1. The Economic and Social Consequences 
			of Disarmament: U.S. Reply to the Inquiry of the Secretary-General 
			of the United Nations (Washington, D.C.: USGPO, June 1964), pp. 8-9.
				
				
				
2. Herman Kahn, Thinking About the Unthinkable (New York: Horizon, 
			1962), p. 35. 
3. Robert S. McNamara, in an address before the American Society of 
			Newspaper Editors, Montreal, P.Q., Canada, 18 May 1966. 
4. Alfred North Whitehead, in "The Anatomy of Some Scientific 
			Ideas," included in The Aims of Education (New York: Macmillan, 
			1929). 
5. At Ann Arbor, Michigan, 16 June 1962. 
				
6. Louis J. Halle, "Peace in Our Time? Nuclear Weapons as a 
			Stabilizer," The New Republic (28 December 1963). 
7. Kenneth E. Boulding, "The World War Industry as an Economic 
			Problem," in Emile Benoit and Kenneth E. Boulding (eds.), 
			Disarmament and the Economy New York: Harper and Row, 1963). 
				
8. McNamara, in ASNE Montreal address cited. 
				9. Report of the Committee on the Economic Impact of Defense and 
			Disarmament (Washington: USGPO, July 1965). 
10. Sumner M. Rosen, "Disarmament and the Economy," War/Peace Report 
			(March 1966). 
11. Vide William D. Grampp, "False Fears of Disarmament," Harvard 
			Business Review (Jan.-Feb. 1964) for a concise example of this 
			reasoning. 
12. Seymour Melman, "The Cost of Inspection for Disarmament," in 
			Benoit and Boulding, op. cit. 
13. Arthur I. Waskow, Toward the Unarmed Forces of the United States 
			(Washington: Institute for Policy Studies, 1966), p. 9. (This is the 
			unabridged edition of the text of a report and proposal prepared for 
			a seminar of strategists and Congressmen in 1965; it was later given 
			limited distribution among other persons engaged in related 
			projects.) 
14. David T. Bazelon, "The Politics of the Paper Economy," 
			Commentary (November 1962), p. 409. 
15. The Economic Impact of Disarmament (Washington: USGPO, January 
			1962). 
16. David T. Bazelon, "The Scarcity Makers," Commentary (October 
			1962), p. 298. 
17. Frank Pace, Jr., in an address before the American Bankers’ 
			Association, September 1957. 
18. A random example, taken in this case from a story by David Deitch in the New York Herald Tribune (9 February 1966).
				
19. Vide L. Gumplowicz, in Geschichte der Staatstheorien (Innsbruck: 
			Wagner, 1905) and earlier writings. 
20. K. Fischer, Das Militaer (Zurich: Steinmetz Verlag, 1932), pp. 
			42-43. 
21. The obverse of this phenomenon is responsible for the principal 
			combat problem of present-day infantry officers: the unwillingness 
			of otherwise "trained" troops to fire at an enemy close enough to be 
			recognizable as an individual rather than simply as a target. 
				
22. Herman Kahn, On Thermonuclear War (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton 
			University Press, 1960), p. 42. 
23. John D. Williams, "The Nonsense about Safe Driving," Fortune 
			(September 1958). 
24. Vide most recently K. Lorenz, in Das Sogenannte Boese: zur 
			Naturgeschichte der Aggression (Vienna: G. Borotha-Schoeler Verlag, 
			1964). 
25. Beginning with Herbert Spencer and his contemporaries, but 
			largely ignored for nearly a century. 
26. As in recent draft-law controversy, in which the issue of 
			selective deferment of the culturally privileged is often carelessly 
			equated with the preservation of the biologically "fittest."
				
27. G. Bouthoul, in La Guerre (Paris: Presses universitaires de 
			France, 1953) and many other more detailed studies. The useful 
			concept of "polemology," for the study of war as an independent 
			discipline, is his, as is the notion of "demographic relaxation," 
			the sudden temporary decline in the rate of population increase 
			after major wars. 
28. This seemingly premature statement is supported by one of our 
			own test studies. But it hypothecates both the stabilizing of world 
			population growth and the institution of fully adequate 
			environmental controls. Under these two conditions, the probability 
			of the permanent elimination of involuntary global famine is 68 
			percent by 1976 and 95 percent by 1981. 
29. This round figure is the median taken from our computations, 
			which cover varying contingencies, but it is sufficient for the 
			purpose of general discussion. 
30. But less misleading than the more elegant traditional metaphor, 
			in which war expenditures are referred to as the "ballast" of the 
			economy but which suggests incorrect quantitative relationships. 
				
31. Typical in generality, scope, and rhetoric. We have not used any 
			published program as a model; similarities are unavoidably 
			coincidental rather than tendentious. 
32. Vide the reception of a "Freedom Budget for all Americans," 
			proposed by A. Philip Randolph et al; it is a ten-year plan, 
			estimated by its sponsors to cost $185 billion. 
33. Waskow, op. cit.
				
