The year 1957 is not chosen 
      at random. That is the year contemplated by "Dropshot", the U.S. plan for 
      a third world war, which governed strategic thinking for the 1950s. 
      Originally created in 1949, the plan was eventually released under the 
      Freedom of Information Act. It was published, with commentary, in 1978 by 
      Anthony Cave Brown in a book entitled "Dropshot".
      
      The war described by that book is the starting point for this article, 
      though my discussion departs from it in many particulars. I would like to 
      consider three topics:
      
      (1) How could such a war could have started?
      (2) What would the course of the war have been?
      (3) What would postwar history have been like?
      
      A preliminary matter that must be dealt with is the role of nuclear 
      weapons. The writers of Dropshot in 1949 did not think that nuclear 
      weapons would be decisive. Their use would have been optional except in 
      retaliation. 
"One factor to consider is that, while 
      the Soviets did not have in 1957 the massive ICBM force they would later 
      possess, they did have a sizable force ofg intermediate-range missiles 
      which could have been used against targets, such as U.S. military forces, 
      in Europe. Further, I take exception to John O'Reilly's retailing of the 
      familiar, but inaccurate, charge that the Vietnam war began under 
      President Kennedy. In fact, armed U.S. troops first went in under 
      Eisenhower, and engaged in at least limited combat; my mother's second 
      husband sustained a near-fatal abdominal wound in the conflict in 1956. 
      Kennedy must take some blame for further escalating the conflict (though 
      not nearly as much as Lyndon Johnson would later do undrr false pretenses); 
      however, had he not done so, and had Saigon then fallen in the mid-1960s, 
      he'd have been blamed for that. " - reader's commentThough atomic 
      bombs are devastating if you can transport them someplace where they can 
      do damage, the only means then available was the bomber. This made 
      delivery highly problematical, especially between continents. The writers 
      did note that their assessment would be obsolete if these weapons could be 
      married to rockets capable of flying between North America and Eurasia. As 
      it happened, the era of the Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) did 
      not really begin until the early 1960s. As late as the Cuban Missile 
      Crisis in 1962, the Soviets were estimated to have only about 50 ICBMs, 
      none in hardened silos. (The Pentagon expressed confidence to President 
      Kennedy that the U.S. could destroy them before they could be launched. 
      Kennedy was not enthusiastic about putting this confidence to the test).
      
      
Part OneThus, while Dropshot did 
      anticipate that the U.S. would be able to make successful nuclear strikes 
      at a few Soviet industrial facilities, it judged that these would not be 
      enough to determine the course of the war. Dropshot forecast that the 
      Soviets would be able to drop no more than two atomic bombs on the United 
      States, and that only if they were lucky. It now appears that those "duck 
      and cover" instructional films that were shown in schools starting in the 
      1950s were less irrational than later opinion has assumed. If you were 
      affected by one of these strikes at all, you were likely to be some 
      distance from ground zero, where precautions against blast and fallout 
      would make perfect sense. We should also note that the relative immunity 
      to atomic attack enjoyed by the United States would not have applied to 
      the European members of NATO. Even in Europe, however, Dropshot did not 
      believe that atomic weapons would be decisive, or even necessarily used at 
      all.
      
      With these points settled, we may begin the discussion proper:
      
      
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      icon to follow us on Twitter.(1) How could such a war could have 
      started? It could not have started by accident. The hair-trigger nuclear 
      response procedures which characterized the later stages of the Cold War 
      simply did not exist during the period in question. There was no need for 
      them, since it would have taken hours for a nuclear-armed bomber to reach 
      its target. Indeed, the leaders of the U.S. and the Soviet Union would 
      have been less constrained than were the leaders of the major European 
      powers in August 1914. The intricate mass mobilization plans devised by 
      France and Germany in preparation for the First World War could not really 
      be controlled once they were started. They were intimately tied to 
      strategic plans of offense and defense which required major battles to 
      occur within days of the start of mobilization. A war in 1957 between the 
      United States and the Soviet Union would have started very differently. 
      The mobilization of whole continents is necessarily a leisurely affair. 
      The plans the newly mobilized armies would have been called on to execute 
      would have been calculated in terms of months or years. Therefore, though 
      accidental skirmishes between East and West might have occurred in Europe 
      or the Mediterranean in the 1950s, an actual war would probably have to 
      have been deliberate.
      
