Abstract

The danger of nuclear war represents a real and catastrophic threat to modern civilization. A possible way for reducing such a threat is to develop non-military means of international conflict resolution to take advantage of improved information handling capabilities to facilitate decision-making and control. Use should be made of adaptive control principles which recognize the possibility of cooperative, competitive, and confrontational perceptions of opposing nations, as well as the possible normal, alert, and emergency states of a cooperative security system. Better use should be made of existing conflict resolution means, as well as of the successes of technical cooperation between people in nations of different ideologies and/or different forms of government. Major incentives and motivations exist for greatly increased efforts toward developing expert systems for helping to facilitate better means for resolving international conflicts.

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