Journal of Strategic Studies

Papers
(The TQCC of Journal of Strategic Studies is 3. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2022-05-01 to 2026-05-01.)
ArticleCitations
A bolt from the blue: NATO’s misconception of Soviet military strategy36
Current Russian perspectives on strategic stability and deterrence through the prism of strategic culture32
Deterrence asymmetry and strategic stability in Europe25
Coercion by military assistance: A two-level strategy24
From the editors14
From the editors13
Hear no evil, see no evil: Why the United States gets net assessment wrong12
From the editors12
A one-way attack drone revolution? Affordable mass precision in modern conflict11
When competition becomes contagious: Strategic arms racing spillovers, alliance politics, and the Sino-American nuclear competition10
Routledge Handbook of Strategic Culture10
Artificial intelligence and the future of warfare: The USA, China, and strategic stability10
On military restoration: How militaries recover from battlefield surprise10
Battlefield knowledge and barracks reality: Learning practices within the Netherlands Army10
Strategic studies and cyber warfare10
Evolving towards military innovation: AI and the Australian Army9
What contributions do anti-insurgent militias produce during armed conflict? Exploring the capabilities of anti-insurgent militias in Colombia and the Philippines8
From the editors8
History is written by the losers: Strategy and grand strategy in the aftermath of war7
‘Like-minded and like-acting.’ Central Europe, the West, and the overlooked factor of the Warsaw Pact’s demise7
Tracking mobile missiles6
Evolution of the Argentina Ministry of Defense since 1983: Organizations, norms, and personnel6
From the editors6
The transatlantic basis of war and peace, 1914–19176
From the editors6
Did the Bush Administration mean well?6
The weakest link: The vulnerability of U.S. and allied global information networks in the nuclear age6
Stuxnet revisited: From cyber warfare to secret statecraft6
Explaining the 2003 Iraq war (again) - Gore-war vs. Gore-peace revisited5
Building engines for war: Air-cooled radial aircraft engine production in Britain and America in World War II5
Anticipatory governance and new weapons of war: Lessons from the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons5
The strategic-level effects of long-range strike weapons: A framework for analysis5
Is the decline of war a delusion? The long peace phenomenon and the modernization peace – the explanation that refutes or subsumes all others5
We’ll never have a model of an AI major-general: Artificial Intelligence, command decisions, and kitsch visions of war5
The end of MAD? Technological innovation and the future of nuclear retaliatory capabilities4
Reply to Frank Harvey – what counterfactuals cannot do4
What does NATO do for you? Advancing the debate on NATO’s endurance and enlargement4
The effectiveness of coercive intelligence disclosure: The case of Israel and the German scientists in Egypt4
The deterrence-provocation continuum in the context of Russian strategic culture: Hypersensitivity, holism-conspiracism, and sacred great power status4
Re-examining the introduction of 280 mm Cannons and Honest John Rockets into Korea, January 19584
How small states break oil sanctions: Israel’s oil import strategy in the 1970s4
Unpacking the varying strategic logics of total defence4
Counterinsurgency as fad: America’s rushed engagement with irregular warfare3
The genesis of the first strategic stealth bomber: Understanding the interactions between strategy, bureaucracy, politics, and technology3
Ceci n’est pas une nuke? The impact of emerging militarised technologies on strategic stability3
New technology, old strategy: Cyberspace and the international politics of African agency3
Which way to turn? Recent directions in writing about the American Civil War3
Is India underbalancing China?3
Is the decline of war a delusion? An exchange between researchers following the publication of Azar Gat’s article on the subject3
Norway, deterrence, reassurance and strategic stability in Europe3
“Hamas is deterred” as wishful thinking: An analysis of how Israel empowered Hamas to attack Israel on October 73
How the United States lost the “forever war”3
Awe for strategic effect: Hardly worth the trouble3
Rethinking Gore-War: Counterfactuals and the 2003 Iraq War3
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