From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the theory of nuclear warfare, a decapitation
strike is a first strike attack that aims to remove
the command
and control mechanisms of the opponent, in the hope that it
will severely degrade or destroy its capacity for nuclear
retaliation.
Strategies against decapitation strikes include:
- distributed command and control structures
- dispersal of political and military leadership in times of
tension
- delegation of the ability to fire to local commanders in the
event of a decapitation strike
A failed decapitation strike carries the risk of immediate
massive retaliation undertaken by the targeted opponent.
Other nuclear warfare doctrines explicitly exclude decapitation
strikes, on the basis that it is better to preserve the adversary's
command and control structures so that a single authority remains
which is capable of negotiating a surrender or ceasefire.
Implementing fail-deadly mechanisms can be a way to
deter decapitation strikes, and cope with a successful decapitation
strike.
Decapitation strikes may also apply to conventional warfare
methods, such as car bombings.
In
fiction
- In the movie Dr. Strangelove, Senator Buford
complains that the US nuclear deterrent lacks credibility. If the
President were killed in a decapitation strike, retaliation would
be impossible. Wing Attack Plan R is devised to close this
loophole.
- In The Cuban Missile Crisis: Second Holocaust, an alternative
history in which the 1962 crisis developed into war, the Soviets
manage to destroy Washington D.C. and
kill Kennedy, Johnson and most of their political
and military advisors. This coup, however, works disastrously
against the Soviet Union. Had Kennedy survived, he might have
ordered a measured response. Since he didn't, surviving American
generals order a total attack, which continues long past the
breaking of any Soviet military capacity and results in killing
some 80% of the entire Soviet population, and later gets the US
accused of genocide.
See also
References