|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewSteven A. Pomeroy has authored the first history of the American mobile intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM), a technology the United States spent four decades and billions of dollars creating but never deployed. An Untaken Road showcases how the evolution of a technology that ultimately never existed and the politics that surrounded it end up significantly shaping American nuclear strategy and forces for decades. Utilizing recently declassified documents, years of experience, and an unrivaled passion for the history of military technologies, Pomeroy has created a new framework on the nature of strategic weapons technology innovation. This thorough study of a ""road not taken"" is a must read for those seeking to understand the challenges and constraints on U.S. military weapon programs, especially when inter-organization competition, domestic politics, strategic needs, and new technologies collide. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Steven A. PomeroyPublisher: Naval Institute Press Imprint: Naval Institute Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 22.80cm Weight: 0.277kg ISBN: 9781612519739ISBN 10: 1612519733 Pages: 304 Publication Date: 30 December 2015 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Stock Indefinitely Availability: Temporarily unavailable ![]() Table of ContentsReviewsIn 2016, as Air Force planners examine aging, silo-based Minuteman IIIs and contemplate a Ground Based Strategic Defense system to replace them, a careful reading of <i>An Untaken Road</i> might prove beneficial. Knowing what failed to happen in the past, and why, might shed as much light on the way ahead as knowing what did happen and why. Regardless of whether current planners take this advice, Pomeroy s book belongs on the shelves of scholars whose specializations range from technology or military strategy to domestic politics or international affairs. <b><i> Air Power History</b></i> <i>An Untaken Road</i> delivers an intelligent and timely analysis of the major strategic debates of the Cold War. In an era of shrinking Pentagon budgets, Steven Pomeroy's compelling new study should be required reading for defense experts and decision-makers grappling with the political and military implications of modernization in the second nuclear age. <b><i> Michigan War Studies Journal</i></b> How and why the U.S. Air Force struggled to bring mobility to its land-based ICBM force is a fascinating saga that played out against the backdrop of strategy, engineering, management, bureaucratic rivalries, domestic politics, and high-level diplomacy. Steven Pomeroy engages this complex story of an untaken road through a series of abortive Air Force efforts to develop and deploy its Minuteman and MX ballistic missiles in ways to ensure the survivability of those weapons in the event of the unthinkable nuclear war. Among the proposals were a fleet of a hundred trains roaming a quarter million miles of track, submersibles cruising the shallows of the Great Lakes and Gulf of Mexico, and giant high-endurance missile-carrying aircraft circling the skies of North America. Extensively documented using an impressive range of recently declassified sources, Pomeroy s book offers a thought-provoking case study that illuminates the process of technological change within a sophisticated historical and analytical context. William Trimble, author of Admiral William A. Moffett: Architect of Naval Aviation and Hero of the Air: Glenn Curtiss and the Birth of Naval Aviation Author InformationSteven A. Pomeroy is a historian of technology and, as an associate professor of military and strategic studies at the Air Force Academy, served as the Senior Military Faculty for Strategy and Technology. A twenty-five-year Air Force veteran and former nuclear launch officer, he received his PhD from Auburn University. He researches, writes, and teaches on technological change and history, processes of innovation, strategy, and emerging technologies. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |