Bernard Brodie (born May 20, 1910, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.—died November 24, 1978, Los Angeles, California) was an American military strategist who was the author of several highly influential works on the subject of nuclear strategy and who shaped the American debate on nuclear weapons for half a century.
Brodie received a Ph.D. in international relations from the University of Chicago in 1940. He served in the office of the chief of naval operations from 1943 to 1945, and after World War II he taught at Yale University, where he was an associate professor of international relations and director of graduate studies. In 1951 Brodie joined the RAND Corporation in Santa Monica, California, where he worked on defense and nuclear strategy until 1966. He joined the Department of Political Science at the University of California, Los Angeles, in 1963 and retired in 1977.
Although his first publications were on naval warfare (Layman’s Guide to Naval Strategy in 1942 and Seapower in the Machine Age in 1943), Brodie became famous for his work on nuclear strategy, which examined concepts and theories of warfare in the new nuclear context. In The Absolute Weapon (1946), Brodie anticipated the development of the doctrine of massive retaliation, which became central to U.S. nuclear strategy in the 1950s.
Other books of Brodie’s dealing with nuclear strategy include The Atomic Bomb and American Security (1945), Strategy in the Missile Age (1959), Escalation and the Nuclear Option (1966), and From Crossbow to H-Bomb, which he wrote in 1973 in collaboration with his wife, Fawn M. Brodie, a prominent historian. Brodie’s work on nuclear strategy resulted in his being known as “the American Clausewitz,” a nod to the Prussian general Carl von Clausewitz, whose On War (1832) is a classic, widely influential treatise on military strategy.
In 1973 Brodie also published War and Politics, a volume on the relations between military affairs and statecraft. In it he examined the history of World War I, World War II, the Korean War, and the Vietnam War and looked at the changing attitudes toward war, theories on its causes, nuclear weapons, and the nature of strategy itself.