Supreme Emergency: How Britain Lives with the Bomb
By (Author) Andrew Corbett
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
15th February 2022
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Military and defence strategy
European history
Politics and government
355.02170941
Hardback
272
Width 138mm, Height 216mm, Spine 16mm
458g
In Supreme emergency, an ex-Trident submarine captain considers the evolution of UK nuclear deterrence policy and the implications of a previously unacknowledged aversion to military strategies that threaten civilian casualties. Drawing on extensive archival research, the book provides a unique synthesis of the factors affecting British nuclear policy decision-making and draws parallels between government debates about reprisals for First World War zeppelin raids on London, the strategic bombing raids of the Second World War and the evolution of the UK nuclear deterrent. It concludes that among all the technical factors, an aversion to being seen to condone civilian casualties has inhibited government engagement with the public on deterrence strategy since 1915.
'As someone who went from the teenager carrying the "Ban the Bomb" poster to being in charge of Britains nuclear deterrent and the worlds biggest nuclear alliance, I know more than most about the heat of the nuclear deterrence debate. Andrew Corbett, as a former Trident submarine commander, knows the debate from another angle. In this fascinating and intriguing account of one of humanitys most important issues, he gives unique policy clarity and poses difficult questions for policy makers.'
Lord George Robertson, former Secretary of State for Defence and Secretary General of NATO
'Since the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons was adopted in 2017, there has been no extensive debate about this in the United Kingdom. As Andrew Corbett argues incisively and persuasively, a comprehensive discussion of this extremely complex issue is needed, in which the ethical dimensions must be addressed. This is too serious a business to be left to governments alone!'
Beatrice Heuser, Professor of International Relations, University of Glasgow
Andrew Corbett is a Teaching Fellow with the Defence Studies Department of Kings College London