34. By several current theorists, most extensively and effectively 
			by Robert R. Harris in The Real Enemy, an unpublished doctoral 
			dissertation made available to this study. 
35. In ASNE Montreal address cited.
				
36. The Tenth Victim. 
37. For an examination of some of its social implications, see 
				Seymour Rubenfeld, Family of Outcasts: A New Theory of Delinquency 
			(New York: Free Press, 1965). 
38. As in Nazi Germany; this type of "ideological" ethnic 
			repression, directed to specific sociological ends, should not be 
			confused with traditional economic exploitation, as of Negroes in 
			the U.S., South Africa, etc. 
39. By teams of experimental biologists in Massachusetts, Michigan, 
			and California, as well as in Mexico and the U.S.S.R. Preliminary 
			test applications are scheduled in Southeast Asia, in countries not 
			yet announced. 
40. Expressed in the writings of H. Marshall McLuhan, in 
			Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man (New York: McGraw-Hill, 
			1964) and elsewhere. 
41. This rather optimistic estimate was derived by plotting a 
			three-dimensional distribution of three arbitrarily defined 
			variables; the macro-structural, relating to the extension of 
			knowledge beyond the capacity of conscious experience; the organic, 
			dealing with the manifestations of terrestrial life as inherently 
			comprehensible; and the infra-particular, covering the subconceptual 
			requirements of natural phenomena. Values were assigned to the known 
			and unknown in each parameter, tested against data from earlier 
			chronologies, and modified heuristically until predictable 
			correlations reached a useful level of accuracy. "Two decades" 
			means, in this case, 20.6 years, with a standard deviation of only 
			1.8 years. (An incidental finding, not pursued to the same degree of 
			accuracy, suggests a greatly accelerated resolution of issues in the 
			biological sciences after 1972.) 
42. Since they represent an examination of too small a percentage of 
			the eventual options, in terms of "multiple mating," the subsystem 
			we developed for this application. But an example will indicate how 
			one of the most frequently recurring correlation problems - 
			chronological phasing - was brought to light in this way. One of the 
			first combinations tested showed remarkably high coefficients of 
			compatibility, on a post hoc static basis, but no variations of 
			timing, using a thirty-year transition module, permitted even 
			marginal synchronization. The combination was thus disqualified. 
			This would not rule out the possible adequacy of combinations using 
			modifications of the same factors, however, since minor variations 
			in a proposed final condition may have disproportionate effects on 
			phasing. 
43. Edward Teller, quoted in War/Peace Report (December 1964).
				
44. E.g., the highly publicized "Delphi technique" and other, more 
			sophisticated procedures. A new system, especially suitable for 
			institutional analysis, was developed during the course of this 
			study in order to hypothecate mensurable "peace games"; a manual of 
			this system is being prepared and will be submitted for general 
			distribution among appropriate agencies. For older, but still 
			useful, techniques, see Norman C. Dalkey’s Games and Simulations 
			(Santa Monica, Calif.: Rand, 1964). 
45. A primer-level example of the obvious and long overdue need for 
			such translation is furnished by Kahn (in Thinking About the 
			Unthinkable, p. 102). Under the heading "Some Awkward Choices" he 
			compares four hypothetical policies: a certain loss of $3,000; a .1 
			chance of loss of $300,000; a .01 chance of loss of $30,000,000; and 
			a .001 chance of loss of $3,000,000,000. A government decision-maker 
			would "very likely" choose in that order. But what if "lives are at 
			stake rather than dollars"? Kahn suggests that the order of choice 
			would be reversed, although current experience does not support this 
			opinion. Rational war research can and must make it possible to 
			express, without ambiguity, lives in terms of dollars and vice 
			versa; the choices need not be, and cannot be, "awkward."
				
46. Again, an overdue extension of an obvious application of 
			techniques up to now limited to such circumscribed purposes as 
			improving kill-ammunition ratios determining local choice between 
			precision and saturation bombing, and other minor tactical, and 
			occasionally strategic, ends. The slowness of Rand, 
				I.D.A., and 
			other responsible analytic organizations to extend 
			cost-effectiveness and related concepts beyond early-phase 
			applications has already been widely remarked on and criticized 
			elsewhere. 
47. The inclusion of institutional factors in war-game techniques 
			has been given some rudimentary consideration in the Hudson 
			Institute’s Study for Hypothetical Narratives for Use in Command and 
			Control Systems Planning (by William Pfaff and Edmund Stillman; 
			Final report published 1963). But here, as with other war and peace 
			studies to date, what has blocked the logical extension of new 
			analytic techniques has been a general failure to understand and 
			properly evaluate the nonmilitary functions of war.