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Kenneth Boulding, Conflict and Defense, (New York: Harper, 1962), p. 262. Boulding went on to support the idea of a decline in the Loss of Strength Gradient. He used two lines of attack. One of these was that transport was becoming easier. Another was that combatants had achieved sufficient capacity to defeat the opponent through strategic air and missile power. Boulding said that there had been a “military revolution” in the 20th century, the significance of which was “a very substantial diminution in the cost of transportation of organized violence of all kinds, especially of organized armed forces” and “an enormous increase in the range of the deadly projectile.”Kenneth Boulding, The Meaning of the 20th Century: The Great Transition, (London: George Allen & Unwin, 1965), p. 87. REFERENCES |
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