      
"I'm not at all sure that the Soviets would have 
      started a war absent extreme provocation; they were still in a lot of ways 
      recovering from WWII, and _nobody bar nobody_ in the USSR wanted to go 
      through _that_ again. " - reader's commentsSince the Dropshot war 
      is defensive, at least in its opening stages, we must imagine a situation 
      in which the Soviets launch a general offensive to occupy Western Europe 
      (and various other places, as we will see below.) This would have required 
      a Soviet leadership that believed a decisive victory for communism was 
      achievable by military means, and a U.S. leadership that was either 
      threatening or indecisive or both. The first requirement would have been 
      met by the survival of Stalin into a vigorous old age. Though Stalin died 
      in 1953, he would have only 78 years old in 1957, hardly old enough to get 
      a driver's license in Georgia. The Stalin whom Solzhenitsyn described in 
      his novel, "The First Circle," planned to fight and win a decisive third 
      world war. Let us then imagine the old tyrant succumbing to delusions of 
      omnipotence because of his overwhelming victory in the Second World War, 
      yet frightened by events he sees happening on the other side of the world.
      
      There is a good argument to made that the United States took as little 
      hurt from the Cold War as it did because the president during the 1950s 
      was that logistics expert, Dwight David Eisenhower. Throughout his 
      presidency, experts from the Pentagon would come to him with estimates of 
      the terrifying strength of the Soviet Union and proposals for huge 
      increases in conventional forces which would be necessary to counter it. 
      Eisenhower, who had been a five star general, knew just how seriously to 
      take assessments of this type. Using his own good judgment to gauge just 
      what the Soviets could or would do, he starved the U.S. military during 
      the 1950s to let give the consumer economy room to breath. It was a risk, 
      but history shows that he was right to take it. (His successor, John 
      Kennedy, lacking this self-assurance, tended to act on the assumption that 
      the most pessimistic assessment was the correct one, which was part of the 
      reason for the Vietnam War.) Eisenhower knew that the Soviets were a real 
      threat, one that had to be contained. In this he was right: the attempts 
      by revisionist historians to ascribe the Cold War to American paranoia are 
      tendentious. He was also right in believing that containment, as 
      distinguished from rollback, could be achieved by feint and threat. He 
      could make threats effectively because he was a known quantity to the 
      Soviet leadership. They knew he was a cautious commander, that he would 
      not start a fight if he did not have to, that he was not easily deceived. 
      Even when they lied to him, they lied within limits understood by both 
      sides.
      
      
"Actually, Stalin did, and and he had plenty of 
      generals willing to march. Beria was executed because he wanted to end the 
      cold war. The only reason why the Soviets did not attack across the Fulda 
      Gap was their conviction that time was on their side. So they waited, and 
      built. By 1980, they were merely awaiting orders. " - reader's commentsLet 
      us picture an alternative president. Suppose that Eisenhower is out on the 
      golf links in September of 1956, taking a short break from his not-very-grueling 
      campaign for almost certain reelection, when he has a fatal heart attack. 
      His running mate, Vice President Richard Nixon, was even then a man of 
      ambiguous reputation. Nixon assumes the top spot on the Republican ticket, 
      and he has few if any differences with his boss's sober military and 
      foreign policies. However, people quickly form the impression that he is 
      too young and too opportunistic to be president yet. They therefore turn, 
      with a sigh of resignation, to the Democratic presidential contender, 
      Adlai Stevenson. Stevenson, of course, had many gifts. He was intelligent, 
      well-informed, and articulate to a degree rare among American politicians. 
      Stevenson was a genuine intellectual. Unfortunately, he was also a windbag 
      in the great tradition of William Jennings Bryan and a sentimental 
      internationalist in the tradition of Woodrow Wilson. Sentiment and 
      kindness are not the same thing, so foreign affairs conducted by 
      sentimental statesmen are often envenomed to an unusual degree.
      
