AI based psychoanalytic insights will point to who and what military think-tank's flawed reasoning led the world into WWIII. Until then, I'll just presume it'll be caused by poorly formulated presumptions and unchallenged reasoning from our leaders and their 'experts' that gets us there. This books in rich in insights, but first and foremost, this author seems to be warning us that our downfall will come from human nature... and is likely inevitable.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 1, 2017The perspective afforded the reader regarding America's stewardship of the nuclear weapon's arsenal by this insightful and authoritative author couldn't be any more timely. While these are events thirty to sixty years ago the relevance to today's geopolitics is stunning. This is insider information affording a window into the decision process as well as the unedited history of our Pentagon and civilian nuclear history allowing the reader to understand issues impossible for the best investigative journalism to uncover. I recommend this book for all citizen;s wanting to enhance their critical thinking regarding our nuclear policies and arsenal.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 6, 2018Ok, but could have been better. I think the issue with all books on this topic is that there is no broadly available declassified files on the actual war plans or policies at the time. This book is no different, with the author recounting the story from his own point of view based on his first had experience of being an analyst at the time.
Still, a worthy read for whoever is interested in the historical point of view.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 1, 2017good researched book
