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L. Freedman. Palgrave Macmillan, London, Fourth edition edition, (2019); Intro -- Preface -- Introduction -- Contents -- Chapter 1: The Arrival of the Bomb -- Chapter 2: The Strategy of Hiroshima -- Chapter 3: Offence and Defence -- Chapter 4: Aggression and Retaliation -- Chapter 5: Strategy for an Atomic Monopoly -- Chapter 6: Strategy for an Atomic Stalemate -- Chapter 7: Massive Retaliation -- Chapter 8: Limited Objectives -- Chapter 9: Limited Means -- Chapter 10: The Importance of Being First -- Chapter 11: Sputnik and the Soviet Threat -- Chapter 12: Soviet Strategy After Stalin -- Chapter 13: The Technological Arms Race -- Chapter 14: New Sources of Strategy -- Chapter 15: The Strategy of Stable Conflict -- Chapter 16: Disarmament to Arms Control -- Chapter 17: Operational Nuclear Strategy -- Chapter 18: Khrushchev's Second-Best Deterrent -- Chapter 19: Defending Europe -- Chapter 20: No Cities -- Chapter 21: Assured Destruction -- Chapter 22: Britain's 'Independent' Nuclear Deterrent -- Chapter 23: France and the Credibility of Nuclear Guarantees -- Chapter 24: A NATO Nuclear Force -- Chapter 25: The Unthinkable Weapon -- Chapter 26: China's Paper Tiger -- Chapter 27: The Soviet Approach to Deterrence -- Chapter 28: The McNamara Legacy -- Chapter 29: SALT, Parity and the Critique of MAD -- Chapter 30: Actions and Reactions -- Chapter 31: Selective Options -- Chapter 32: ICBM Vulnerability -- Chapter 33: The Rise of Anti-Nuclear Protest -- Chapter 34: Strategic Defences -- Chapter 35: Soviet Doctrine from Brezhnev to Gorbachev -- Chapter 36: The End of the Cold War -- Chapter 37: Mutual Assured Safety -- Chapter 38: Elimination or Marginalization -- Chapter 39: The Second Nuclear Age -- Chapter 40: The Nuclear War on Terror -- Chapter 41: Proliferation: The Middle East and the Pacific -- Chapter 42: The Return of Great Power Politics -- Chapter 43: Primacy and Maximum Deterrence..