Journal of Strategic Studies

Papers
(The TQCC of Journal of Strategic Studies is 2. 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 2021-06-01 to 2025-06-01.)
ArticleCitations
Pulled East. The rise of China, Europe and French security policy in the Asia-Pacific20
Deterrence asymmetry and strategic stability in Europe19
Learning from losing: How defeat shapes coalition dynamics in wartime19
Andrew Marshall and net assessment15
From the editors13
Red lines: Enforcement, declaration, and ambiguity in the Cuban Missile Crisis12
Strategic studies and cyber warfare11
From the editors11
In the blind spot: Influence operations and sub-threshold situational awareness in Norway11
Hear no evil, see no evil: Why the United States gets net assessment wrong9
On military restoration: How militaries recover from battlefield surprise8
What contributions do anti-insurgent militias produce during armed conflict? Exploring the capabilities of anti-insurgent militias in Colombia and the Philippines8
A one-way attack drone revolution? Affordable mass precision in modern conflict8
The maritime perspective: Placing the oceans in the study of the Second World War8
Artificial intelligence and the future of warfare: The USA, China, and strategic stability8
Evolving towards military innovation: AI and the Australian Army7
From the editors7
History is written by the losers: Strategy and grand strategy in the aftermath of war7
Did the Bush Administration mean well?7
Evolution of the Argentina Ministry of Defense since 1983: Organizations, norms, and personnel6
The transatlantic basis of war and peace, 1914–19176
Stuxnet revisited: From cyber warfare to secret statecraft6
Organizational strategy and its implications for strategic studies: A review essay6
Speaking with one voice: Coalitions and wartime diplomacy6
The weakest link: The vulnerability of U.S. and allied global information networks in the nuclear age6
Tracking mobile missiles6
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
North Korea’s nuclear and missile programs: Foreign absorption and domestic innovation4
Anticipatory governance and new weapons of war: Lessons from the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons4
What does NATO do for you? Advancing the debate on NATO’s endurance and enlargement4
Explaining the 2003 Iraq war (again) - Gore-war vs. Gore-peace revisited4
We’ll never have a model of an AI major-general: Artificial Intelligence, command decisions, and kitsch visions of war4
The rise of the autocratic nuclear marketplace3
Unpacking the varying strategic logics of total defence3
Building engines for war: Air-cooled radial aircraft engine production in Britain and America in World War II3
From the editors3
How small states break oil sanctions: Israel’s oil import strategy in the 1970s3
The end of MAD? Technological innovation and the future of nuclear retaliatory capabilities3
Military-technological innovation in small states: The cases of Israel and Singapore3
Is India underbalancing China?2
How leaders exercise emergent strategy? Lessons from Moshe Dayan2
Awe for strategic effect: Hardly worth the trouble2
New technology, old strategy: Cyberspace and the international politics of African agency2
Which way to turn? Recent directions in writing about the American Civil War2
Reply to Frank Harvey – what counterfactuals cannot do2
How the United States lost the “forever war”2
Protecting China’s interests overseas: Securitization and foreign policy2
Rethinking Gore-War: Counterfactuals and the 2003 Iraq War2
Trust but verify: Satellite reconnaissance, secrecy and arms control during the Cold War2
Understanding Russia’s war against Ukraine: Political, eschatological and cataclysmic dimensions2
Counterinsurgency as fad: America’s rushed engagement with irregular warfare2
From the editors2
The genesis of the first strategic stealth bomber: Understanding the interactions between strategy, bureaucracy, politics, and technology2
Norway, deterrence, reassurance and strategic stability in Europe2
Ceci n’est pas une nuke? The impact of emerging militarised technologies on strategic stability2
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