      Stevenson's foreign policy is itself a good illustration. John Kenneth 
      Galbraith, who helped write Stevenson's speeches in the early 1950s, has 
      remarked that part of his job consisted of toning down the virtual 
      declarations of war against the Soviet Union that Stevenson usually 
      inserted in his first drafts. Doubtless some of this rhetoric was intended 
      merely to counter the impression that the Democratic Party was soft on 
      Communism. However, it cannot be denied that Stevenson felt the policy of 
      Cold War containment was immoral because it did not go far enough. He did 
      not favor an attack on the Soviet Union, but he did want it pressured from 
      all directions with physical and moral force. This was what Ronald Reagan 
      actually did in the 1980s, with considerable success. However, Reagan and 
      his advisers knew that the Soviet Union had exhausted the growth capacity 
      of a command economy, that the system was strong but brittle. In the 
      1950s, by contrast, the Soviet Union was growing and confident. Stevenson 
      would not have been deterred by this well-known fact; he had the sort of 
      mind that regarded mere practicality as rather tawdry. His idealism would 
      have been costly. Even a symbolic threat to the Soviet Empire, as it then 
      was, would have brought results quite different from those of thirty years 
      later.
      
      
"If victory were assured, I'd wonder how long it'd 
      be before China and Russia turned on each other" - reader's commentsIf 
      the parties to the Cold War had wanted a military showdown, they would 
      have had several perfectly suitable occasions in 1956, notably the Suez 
      Crisis and the Hungarian Uprising. Had Stalin still been alive at that 
      time, it is conceivable that he would have started to deal with the 
      peoples of Eastern Europe as he had begun to deal with the peoples of the 
      Soviet Union in the 1930s. Certainly some Eastern Europeans believed that 
      Stalin was planning massive movements of populations and the vigorous 
      purging of pre-World War II society. If this happened, an outraged 
      Stevenson Administration might then have announced its intention to send a 
      standby expeditionary force to Western Europe to support any future 
      popular uprisings in Eastern Europe. Less suspicious rulers than Stalin 
      would have been moved to preemptive action in such an event. He would not 
      have been reassured by the interminable flow of moralistic rhetoric that 
      President Stevenson could have been relived upon to produce. There would 
      have been too much of it to read, much less analyze. Stalin could easily 
      have decided that he could no longer wait for his creatures in Western 
      Europe to take power through force or fraud. Hoping for a decisive victory 
      before the U.S. expeditionary force could arrive, he sends his armies 
      across the north German plain to take the ports on the English Channel.
      
      (2) What would the course of the war have been? The Dropshot study is not 
      a belligerent document. It seems to be one of those common bureaucratic 
      plans which deliberately present a scenario so hair-raising that its 
      intended readers will be dissuaded from ever trying it in real life. It 
      does, of course, wildly overestimate anything the Soviet could or would 
      do. In addition to the main thrust across northwestern Europe, it 
      contemplates simultaneous Soviet offensives into the Middle East and 
      Japan. (For reasons wholly obscure, it directs that Hokkaido, the 
      northernmost and least populous of the main Japanese islands, be 
      abandoned.) Its assessment of the early course of the war in Europe, 
      however, was certainly realistic in 1949, and might still have held true 
      in 1957. The gist of the forecast was two months of unrelieved disaster. 
      While the planners hoped to stop the offensive somewhere in Germany, their 
      sober assessment was that it would have been difficult even to hold 
      Britain.
      
