Canada and Ballistic Missile Defence, 1954-2009

Déjà Vu All Over Again

By James G. Fergusson
Categories: History, Canadian History, Military History, Political Science, Security, Peace & Conflict Studies, Canadian Political Science, International Political Science
Series: Studies in Canadian Military History
Publisher: UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774817509, 352 pages, May 2010
Paperback : 9780774817516, 352 pages, November 2010
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774817523, 352 pages, January 2011

Table of contents

Preface

Prologue – What’s with Defence?

Act 1 – Anti-Ballistic Missiles: Don’t Worry, Be Happy (1954-71)

Act 2 – The Strategic Defence Initiative: Much Ado About Very Little (1972-85)

Act 3 – Global Protection Against Limited Strikes: Too Close for Comfort (1986-92)

Act 4 – National Missile Defense: Let Sleeping Dogs Lie (1993-2000)

Act 5 – Ground-Based Mid-Course Defense: Is this the End? (2001-05)

Epilogue – Forward to the Past (2005 and Beyond)

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Based on newly declassified information, this insightful book offers the first full account of Canada’s uncertain response to US ballistic missile defence initiatives and reveals the implications of this indecision.

Description

Since the mid-1950s, successive Canadian governments have responded to US ballistic missile defence initiatives with fear and uncertainty. Officials have endlessly debated the implications – at home and abroad – of participation. Drawing on previously classified government documents and interviews with senior officials, James Fergusson offers the first full account of Canada’s unsure response to US initiatives. He reveals that factors such as weak leadership and a tendency to place uncertain and ill-defined notions of international peace and security before national defence have resulted in indecision. In the end, policy-makers have failed to transform the ballistic missile defence issue into an opportunity to define Canada’s strategic interests at home and on the world stage.

Reviews

This book should serve as a “lessons learned” reference for our political and military leadership with respect to development of coherent strategic policies. It is also a very useful historical source for students and scholars of politics and history.

- Major Fred Brulier, Canadian Defence Academy

James Fergusson has followed ballistic missile defense and Canadian defense policy for decades, and his passion is reflected in this, the first history that treats these topics in a single volume.

- D. McIntosh, Slippery Rock University Pennsylvania