Why Nuclear Deterrence is Key: America and its Allies Came Close to Launching Nuclear Strikes on China, North Korea and the Soviet Union Before They Could Retaliate
The threats North Korea faced before completing its nuclear deterrent were far from unprecedented, and as early as 1945 the Pentagon had planned for nuclear strikes against 66 Soviet cities using 204 nuclear warheads, which Britain in particular had persistently lobbied for to prevent the USSR from developing its own nuclear bomb.171 The Soviets achieved such a capability six years earlier than expected, which was key to deterring use of nuclear weapons either against their country or against neighboring China during the Korean War.
Subsequently in the 1960s conventional and nuclear attacks on China were seriously considered by the John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson administrations, and were widely advocated in the West to prevent the country from developing a nuclear deterrent. As summarized by U.S. Naval War College Professor Lyle J. Goldstein: “Infiltration, sabotage, invasion by Chinese Nationalists, maritime blockades, South Korean invasion of North Korea, conventional air attacks on nuclear facilities, and the use of tactical nuclear weapons on selected targets” were among the means considered to destabilize China and set back its nuclear development. These attack plans mirrored the widespread calls in the West up to late 2017 either for a limited “bloody nose” strike to set back North Korean weapons development, or for what lawmakers referred to as an “an all out war against the regime” intended “to take the regime completely down.”
Extract from A. B. Abrams’ new book Surviving the Unipolar Era:
North Korea's 35 Year Standoff with the United States (pp. 266-267).

====
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Surviving the Unipolar Era: North Korea's 35 Year Standoff with the United StatesShow full title
By A.B. Abrams
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On June 29, 1950, the U.S. launched its first ever air strikes on the North Korean capital, Pyongyang, marking the start of what would become the longest conflict in history between two industrial powers. Four decades later, the end of the Cold War in 1989 and the disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991 marked the beginning of a new phase of the conflict, with a new unipolar world order centered on the power of the U.S. and Western world leaving North Korea in unprecedented isolation. Now unsupported in its fight against a Western superpower intent on its destruction, the small but technologically adept and heavily militarized East Asian state would need to adopt more radical measures to ensure its security. Over the next 35 years, the conflict would transform from a period of North Korean decline in the face of tremendous economic and military pressure, to one of an ascent in its power and decline in the West as international order evolved past the unipolar era
Surviving the Unipolar Era elucidates the conflict’s transformation, beginning with unprecedented U.S.-led efforts to achieve North Korea’s total collapse and elimination through maximum pressure, and ending three decades later with a subsiding of Pyongyang’s international isolation and the modernization of its economy, armed forces and nuclear deterrent. A. B. Abrams highlights how the small state has been able to hold its own in multiple standoffs with the world’s superpower, successfully weather economic sanctions, and prevent penetration of its information space, and the implications that this has had for the country, the region and the wider world. He details the strong consistency in American objectives, and the evolution of consensus across five separate administrations on how these should be pursued as the circumstances of the conflict transformed. In the context of prevailing geopolitical, economic and security trends, Abrams projects the future course of the conflict including aspects such as Western difficulties coming to terms with North Korea’s ascent, U.S. policy priorities going forward, and the growing opportunities that an emerging new global cold war is likely to provide Pyongyang.