Readers of Norman Schwartzkopf's memoir, "It Doesn't Take A Hero," will 
      recall his description of the state of the U.S. Army in the 1950s. At 
      least that part of it stationed in the United States was a hollow force of 
      badly trained conscripts. Its equipment was ill-maintained and its senior 
      officer corps consisted disproportionately of World War II veterans who 
      would not otherwise have had jobs. This was the Army that was sent to 
      fight in Vietnam, with what results we know. While doubtless the emergency 
      of a world war would have quickly brought improvements, the opening phases 
      of the war would have had to be fought with what the U.S. had on hand. 
      What it had was not all that good. 
      In some ways, an actual world war fought in 1957 would have been fought 
      under even worse conditions than those envisioned in 1949. When Dropshot 
      was being developed, the fate of China was still in doubt. The maps that 
      come with the plan show China with a Communist north and a Nationalist 
      south. The study discusses the country mostly in terms of natural 
      resources and as a bridge to French Indochina. In reality, by 1957 China 
      was a united ally of the Soviet Union. It had a significant military, as 
      proven by the Korean War. As we know now, Chairman Mao tended to needle 
      the Soviet leadership for being too accommodating to the West. By some 
      accounts, he even proposed an offensive war against the West to Nikita 
      Khruschev, offering tens of millions of soldiers and even the union of 
      China with the USSR. Of course, China had (and has) little striking power 
      beyond its own borders, and the Soviet Union could not have come near to 
      supplying the Chinese Red Army with the equipment for offensive 
      capabilities. Still, the Sino-Soviet alliance in a World War would have 
      been a formidable opponent. It is perfectly plausible that some Chinese 
      armies would have fought not just around China's perimeter, but in France 
      and Germany. The worst case scenario for such a war is available, not in 
      Dropshot, but in a 1955 novel by C.M. Kornbluth, entitled "Not This 
      August". We hear about the war mostly in retrospect, since in the first 
      few pages the president of the United States surrenders to the Communist 
      alliance in a radio address. The bulk of the book is a description of the 
      Soviet occupation, as it affects a single small town. The war lasted for 
      three years, and it was not so different from the Dropshot war. 
      Nuclear weapons were not a decisive factor. The Soviets take all of 
      Europe and, using its resources and Chinese manpower, contrive to defeat 
      the American fleet, make a landing in Central America and work their way 
      north. The U.S. surrenders when the American front in Texas collapses. It 
      might seem a bit premature to surrender with the enemy only on the 
      southern border, but the author paints a good picture of a society that 
      has already been bled white. All available manpower and industrial 
      capacity have been diverted to the war, and still it is not enough. 
      Dropshot contemplates a comparable degree of mobilization. Thirty 
      million people of both sexes would have been needed to win the war the 
      plan laid out. It would not have been an economically invigorating war, as 
      the Second World War was for the United States. Wars are only invigorating 
      if the economy has a lot of unused potential which would go to waste if 
      not used for military production. This was the case with the American 
      economy in 1940, but not in 1957. Rather, it would have been like the 
      Second World War was for Great Britain, with every warm body either in the 
      service or doing something to support the war effort, and with civilian 
      production at destitution levels. During and after the Second World War, a 
      number of laws were passed giving the president standby authority to 
      nationalize or otherwise commandeer most of the industrial plant of the 
      U.S. in the event of a national emergency. Universal conscription was, in 
      principle, already in place. In the course of the war against the 
      Communist alliance, the U.S. would itself have become a command-economy 
      state.
      
