Tytuł
The Russia trap : how our shadow war with Russia could spiral into
nuclear catastrophe
Miejsce wydania
New York: New York:
Wydawnictwo
Thomas Dunne Books, Thomas Dunne Books,
Hasła przedmiotowe
Cyberterroryzm
Bezpieczeństwo międzynarodowe
Informacje dodatkowe
Part 1. Analysis: Understanding the problem -- War by other means -- Deadly perceptions -- Brake failure -- Triggers -- Part 2. Synthesis: managing the problem -- Escaping the simplicity trap -- Absorbing shocks -- Working the system -- Conclusion.
Streszczenie
"A former head of CIA's Russia analysis shows how Washington and Moscow may be headed toward nuclear annihilation. After years of unsuccessful post-Cold War efforts to forge a cooperative relationship, it is now clear that the U.S. and Russia have become competitors, not partners--no matter what some politicians would have the American public believe. And this competition is quickly spiraling into enmity thanks to new strategic weapons, shifts in world power, and unsettled regional conflicts. Me
020
%a 9781250316622 (hardcover)
245
%a The Russia trap :
%b how our shadow war with Russia could spiral into
nuclear catastrophe /
260
%a New York:%a New York:
%b Thomas Dunne Books,%b Thomas Dunne Books,
%c 2019.%c 2019.
300
%a xxii, 216 s. ;
%c 25 cm
505
%a Part 1. Analysis: Understanding the problem -- War by other means -- Deadly perceptions -- Brake failure -- Triggers -- Part 2. Synthesis: managing the problem -- Escaping the simplicity trap -- Absorbing shocks -- Working the system -- Conclusion.
520
%a "A former head of CIA's Russia analysis shows how Washington and Moscow may be headed toward nuclear annihilation. After years of unsuccessful post-Cold War efforts to forge a cooperative relationship, it is now clear that the U.S. and Russia have become competitors, not partners--no matter what some politicians would have the American public believe. And this competition is quickly spiraling into enmity thanks to new strategic weapons, shifts in world power, and unsettled regional conflicts. Me
650
%a Bezpieczeństwo międzynarodowe
651
%a Stany Zjednoczone (USA)