RUSSIANS DEBATE NUCLEAR 'VICTORY'

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP70B00338R000300090070-9
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RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 19, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 9, 2006
Sequence Number: 
70
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
February 21, 1967
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP70B00338R000300090070-9.pdf91.37 KB
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Approved For Release 2006/01/ CIA-RDP70B00338R000300090070-9 WASHING-70N CLOSE -U ? MW~d ~YI(jL YW 1rA.~ ~..~J t:i ~1 '..s ~I r11y Soviet military men are arguing these days over whether a nuclear war can be "won." The end of the debate is not yet in sight, but the main lines have been developed. It is of more than scholarly interest to U.S. specialists because if the "no-win" side comes out on top, it will make possible a number of East-West agree- ments that the "win" group would oppose. Under Nikita S. Khru; h- chev's "peaceful coexistence" leadership, military men tended to admit that nuclear war was likely to be militarily unmanageable-that nobody could win such a war. Khrush- chev obviously was rankled by heavy defense expenditures, and seemed to be happy with a deterrent program that, while inferior to the United States, was felt to be strong enough to persuade the United. States not to attack first. After Khrushchev's fall, the matter remained quiet for awhile, although some mili- tary men began pressing for additional funds. The current debate came into the open in September 1965, in the "Communist of the :'Armed Forces," official, journal of the political depart- ment of the defense ministry. An article by a Lt. Col. Ye. Rybkin . attacked such well known Soviet writers as Nicolai Talensky for having spread the "fatalistic" doc- trine that it is no longer possible "to find acceptable forms of nuclear war." While admitting that nuclear war would cause great havoc, Rybkin said no one should By BERNARD GWER ZMAN succumb to the view that victory in nuclear war is imnossidie. "Any `a priori' rejection of the possibility of victory is harmful because it leads to moral disarmament, to a disbelief in victory, and to fatalism and passivity. It is necessary to wage a struggle against such views and atti- tudes," he wrote. with these statements until just last month, in a long unsigned article in "Red Star," official newspaper of the defense ministry. It seemed to speak for the top leadership. It took issue directly v,: the views stated by Rybkin add Bondarcnko and specifi- cally attacked Rybkin by name. The article stressed that Rybkin was acting "in- victory was feasible if the, dependently" and did not country conducted nuclear speak for anyone but himself. war in such a way as to in a significant paragraph, minimize damage to itself. He the article said that progres- seemed to stress the need for sive people in the West realize Russia to step up its pro,:uc- "what results a world nuclear tion of offensive nuclear war could cause and that such missiles and at the same time- a war, has ceased to ' be an to develop a missile defense. Rybkin's ideas were carried further, a year later in t ha same journal, by Lt. Col. V. Bondarenko in an article called ":~iuitary-Tech~iolo ical Superiority-a Most Important Factor is the Reliable Defense of the Country." Bondarcniko argucd that the key to victory lies in military superiority to be attained only through a large-scale commit- ment of resources in advanced weapons development and production. implicit in his article was an attack on the policy of Soviet Premier Alexei N. Kosy, n, who has stressed the primacy of thou consumer sector in the expedient means of politics and a means for the achieve- meat of certain political and economic objectives." "Assertions of this, type express above all a condemna- tion of a nuclear war, and its dangers and inoxped;c:,cy are emphasized," the article said. "All peace-loving anfl anti- imperialist forces oppose a world nuclear war as,a means of the continuation- ?of tics." The "Red Star'.' article aroused particular interest in ;Vashington because' i', came at a time w,-,en the. adminis- tration had begun to., sound out the Russians on an agreement for a freeze on both defensive econoniy. i3o?darcnko makes ? and offensive weapona. it clear he is ihinlain ; of it is quite possible that the developing some new ,,w , pon, leadership ordered "the Red which he says "can abruptly Star article in order to tell the' change the relationship of West that the militarists in the forces in a short period of ? army were not making policy time." -and that Moscow was still The Communist party open to arms control meas- leadership did not take issue ores. Approved For Release 2006/01/30 : CIA-RDP70B00338R000300090070-9