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Surviving the Unipolar Era: North Korea's 35 Year Standoff with the United States Paperback – 1 January 2025
by A B Abrams (Author)
On June 29, 1950, the U.S. launched its first ever air strikes on the North Korean capital, Pyongyang, marking the start of what would become the longest conflict in history between two industrial powers. Four decades later, the end of the Cold War in 1989 and the disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991 marked the beginning of a new phase of the conflict, with a new unipolar world order centered on the power of the U.S. and Western world leaving North Korea in unprecedented isolation. Now unsupported in its fight against a Western superpower intent on its destruction, the small but technologically adept and heavily militarized East Asian state would need to adopt more radical measures to ensure its security. Over the next 35 years, the conflict would transform from a period of North Korean decline in the face of tremendous economic and military pressure, to one of an ascent in its power and decline in the West as international order evolved past the unipolar era
Surviving the Unipolar Era elucidates the conflict's transformation, beginning with unprecedented U.S.-led efforts to achieve North Korea's total collapse and elimination through maximum pressure, and ending three decades later with a subsiding of Pyongyang's international isolation and the modernization of its economy, armed forces and nuclear deterrent. A. B. Abrams highlights how the small state has been able to hold its own in multiple standoffs with the world's superpower, successfully weather economic sanctions, and prevent penetration of its information space, and the implications that this has had for the country, the region and the wider world. He details the strong consistency in American objectives, and the evolution of consensus across five separate administrations on how these should be pursued as the circumstances of the conflict transformed. In the context of prevailing geopolitical, economic and security trends, Abrams projects the future course of the conflict including aspects such as Western difficulties coming to terms with North Korea's ascent, U.S. policy priorities going forward, and the growing opportunities that an emerging new global cold war is likely to provide Pyongyang.
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Print length
428 pages
Language
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Kindle Edition
$6.99$6.99
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Review
"Abrams' book ultimately makes clear that David (North Korea) has defeated Goliath (the USA)--after withstanding biblical scale devastation." JEREMY KUZMAROV, CovertAction Magazine
"A. B. Abrams has produced another exceptionally well researched book with a depth of nuance and understanding of the DPRK (North Korea) few others can provide. The book unravels the tenacity of the North Koreans to survive the continuous onslaught of debilitating Western actions against their country over decades. It blows away the smoke of misleading and derogatory Western propaganda, and labelling, to reveal truths seldom told about their resiliency, in spite of the myriad puerile attempts by Western powers and their media apparatus to castigate and dehumanise them. Abrams' work provides very timely and much needed realistic context to North Korea's role on the geopolitical chessboard in the current rapidly devolving geopolitical environment." PHIL HYNES, former Head of Research & Political Risk at ISS Risk, former British Army counterinsurgency specialist, and longstanding expert on North Korean politics.
"In this timely, much-needed overview and analysis of North Korea in the world from the end of the Cold War to the current era of the Second Cold War, Abrams details how North Korea indeed "survived the unipolar era", and how the emergence of a new geopolitical environment may be more conducive to it than any time since the late 1950s. This careful and well-researched study is an invaluable corrective to the stereotypical and ahistorical assumptions that underlie most Western views on the subject." CHARLES K. ARMSTRONG, formerly Korea Foundation Professor of Korean Studies in the Social Sciences at Columbia University, author of numerous books and articles on North Korea.
"Surviving the Unipolar Era portrays an epic struggle between North Korea (the DPRK) and the US-led West. A.B. Abrams' book is engaging and rich in factology."
ARTYOM LUKIN, Professor, Far Eastern Federal University
"A highly effective case study of a world on the more-or-less constant brink of nuclear war. A. B Abrams' book reads like a thriller but tells you much of what you need to know." RICHARD C. COOK, retired analyst for the U.S. Treasury Department, NASA and the Jimmy Carter White House, author, Our Country, Then and Now
About the Author
A. B. Abrams has published widely on Korean politics and security, including several dozen articles in outlets such as 38North, The Diplomat and SinoNK among others, as well as multiple prior books. He holds Masters degrees in related subjects from the University of London. Having studied the Korean language at university in Pyongyang, he has spent considerable time in both North and South Korea and formed many contacts across the two countries. Abrams' prior works on geopolitics and security have received strong endorsements from multiple senior military officials, diplomats, professors and UN experts among others. He is proficient in multiple other Asian languages including Chinese.