      
      That is the year contemplated by "Dropshot", the U.S. plan for a third 
      world war, which governed strategic thinking for the 1950s. In actuality, 
      or course, even if the Soviets got to Antwerp, they would be most unlikely 
      to have arrived in Amarillo three years later. Rather than the immediate 
      loss of Western Europe, we must imagine Central Europe becoming a 
      debatable region. 
      Part OneAfter absorbing the 
      initial offensive, Dropshot calls for NATO to hold the line while the 
      resources of the United States were mobilized. Realistically, this could 
      have taken at least a year. During that time, it would have been extremely 
      difficult to keep NATO together. One of the points which "Not This August" 
      emphasizes as a factor in the defeat of the United States is the role of 
      the Communist underground. The state of the evidence suggests that such a 
      concern may be more than simple McCarthyite paranoia. The part played by 
      Communists and communist sympathizers in the politics and culture of the 
      U.S. in the 1930s and 1940s is still insufficiently appreciated. If I had 
      to name a single book to support this "There's a 
      good point in here, about just _how_ pervasive Communist influence had 
      been between about 1929 and 1946 or thenabouts" - reader's commentpoint, 
      I would suggest the last of Upton Sinclair's "Lanny Budd" novels, entitled 
      "A World to Win". Published in 1946, it describes sympathetically the 
      adventures of a wealthy American Communist as he moves about the world 
      during and just before the war, helping to organize the fight against 
      Fascism. The author, who made no secret of his own leftist sympathies, 
      describes the pro-Soviet cells which exist everywhere in the U.S., in 
      Hollywood and Washington and the arts. This, of course, was all edifying 
      progressive fiction, but it seems to have been fictionalized rather than 
      fantastic.
      
      The pro-Soviet streak in America politics did real harm during the 
      Molotov-Ribbentrop pack, when it actively impeded U.S. attempts to prepare 
      for World War II. It continued to do harm throughout the Cold War era, up 
      to and including the "Nuclear Freeze" movement of the 1980s, which nearly 
      succeeded in depriving American negotiators of the bargaining power they 
      needed to get the Soviets to reduce the number of nuclear weapons. While 
      this force in American politics would have been as active as possible 
      during a U.S.-Soviet war, they might not have counted for that much, 
      considering the high degree of national unity there would have been. In 
      any event, they would have worked through "I'm 
      curious to hear your opinion on how the Civil Rights Movement (if it 
      occurred at all) would have fared in this TL. " - reader's commentfront 
      groups as much as possible. This would not have been the case in Europe. 
      The powerful Communist Parties in France and Italy were openly and proudly 
      pro-Soviet, indeed pro-Stalin. They could and would have organized work 
      stoppages and mutinies. The peace movements they would have supported 
      would have been particularly persuasive with hostile and at least 
      temporarily triumphant armies only a few hundred miles away. Even if they 
      could not have forced their countries to surrender, they could have made 
      all but the most perfunctory participation in the war impossible.
      
      "the Civil Rights Movement succeeded in large part 
      because of the Cold War; the end of domestic segregation was necessary in 
      order to court the Third World. End the Cold War early, even by a hot war, 
      and maybe the whole thing happens more slowly" - author's responseStill, 
      these political difficulties would have been no more insurmountable than 
      those that had to be overcome to win the Second World War. Assuming, 
      therefore, that NATO holds together while it rearms and regroups, the 
      second phase of the war could begin. Dropshot contemplated an offense that 
      would ultimately result in the occupation of the Soviet Union. Again, 
      however, it did nothing to suggest that anyone would enjoy trying this in 
      real life. The plan considered the various ways that the Soviet Union 
      might have been invaded, and finds all but one of them either impractical, 
      like a drive north from the Middle East, or useless, like an invasion of 
      the Soviet Far East. The only way to do it is the hard way, back eastward 
      across the north German plain and into Poland. Securing the Balkans would 
      be necessary simply to secure this endeavor.
      
      Having defeated the Soviet armies in Eastern Europe, the rest of the war 
      would have resembled the German campaign of 1941, but without Hitler's 
      mental problems. I can summarize the final stage of the war no better than 
      by quoting Dropshot itself:
      
      "22. In the event of war with the USSR, we should endeavor by successful 
      military and other operations to create conditions which would permit 
      satisfactory accomplishment of U.S. objectives without a predetermined 
      requirement for unconditional surrender. War aims supplemental to our 
      peacetime aims should include:
      
      "a. Eliminating Soviet Russian domination in areas outside the borders of 
      any Russian state allowed to exist after the war.
      
