出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/06/18 21:04 UTC 版)
A pun on "assured destruction" ("a highly reliable ability to inflict unacceptable damage ... even after absorbing a surprise first strike"), a term used in discussions of American nuclear strategy in the 1960s. Perhaps coined by Donald Brennan, conservative defense analyst and a public critic of the policy.
mutual assured destruction (uncountable)
出典:Wikipedia
出典:『Wikipedia』 (2011/07/05 06:20 UTC 版)
Mutual Assured Destruction, or mutually assured destruction (MAD), is a doctrine of military strategy and national security policy in which a full-scale use of high-yield weapons of mass destruction by two opposing sides would effectively result in the complete, utter and irrevocable annihilation of both the attacker and the defender, becoming thus a war that has no victory nor any armistice but only effective reciprocal destruction. It is based on the theory of deterrence according to which the deployment, and implicit menace of use, of strong weapons is essential to threaten the enemy in order to prevent the use by said-enemy of the same weapons against oneself. The strategy is effectively a form of Nash equilibrium in which neither side, once armed, has any incentive to disarm thereafter.
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支離滅裂に
支離滅裂になる
destruction by annihilating something
separation resulting from hostility
damage the reputation of
支離滅裂なさまの
discouraging intimacies