Product details
Publisher : Clarity Press (1 January 2025)
Language : English
Paperback : 428 pages
ISBN-10 : 1963892127
ISBN-13 : 978-1963892123
Dimensions : 15.24 x 3.18 x 22.86 cm
Best Sellers Rank: 187,922 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)32 in History of North Korea
41 in Korean War History (Books)
298 in National & International Security (Books)
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Surviving the Unipolar Era: North Korea's 35 Year Standoff with the United States Paperback – 1 January 2025
by A B Abrams (Author)
9, 1950, the U.S. launched its first ever air strikes on the North Korean capital, Pyongyang, marking the start of what would become the longest conflict in history between two industrial powers. Four decades later, the end of the Cold War in 1989 and the disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991 marked the beginning of a new phase of the conflict, with a new unipolar world order centered on the power of the U.S. and Western world leaving North Korea in unprecedented isolation. Now unsupported in its fight against a Western superpower intent on its destruction, the small but technologically adept and heavily militarized East Asian state would need to adopt more radical measures to ensure its security. Over the next 35 years, the conflict would transform from a period of North Korean decline in the face of tremendous economic and military pressure, to one of an ascent in its power and decline in the West as international order evolved past the unipolar era
Surviving the Unipolar Era elucidates the conflict's transformation, beginning with unprecedented U.S.-led efforts to achieve North Korea's total collapse and elimination through maximum pressure, and ending three decades later with a subsiding of Pyongyang's international isolation and the modernization of its economy, armed forces and nuclear deterrent. A. B. Abrams highlights how the small state has been able to hold its own in multiple standoffs with the world's superpower, successfully weather economic sanctions, and prevent penetration of its information space, and the implications that this has had for the country, the region and the wider world. He details the strong consistency in American objectives, and the evolution of consensus across five separate administrations on how these should be pursued as the circumstances of the conflict transformed. In the context of prevailing geopolitical, economic and security trends, Abrams projects the future course of the conflict including aspects such as Western difficulties coming to terms with North Korea's ascent, U.S. policy priorities going forward, and the growing opportunities that an emerging new global cold war is likely to provide Pyongyang.
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Product description
Review
"Abrams' book ultimately makes clear that David (North Korea) has defeated Goliath (the USA)--after withstanding biblical scale devastation." JEREMY KUZMAROV, CovertAction Magazine
"A. B. Abrams has produced another exceptionally well researched book with a depth of nuance and understanding of the DPRK (North Korea) few others can provide. The book unravels the tenacity of the North Koreans to survive the continuous onslaught of debilitating Western actions against their country over decades. It blows away the smoke of misleading and derogatory Western propaganda, and labelling, to reveal truths seldom told about their resiliency, in spite of the myriad puerile attempts by Western powers and their media apparatus to castigate and dehumanise them. Abrams' work provides very timely and much needed realistic context to North Korea's role on the geopolitical chessboard in the current rapidly devolving geopolitical environment." PHIL HYNES, former Head of Research & Political Risk at ISS Risk, former British Army counterinsurgency specialist, and longstanding expert on North Korean politics.
"In this timely, much-needed overview and analysis of North Korea in the world from the end of the Cold War to the current era of the Second Cold War, Abrams details how North Korea indeed "survived the unipolar era", and how the emergence of a new geopolitical environment may be more conducive to it than any time since the late 1950s. This careful and well-researched study is an invaluable corrective to the stereotypical and ahistorical assumptions that underlie most Western views on the subject." CHARLES K. ARMSTRONG, formerly Korea Foundation Professor of Korean Studies in the Social Sciences at Columbia University, author of numerous books and articles on North Korea.
"Surviving the Unipolar Era portrays an epic struggle between North Korea (the DPRK) and the US-led West. A.B. Abrams' book is engaging and rich in factology."
ARTYOM LUKIN, Professor, Far Eastern Federal University
"A highly effective case study of a world on the more-or-less constant brink of nuclear war. A. B Abrams' book reads like a thriller but tells you much of what you need to know." RICHARD C. COOK, retired analyst for the U.S. Treasury Department, NASA and the Jimmy Carter White House, author, Our Country, Then and Now
About the Author
A. B. Abrams has published widely on Korean politics and security, including several dozen articles in outlets such as 38North, The Diplomat and SinoNK among others, as well as multiple prior books. He holds Masters degrees in related subjects from the University of London. Having studied the Korean language at university in Pyongyang, he has spent considerable time in both North and South Korea and formed many contacts across the two countries. Abrams' prior works on geopolitics and security have received strong endorsements from multiple senior military officials, diplomats, professors and UN experts among others. He is proficient in multiple other Asian languages including Chinese.