      "b. Destroying the structure of relationships by which the leaders of the 
      All-Union Communist Party have been able to exert moral and disciplinary 
      authority over individual citizens, or groups of citizens, in countries 
      not under Communist control.
      
      "c. Assuring that any regime or regimes which may exist on traditional 
      Russian territory in the aftermath of a war:
      
      (1) Do not have sufficient military power to wage a war.
      
      (2) Impose nothing resembling the present Iron Curtain over contacts with 
      the outside world.
      
      "d. In addition, if any Bolshevik Regime is left in any part of the Soviet 
      Union, ensuring that it does not control enough of the military-industrial 
      potential of the Soviet Union to enable it to wage war on comparable terms 
      with any other regime or regimes which may exist on traditional Russian 
      territory.
      
      "e. Seeking to create postwar conditions which will:
      
      (1) Prevent the development of power relationships dangerous to the 
      security of the United States and international peace.
      
      (2) Be conducive to the development of an effective world organization 
      based on the purposes and principles of the United Nations. 
      
      (3) Permit the earliest practicable discontinuance within the United 
      States of wartime controls".
      
      This passage is not without relevance to the state of the world in 1995. 
      Let us imagine, however, that all this has been achieved, but the year is 
      only 1960. (3) What would postwar history have been like? 
      
      "Personally, I'm deeply skeptical about the alleged 
      influence of Communism during the thirties and forties. When one has to 
      argue a real-life point on the basis of a novel, one is in trouble. As for 
      the nuclear freeze movement, it's far from clear either that it was 
      significantly Communist-influenced or that it impeded the U.S. in the late 
      Cold War. To accomplish the latter, it would have actually had to slow 
      President Reagan's pell-mell military buildup--and that's assuming Mr. 
      Reilly is correct that the U.S., by way of superior armaments, essentially 
      bullied the Soviets into cutting their arsenal. There's precious little 
      evidence of this. Rather, what appears to have happened is that with 
      Gorbacjev's ascent, the Soviets finally had a leader who neither 
      remembered the Revolution nmor had fought in World War II, and who 
      therefore had neither the ideological zeal of the revolutionary generation 
      nor the security paranoia of those who'd faced national annihilation at 
      the hands of Hitler. Just because Reagan said the movement was 
      Communist-driven doesn't mean it was; he said the same in the 1960s about 
      Medicare (on radio and LP records) and (in correspondence with Richard 
      Nixon during the 1960 presidential race) the presidential candidacy of 
      Hohn F. Kennedy. It's worth noting that actual membership in the U.S. 
      Communist Party apparently shriveled after the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact, 
      which many sincere idealists on the left regarded as a dreadful betrayal. 
      Membership shrank from an estimated (by the FBI) high of about 90,000 in 
      the mid-thirties to perhaps 5,000 by 1950, and as much as half of the 1950 
      membership may have been FBI informants. As for "fellow travelers," we'll 
      never know, since the term is so elastic it could apply (and sometimes was 
      applied) to anyone who served as a union officer (and wasn't called a 
      Communist outright) to someone who simply supported the New Deal. " - 
      reader's commentThe burden of Arnold Toynbee's great multivolumed 
      work, "A Study of History," is that our civilization has broken down and 
      that it is now (during the 20th century) in a "time of troubles," like the 
      Hellenistic period in the ancient West and the Era of Contending States in 
      China. Such periods are characterized by "world wars". In the course of 
      them, one great power delivers a "knockout blow" to its main rival, and 
      sooner or later goes on to establish a universal state, like the Roman 
      Empire. The war Dropshot envisioned would have been such a blow. Actually, 
      Toynbee thought that a third world war would probably be started by the 
      United States and won by the Russians, "because they have a more serious 
      attitude toward life". Be that as it may, since we are working with the 
      U.S. war plan, let us consider what the result of a Western victory would 
      have been. 
      
