Yes, sometimes. But I can assure you that nuclear information is amongst the most tightly held. Held to the point, that there is really no public information on just how much is held. In fact, inside the system, it remains tightly controlled with limited and special access regimes. This includes tech and policy.ladajo wrote:
They do not put accurate information in the public domain, if they did, there would be no point to it all being classified.
For all sorts of reasons, plenty of officially classified info is also public domain - the one does not cancel the other.
Nope. This is a specific construct for only the nuclear regime. Other weapons systems do not enjoy the unique postion that nuclear ones do. Nuclear systems have their very own and specific policy and use controls. Theonly other system that will face this will be Global Strike. But, it will not be the same, just more of a "let's keep the other guy from thinking it is nuclear" approach.That is the same for *any* weapon. And even if you possess that weapon yourself you can not be certain what your enemy's "triggers" will be for using theirs
Actually, you are wrong in this. Yo also still do not undertand the construct. Specifically, in WWII use authority was delgated down. Also not the last time that happened. During Korea and Vietnam, as well as other events, use authority was delegated down. Again, you know not of what you speak. You know not how nuclear command and control works.Yes, there is still a great deal of debate about the strategic decisions made by all sides during WWII. But this mechanistic process of constraints, restraints and triggers that you suggest is not the whole story - in 1945 the decision to use atomic weapons had an obviously political dimension. The final decision was that of the chief executive, not the Generals'.
Yes and no. The Japanese data was generated with US support to study long term effects across a spectrum of domains. There is also a large pool of information that the US generated that remains controlled. The controlled information includes not just technical aspects. ONe of the interesting, and oft overlooked points that is in the public domain is the actual summary death/destruction directly related ( we will say first and second order effects) to the strikes. But that is routinely glossed as it does not support the 'anti-nuke' pundits. I have been to ground zero in Japan, have you? It may surprise you if you haven't (my guess). Give you some things to think about at the least.There is a huge amount of published data about the effects of the bombs, much of it from the Japanese themselves. And even were all of your classified information released it would still not tell "the whole story", it would just tell a different story.
Bottom line, the weapons used in Japan are nothing like the weapons we have to day. And Japan is the only publically visible use. Much hyperboly and supposition has fed the mythos out of those two weapons. And much of the mythos growth has been fed by a on purpose lack of release of real data from controlling sources since then.
No intended as such. I intended to type "Contemporary Strategy", but was thinking along several lines as I wrote that. Chalk it up as a typo.So where did I claim to "understand contemporary US Nuclear Strategy"... strawman.
You also really need to learn more about debate fallacies. You are very stuck on the whole 'Strawman' theme.
Nope, I do not disagree. What I take issue with is the idea that either or both countries could "threaten Israel's existence". Not likely at this point.Note the phrase "that threatened Israel's existence". I think it a more than reasonable deduction that an attack that threatened Israel's existence (ie the highly unlikely circumstance that Israel was on the verge of being overrun by its enemies) would trigger Israel's use of its nuclear weapons. Do you disagree?
Expand it as you wish to be more amorphous. But, what you are not getting is my point that there is no chance of it being "fair".I assure you that that rather depends upon what I meant by a "fair idea"
True. But you leave out the fact that by building functional weapons, you learn a great deal about what they can and can not do. I would also ask you to consider how you know that Israel has never tested a live weapon? I would ask to you to consider how and from who Israel got its weapons, and in the ask yourself if there is a possibility that either data was provided, or sims and test ranges were cooperatively used under the guise of the cooperating nation(s) own test programs.I guess Israel, not having conducted battlefied testing