Product details
Publisher : Clarity Press (1 January 2025)
Language : English
Paperback : 428 pages
ISBN-10 : 1963892127
ISBN-13 : 978-1963892123
Dimensions : 15.24 x 3.18 x 22.86 cm
===

====
Ebook605 pages9 hours
Surviving the Unipolar Era: North Korea's 35 Year Standoff with the United StatesShow full title
By A.B. Abrams
Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
5/5
(1 rating)
About this ebook
On June 29, 1950, the U.S. launched its first ever air strikes on the North Korean capital, Pyongyang, marking the start of what would become the longest conflict in history between two industrial powers. Four decades later, the end of the Cold War in 1989 and the disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991 marked the beginning of a new phase of the conflict, with a new unipolar world order centered on the power of the U.S. and Western world leaving North Korea in unprecedented isolation. Now unsupported in its fight against a Western superpower intent on its destruction, the small but technologically adept and heavily militarized East Asian state would need to adopt more radical measures to ensure its security. Over the next 35 years, the conflict would transform from a period of North Korean decline in the face of tremendous economic and military pressure, to one of an ascent in its power and decline in the West as international order evolved past the unipolar era
Surviving the Unipolar Era elucidates the conflict’s transformation, beginning with unprecedented U.S.-led efforts to achieve North Korea’s total collapse and elimination through maximum pressure, and ending three decades later with a subsiding of Pyongyang’s international isolation and the modernization of its economy, armed forces and nuclear deterrent. A. B. Abrams highlights how the small state has been able to hold its own in multiple standoffs with the world’s superpower, successfully weather economic sanctions, and prevent penetration of its information space, and the implications that this has had for the country, the region and the wider world. He details the strong consistency in American objectives, and the evolution of consensus across five separate administrations on how these should be pursued as the circumstances of the conflict transformed. In the context of prevailing geopolitical, economic and security trends, Abrams projects the future course of the conflict including aspects such as Western difficulties coming to terms with North Korea’s ascent, U.S. policy priorities going forward, and the growing opportunities that an emerging new global cold war is likely to provide Pyongyang.
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Surviving the Unipolar Era: North Korea's 35 Year Standoff with the United States Paperback – 1 January 2025
by A B Abrams (Author)
On June 29, 1950, the U.S. launched its first ever air strikes on the North Korean capital, Pyongyang, marking the start of what would become the longest conflict in history between two industrial powers. Four decades later, the end of the Cold War in 1989 and the disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991 marked the beginning of a new phase of the conflict, with a new unipolar world order centered on the power of the U.S. and Western world leaving North Korea in unprecedented isolation. Now unsupported in its fight against a Western superpower intent on its destruction, the small but technologically adept and heavily militarized East Asian state would need to adopt more radical measures to ensure its security. Over the next 35 years, the conflict would transform from a period of North Korean decline in the face of tremendous economic and military pressure, to one of an ascent in its power and decline in the West as international order evolved past the unipolar era
Surviving the Unipolar Era elucidates the conflict's transformation, beginning with unprecedented U.S.-led efforts to achieve North Korea's total collapse and elimination through maximum pressure, and ending three decades later with a subsiding of Pyongyang's international isolation and the modernization of its economy, armed forces and nuclear deterrent. A. B. Abrams highlights how the small state has been able to hold its own in multiple standoffs with the world's superpower, successfully weather economic sanctions, and prevent penetration of its information space, and the implications that this has had for the country, the region and the wider world. He details the strong consistency in American objectives, and the evolution of consensus across five separate administrations on how these should be pursued as the circumstances of the conflict transformed. In the context of prevailing geopolitical, economic and security trends, Abrams projects the future course of the conflict including aspects such as Western difficulties coming to terms with North Korea's ascent, U.S. policy priorities going forward, and the growing opportunities that an emerging new global cold war is likely to provide Pyongyang.