      The world of 1960 after Dropshot would have been poorer than the real 
      world of that time. Africa and the great arc of Eurasia around Russia 
      would have collapsed into ethnic squabbling as the reach and attention of 
      the great powers were withdrawn. On the whole, the non-communist countries 
      of East Asia might have been invigorated, as they were by the Korean and 
      Vietnam Wars. However, there would have been no comparable world demand 
      for consumer goods for these countries to exploit. They could well have 
      experienced a war boom, followed by prolonged depressions, as their home 
      markets slowly recovered. 
      
      China, we assume, would have been part of the losing alliance. Dropshot 
      did not devote a great deal of attention to it. If the plan had actually 
      been implemented, it is unlikely that country would have been the scene of 
      major U.S. operations. However, with China's attention diverted toward 
      supporting the Soviet war effort, it is conceivable that the U.S. might 
      have backed a Nationalist reinvasion of southern China. It is debatable 
      whether this would have found wide support. The Communist regime did not 
      begin to mismanage the country significantly until the Great Leap Forward 
      of the late 1950s, a program which presumably would have been postponed in 
      the event of a war. However, what with the stresses of a lost war and such 
      resentment against the regime as had already been generated, it is 
      possible that China would have fallen apart, much as it had during the 
      warlord era of the 1920s, and as it may again in the later 1990s when Deng 
      Xiao Peng dies. 
      
      The biggest differences between a post-Dropshot world and the actual world 
      of 1960 would have been in Russia, Europe and the United States. Russia 
      and Eastern Europe in the late 1950s were still recovering from the 
      effects of World War II, and the last thing they needed was another war. 
      In some ways, perhaps, the Dropshot war would been less damaging than the 
      Second World War, since it was supposed to be faster and would not have 
      been directed against civilians. The plan called for a war of tanks, 
      fought for the most part on the plains of northern Europe. It would still 
      have been a catastrophe, but one that would not have returned the region 
      to 1945 levels. 
      
      Russia in 1960 might have been better able to make the transition to a 
      market economy than it was in the 1990s, for the simple reason there was a 
      substantial portion of the population who were already adults during the 
      last period when free enterprise had been allowed to operate, during 
      Lenin's "New Economic Policy" of the 1920s. It might, for instance, have 
      been fairly simple to recreate peasant agriculture. On the other hand, 
      Russian industry in the 1950s was even more strictly military than it was 
      in the final stages of the Soviet Union in the 1980s. Since the military 
      occupation of Russia in 1960 would have been largely concerned with 
      closing down the country's military potential, this would have meant 
      closing down all but a small fraction of the country's industry. The 
      country would have become, at least for a while, a country of peasants and 
      priests. This prospect might warm the heart of Alexander Solzhenitsyn, but 
      the reality might not have been sustainable. 
      
      In Western Europe, the 1950s boom would gave been cancelled. Even assuming 
      the Dropshot war did less damage than the Second World War, still it would 
      have been the third major war in the region in fifty years. Maybe that 
      would have been too much. People can only be expected to rebuild so many 
      times before they begin to despair about the future. It is hard to imagine 
      the normal market mechanisms of savings and investment operating at all in 
      such environment. What fool would invest money in a society that seemed to 
      explode every 20 years? Who would even want to keep money? People would 
      try to turn their savings into tangible assets as quickly as possible. The 
      cloud of despondency would ultimately lift, of course, but would be 
      greatly impeded by the factor we will consider below. 
      
