Report_from_Iron_Mountain

 
2. Seymour Melman, "The Cost of Inspection for Disarmament," in Benoit and
Boulding, op. cit.
 
SECTION 5
 
1. 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 Congressman in 1965; it was later given limited distribution among other
persons engaged in related projects.)
 
2. David T. Bazelon, "The Politics of the Paper Economy," Commentary
(November 1962), p.409.
 
3. The Economic Impact of Disarmament (Washington: USGPO, January
1962), p.409.
 
4. David T. Bazelon, "The Scarcity Makers," Commentary (October 1962), p.
298.
 
5. Frank Pace, Jr., in an address before the American Banker's Association,
September 1957.
 
6. A random example, taken in this case from a story by David Deitch in the
New York Herald Tribune (9 February 1966).
 
7. Vide L. Gumplowicz, in Geschichte der Staatstheorien (Innsbruck: Wagner,
1905) and earlier writings.
 
8. K. Fischer, Das Militar (Zurich: Steinmetz Verlag, 1932), pp.42-43.
 
9. 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.
 
10. Herman Kahn, On Thermonuclear War (Princeton, N.J., Princeton
University Press, 1960), p.42. 11. John D. Williams, "The Nonsense about Safe
Driving," Fortune (September 1958).
 
12. Vide most recently K. Lorenz, in Das Sogenannte Bose: zur
Naturgeschichte der Aggression (Vienna: G. Borotha-Schoeler Verlag, 1964).