Read less
Report an issue with this product
Print length
428 pages
Language
English
Kindle Edition
$6.99$6.99
Product description
Review
"Abrams' book ultimately makes clear that David (North Korea) has defeated Goliath (the USA)--after withstanding biblical scale devastation." JEREMY KUZMAROV, CovertAction Magazine
"A. B. Abrams has produced another exceptionally well researched book with a depth of nuance and understanding of the DPRK (North Korea) few others can provide. The book unravels the tenacity of the North Koreans to survive the continuous onslaught of debilitating Western actions against their country over decades. It blows away the smoke of misleading and derogatory Western propaganda, and labelling, to reveal truths seldom told about their resiliency, in spite of the myriad puerile attempts by Western powers and their media apparatus to castigate and dehumanise them. Abrams' work provides very timely and much needed realistic context to North Korea's role on the geopolitical chessboard in the current rapidly devolving geopolitical environment." PHIL HYNES, former Head of Research & Political Risk at ISS Risk, former British Army counterinsurgency specialist, and longstanding expert on North Korean politics.
"In this timely, much-needed overview and analysis of North Korea in the world from the end of the Cold War to the current era of the Second Cold War, Abrams details how North Korea indeed "survived the unipolar era", and how the emergence of a new geopolitical environment may be more conducive to it than any time since the late 1950s. This careful and well-researched study is an invaluable corrective to the stereotypical and ahistorical assumptions that underlie most Western views on the subject." CHARLES K. ARMSTRONG, formerly Korea Foundation Professor of Korean Studies in the Social Sciences at Columbia University, author of numerous books and articles on North Korea.
"Surviving the Unipolar Era portrays an epic struggle between North Korea (the DPRK) and the US-led West. A.B. Abrams' book is engaging and rich in factology."
ARTYOM LUKIN, Professor, Far Eastern Federal University
"A highly effective case study of a world on the more-or-less constant brink of nuclear war. A. B Abrams' book reads like a thriller but tells you much of what you need to know." RICHARD C. COOK, retired analyst for the U.S. Treasury Department, NASA and the Jimmy Carter White House, author, Our Country, Then and Now
About the Author
A. B. Abrams has published widely on Korean politics and security, including several dozen articles in outlets such as 38North, The Diplomat and SinoNK among others, as well as multiple prior books. He holds Masters degrees in related subjects from the University of London. Having studied the Korean language at university in Pyongyang, he has spent considerable time in both North and South Korea and formed many contacts across the two countries. Abrams' prior works on geopolitics and security have received strong endorsements from multiple senior military officials, diplomats, professors and UN experts among others. He is proficient in multiple other Asian languages including Chinese.
