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Under the Nuclear Shadow

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How and why China has pursued information-age weapons to gain leverage against its adversariesHow can states use military force to achieve their political aims without triggering a catastrophic nuc...
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  • 07 January 2025
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How and why China has pursued information-age weapons to gain leverage against its adversaries

How can states use military force to achieve their political aims without triggering a catastrophic nuclear war? Among the states facing this dilemma of fighting limited wars, only China has given information-age weapons such a prominent role. While other countries have preferred the traditional options of threatening to use nuclear weapons or fielding capabilities for decisive conventional military victories, China has instead chosen to rely on offensive cyber operations, counterspace capabilities, and precision conventional missiles to coerce its adversaries. In Under the Nuclear Shadow, Fiona Cunningham examines this distinctive aspect of China’s post–Cold War deterrence strategy, developing an original theory of “strategic substitution.” When crises with the United States highlighted the inadequacy of China’s existing military capabilities, Cunningham argues, China pursued information-age weapons that promised to rapidly provide credible leverage against adversaries.

Drawing on hundreds of original Chinese-language sources and interviews with security experts in China, Cunningham provides a rare and candid glimpse from Beijing into the information-age technologies that are reshaping how states gain leverage in the twenty-first century. She offers unprecedented insights into the trajectory of China’s military modernization, as she details the strengths and weaknesses of China’s strategic substitution approach. Under the Nuclear Shadow also looks ahead at the uncertain future of China’s strategic substitution approach and briefly explores too how other states might seize upon the promise of emerging technologies to address weaknesses in their own military strategies.

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Price: $99.95
Pages: 400
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Imprint: Princeton University Press
Series: Princeton Studies in International History and Politics
Publication Date: 07 January 2025
ISBN: 9780691261027
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

POLITICAL SCIENCE / Security (National & International), Military and defence strategy, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Intelligence & Espionage, HISTORY / Asia / China, HISTORY / Military / Strategy, HISTORY / Military / Nuclear Warfare, Political science and theory, Nuclear weapons

"An exposition on how China’s nuclear policy has evolved alongside its non-nuclear capabilities. . . . [Cunningham] offers the most thorough analysis to date of a key shortcoming in China’s nuclear posture: that the high threshold for nuclear use renders nuclear weapons a blunt and ineffective instrument for escalating conventional conflict without risking catastrophe."---Tong Zhao, China Books Review
Fiona S. Cunningham is assistant professor of political science at the University of Pennsylvania.