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Paul Nitze

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--- created: 2026-05-15 updated: 2026-05-16 title: Paul Nitze aliases:

  • Paul Henry Nitze tags:
  • Person
  • ColdWar
  • StateDepartment
  • Pentagon
  • 1950s
  • 1960s
  • 1980s category: "Diplomat & Government" summary: "Paul Nitze was the U.S. foreign policy official who authored NSC-68 in 1950 - replacing George Kennan's political containment with a militarized framework - and remained a central figure in American arms control and nuclear strategy debates for five decades, from the Truman administration through Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative." born: 1907-01-16 died: 2004-10-19 location: "Washington, D.C."

Paul Henry Nitze (January 16, 1907 - October 19, 2004) was an American Cold War strategist and diplomat who authored NSC-68 in 1950, the foundational policy document that militarized American containment strategy, and who remained a central figure in U.S. nuclear strategy and arms control for more than five decades. Nitze represented the opposing pole to George Kennan in the defining debate about how to conduct the Cold War: where Kennan emphasized political and economic means, Nitze argued that Soviet military capabilities required a permanent, massive American military counter-mobilization.1

Early Career

Nitze graduated from Harvard University and worked on Wall Street before entering government service during World War II. He served in the Strategic Bombing Survey after the war, analyzing the effects of Allied bombing on German and Japanese war production - experience that shaped his thinking about industrial capacity and military competition.

He joined the State Department and in 1949 succeeded George Kennan as Director of the Policy Planning Staff when Secretary of State Dean Acheson concluded that Kennan's political approach to containment was insufficient for the threat environment following the Soviet atomic bomb test and the Chinese communist victory.1

NSC-68

Nitze led the drafting of NSC-68, submitted to President Harry Truman on April 14, 1950. The document argued that the Soviet Union's military capabilities, particularly its developing nuclear arsenal, required the United States to roughly quadruple its defense spending and build conventional and nuclear forces sufficient to deter Soviet aggression across all contingencies.

Kennan opposed the document directly, arguing that it misread Soviet motivations and would produce a militarized competition that could be avoided through political means. Nitze's assessment prevailed: Truman approved NSC-68 following the outbreak of the Korean War in June 1950, and American defense spending increased dramatically in subsequent years, establishing the baseline military establishment that persisted through the Cold War.1

Pentagon and Negotiations

Nitze served as Secretary of the Navy from 1963 to 1967 under Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, and as Deputy Secretary of Defense from 1967 to 1969. He participated in the SALT I negotiations under Nixon and SALT II discussions, developing expertise in the technical details of arms control that made him one of the most persistent voices in nuclear policy debates regardless of which party held power.

In 1982, during the Reagan administration's intermediate nuclear force negotiations in Geneva, Nitze proposed an informal compromise known as the "walk in the woods" - a private conversation with Soviet negotiator Yuli Kvitsinsky in which the two men outlined a framework for reducing intermediate-range nuclear forces in Europe. Both governments rejected the proposal; Reagan's administration was committed to deploying new missiles and did not want to foreclose that option.2

Reagan Era

Nitze was initially supportive of President Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) - the missile defense program announced in 1983 - but increasingly concerned that it was being sold as making nuclear weapons "impotent and obsolete" in ways that distorted the arms control framework. He served as arms control adviser in Reagan's second term and participated in the negotiations that produced the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty eliminating an entire class of nuclear weapons.

He died in Washington, D.C. on October 19, 2004, at age 97, having spanned U.S. nuclear policy from the atomic bomb to post-Cold War arms reduction.

  1. Callahan, David. Dangerous Capabilities: Paul Nitze and the Cold War. HarperCollins, 1990. Nitze, Paul H., with Ann M. Smith and Steven L. Rearden. From Hiroshima to Glasnost: At the Center of Decision. Grove Weidenfeld, 1989.
  2. Talbott, Strobe. Deadly Gambits: The Reagan Administration and the Stalemate in Nuclear Arms Control. Knopf, 1984.

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