Product details
Publisher : Clarity Press (1 January 2025)
Language : English
Paperback : 428 pages
ISBN-10 : 1963892127
ISBN-13 : 978-1963892123
Dimensions : 15.24 x 3.18 x 22.86 cm
Best Sellers Rank: 187,922 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)32 in History of North Korea
41 in Korean War History (Books)
298 in National & International Security (Books)
Add to Wish List
Other sellers on Amazon
New & Used (6) from $51.73$51.73 FREE delivery for Prime members

Read sample
Surviving the Unipolar Era: North Korea's 35 Year Standoff with the United States Paperback – 1 January 2025
by A B Abrams (Author)
9, 1950, the U.S. launched its first ever air strikes on the North Korean capital, Pyongyang, marking the start of what would become the longest conflict in history between two industrial powers. Four decades later, the end of the Cold War in 1989 and the disintegration of the Soviet Union in 1991 marked the beginning of a new phase of the conflict, with a new unipolar world order centered on the power of the U.S. and Western world leaving North Korea in unprecedented isolation. Now unsupported in its fight against a Western superpower intent on its destruction, the small but technologically adept and heavily militarized East Asian state would need to adopt more radical measures to ensure its security. Over the next 35 years, the conflict would transform from a period of North Korean decline in the face of tremendous economic and military pressure, to one of an ascent in its power and decline in the West as international order evolved past the unipolar era
Surviving the Unipolar Era elucidates the conflict's transformation, beginning with unprecedented U.S.-led efforts to achieve North Korea's total collapse and elimination through maximum pressure, and ending three decades later with a subsiding of Pyongyang's international isolation and the modernization of its economy, armed forces and nuclear deterrent. A. B. Abrams highlights how the small state has been able to hold its own in multiple standoffs with the world's superpower, successfully weather economic sanctions, and prevent penetration of its information space, and the implications that this has had for the country, the region and the wider world. He details the strong consistency in American objectives, and the evolution of consensus across five separate administrations on how these should be pursued as the circumstances of the conflict transformed. In the context of prevailing geopolitical, economic and security trends, Abrams projects the future course of the conflict including aspects such as Western difficulties coming to terms with North Korea's ascent, U.S. policy priorities going forward, and the growing opportunities that an emerging new global cold war is likely to provide Pyongyang.
Read less
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Language
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Product description
Review
"Abrams' book ultimately makes clear that David (North Korea) has defeated Goliath (the USA)--after withstanding biblical scale devastation." JEREMY KUZMAROV, CovertAction Magazine
"A. B. Abrams has produced another exceptionally well researched book with a depth of nuance and understanding of the DPRK (North Korea) few others can provide. The book unravels the tenacity of the North Koreans to survive the continuous onslaught of debilitating Western actions against their country over decades. It blows away the smoke of misleading and derogatory Western propaganda, and labelling, to reveal truths seldom told about their resiliency, in spite of the myriad puerile attempts by Western powers and their media apparatus to castigate and dehumanise them. Abrams' work provides very timely and much needed realistic context to North Korea's role on the geopolitical chessboard in the current rapidly devolving geopolitical environment." PHIL HYNES, former Head of Research & Political Risk at ISS Risk, former British Army counterinsurgency specialist, and longstanding expert on North Korean politics.
"In this timely, much-needed overview and analysis of North Korea in the world from the end of the Cold War to the current era of the Second Cold War, Abrams details how North Korea indeed "survived the unipolar era", and how the emergence of a new geopolitical environment may be more conducive to it than any time since the late 1950s. This careful and well-researched study is an invaluable corrective to the stereotypical and ahistorical assumptions that underlie most Western views on the subject." CHARLES K. ARMSTRONG, formerly Korea Foundation Professor of Korean Studies in the Social Sciences at Columbia University, author of numerous books and articles on North Korea.
"Surviving the Unipolar Era portrays an epic struggle between North Korea (the DPRK) and the US-led West. A.B. Abrams' book is engaging and rich in factology."
ARTYOM LUKIN, Professor, Far Eastern Federal University
"A highly effective case study of a world on the more-or-less constant brink of nuclear war. A. B Abrams' book reads like a thriller but tells you much of what you need to know." RICHARD C. COOK, retired analyst for the U.S. Treasury Department, NASA and the Jimmy Carter White House, author, Our Country, Then and Now
About the Author
A. B. Abrams has published widely on Korean politics and security, including several dozen articles in outlets such as 38North, The Diplomat and SinoNK among others, as well as multiple prior books. He holds Masters degrees in related subjects from the University of London. Having studied the Korean language at university in Pyongyang, he has spent considerable time in both North and South Korea and formed many contacts across the two countries. Abrams' prior works on geopolitics and security have received strong endorsements from multiple senior military officials, diplomats, professors and UN experts among others. He is proficient in multiple other Asian languages including Chinese.
Product details
Publisher : Clarity Press (1 January 2025)
Language : English
Paperback : 428 pages
ISBN-10 : 1963892127
ISBN-13 : 978-1963892123
Dimensions : 15.24 x 3.18 x 22.86 cm
===
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