I don’t think MAD is all that effective. At this moment in time we’re seeing:
* Several concurrent arms races in the Middle East, Asia, and Europe
* A high intensity conflict in Ukraine
* China threatening a land invasion into Taiwan
MAD might be preventing a country like Poland from jumping into the Ukraine conflict, but more likely it’s because of its involvement in NATO.
I think collective security organisations are a far more potent force for peace than nuclear weapons. If countries abided by their security agreements in WW2, then we’d have nipped the entire thing in the bud.
> I don’t think MAD is all that effective. At this moment in time we’re seeing:
> * Several concurrent arms races in the Middle East, Asia, and Europe
> * A high intensity conflict in Ukraine
> * China threatening a land invasion into Taiwan
I mean... Only one of those is an actual fight. And there MAD doesn't apply because the defender doesn't have the Assured Destruction capability needed.
> Several concurrent arms races in the Middle East, Asia, and Europe
Which is to say, possible future proxy wars between the great powers where MAD will supposedly restrict conflict intensity. See below.
> A high intensity conflict in Ukraine
What's going on in Ukraine is a bog standard cold war style proxy war. The NATO plan is basically to turn it into another Afghanistan for the Russians. It's the exact thing that MAD is meant to keep from spilling over into a world war between the principals.
> China threatening a land invasion into Taiwan
This is more interesting. US conventional forces almost certainly have no hope of beating China that close to home. Therefore, any effective US response would require nuking China and China is presumably deterring that with their nukes. There is an argument to be made here that a non-nuclear Chinese military would be in Taiwan's best interests. However, I see no scenario where either a nuclear or non-nuclear China and a non-nuclear USA is in Taiwan's best interests. So while the MAD case isn't the best case for Taiwan here, it's also not the worst.
There are a lot more armed conflicts throughout the world that are proxies or partial proxies between the various powers in the world (US, Russia, and more). See Yemen, Syria, and many more throughout Africa. World powers tend to get on one side or another as they see their interests align and oftentimes this prolongs the conflict rather than bring it to any resolution.
* Several concurrent arms races in the Middle East, Asia, and Europe
* A high intensity conflict in Ukraine
* China threatening a land invasion into Taiwan
MAD might be preventing a country like Poland from jumping into the Ukraine conflict, but more likely it’s because of its involvement in NATO.
I think collective security organisations are a far more potent force for peace than nuclear weapons. If countries abided by their security agreements in WW2, then we’d have nipped the entire thing in the bud.