ABSTRACT

This book provides a detailed examination of the compound crisis between India and Pakistan that brought the region to the brink of a nuclear war in 1990. Placing the crisis in the context of concurrent international events such as the fall of the Soviet Union, the authors draw out the lesson for present-day South Asian affairs. The book also makes a significant contribution to the debates on the role of nuclear weapons, confidence and security building strategies and the place of ethnicity in contemporary international relations.

chapter |1 pages

Introduction

chapter |7 pages

Compound and complex crises

chapter 1|1 pages

The strategic context

chapter |9 pages

China

chapter |2 pages

A deteriorating political environment

chapter 3|11 pages

Kashmir

From Simla to chaos

chapter 1984|20 pages

–1988

chapter |5 pages

The war of words escalates

chapter |17 pages

The military crisis

chapter 5|5 pages

America’s deepening engagement

chapter |8 pages

The Gates mission

chapter |6 pages

The Gates mission: an evaluation

chapter 6|9 pages

1990 as a nuclear crisis

chapter |3 pages

The nuclear issue and the crisis

chapter 7|10 pages

Lessons for the real world