      ""Just because Reagan said the movement was 
      Communist-driven doesn't mean it was;.." I would you grant that, except 
      the evidence found in KGB files after the fall of the Soviet Union clearly 
      stated that they had funded the anti-war movement in the 1960s as well 
      using the Rosenbergs to spy on the US. I remember reading an article in 
      the Washington Post back in 1992 or 93, where the author had personally 
      visited Russia and had read the files in question. " - reader's commentEven 
      in America, collectivism would have triumphed. As several historians have 
      pointed out, what we call socialism is simply the institutionalization in 
      peacetime of the command economy measures devised by Britain and Germany 
      to fight the First World War. These institutions would have been greatly 
      strengthened throughout the West, but especially in the United States, by 
      the experience of two world wars so close in occurrence. We should 
      remember that enlightened opinion in the U.S. of the 1950s was that 
      command economies really were superior in most was to market economies. It 
      was universally assumed that pro-market policies could never cure 
      underdevelopment in the Third World. Certainly the literature of the era 
      is filled with ominous observations that the Soviet Economy was growing 
      much faster than the U.S. economy during the same period. If the highly 
      regimented American economy envisioned by Dropshot had actually succeeded 
      in winning the Third World War, this attitude might have become a fixed 
      assumption of American culture, as it did in so many other countries 
      during the same period. Private enterprise would doubtless have continued 
      to constitute a major share of economic activity, but it would have been 
      so tightly regimented as to be virtually a creature of the state. And 
      there would have been no example, anywhere on Earth, of an important 
      country that did things differently. 
      
      The '60s, as we knew them, would also have been cancelled. Partly, of 
      course, this would have been because the country would have been broke. 
      Everyone would have had a job with a fixed salary, of course, but there 
      would have been little money for cars or highways or private houses. 
      America would have remained a country of immense, densely populated 
      cities, most of which would have consisted of public housing. The biggest 
      difference would have been the psychology of the younger generation. The 
      young adults of the 1950s, who had been children during the Second World 
      War, could not have conceived of allowing themselves the indiscipline and 
      disrespect shown by the young adults of the actual 1960s. The "Silent 
      Generation" of the 1950s knew from their earliest experiences that the 
      world was a dangerous place and the only way to get through it was by 
      cooperation and conformity. If Dropshot had occurred, their children, the 
      babyboom children, would have been even more constrained in childhood and 
      correspondingly more well-behaved in young adulthood. Doubtless there 
      would still have been something of an increase in the percentage of the 
      young in higher education in the 1960s, but the campuses would have been a 
      sea of crewcuts and neat bobs, white shirts and sensible shoes. The 
      popular music would not have been memorable. 
      
      The world after Dropshot would have had certain advantages, of course. 
      Total world expenditures on the military would probably have been much 
      smaller than was actually the case. The nuclear arms race would never have 
      occurred. Indeed, the more alarming types of nuclear missile, those with 
      multiple warheads, would never have been invented. It would have been a 
      world much less cynical than the one which actually occurred. The three 
      world wars would have provided a sense of closure which modern history has 
      not yet achieved. This time, finally, all the great evils of the century 
      would have been defeated. It would be unlikely to have resulted in 
      Toynbee's universal state, at least not during the 20th century. The 
      American people would probably have been as sick of the Adlai Stevenson 
      Democrats after the Third World War as they were of the Roosevelt 
      Democrats after the Second World War. The country would have kicked the 
      victors out of office and sought to turn inward. America would not have 
      been enthusiastic about further adventures for a long time to come. 
      
      The exhausted world I have described would doubtless have revived in a few 
      decades. Nations would have broken out of the cultural constraints that 
      the experience of universal conscription tend to impose on a generation. 
      People would slowly realize that their highly regulated economies were not 
      really keeping them safe but were really keeping them poor. There would be 
      an episode of restructuring as technologies developed for the military 
      were finally converted to consumer use, and old subsidized industries were 
      allowed to die. All in all, the world of 1995 after Dropshot might have 
      been similar to the one we see today. Still, it would have been reached at 
      immensely greater cost, both economic and spiritual. We are not living in 
      the best of all possible worlds, but it could easily have been worse.