ABSTRACT

The intensification of the Iranian and North Korean nuclear crises has created new fears that deteriorating security conditions in the Middle East, Northeast Asia, and other regions will lead additional countries to seek their own nuclear arsenals in the years to come.

This special issue examines the factors that are likely to shape nuclear weapons proliferation over the next decade. The internationally recognized authors of this issue, many of whom are prominent scholars and others of whom have held influential governmental positions with responsibility for countering nuclear proliferation, bring to light the conditions and events that might drive new countries to pursue nuclear weapons; the indicators and cautionary signs that can provide early warning that a country is interested in building nuclear bombs; and the policy and military measures that can be adopted to prevent or at least dissuade new proliferators. The introductory chapter develops a novel analytical approach focusing on the role of nuclear myths and mythmakers and the subsequent chapters draw on this approach to help analysts better understand and policy makers better manage nuclear proliferation over the next ten years.

chapter |22 pages

Nuclear Proliferation Over the Next Decade

Causes, Warning Signs, and Policy Responses

chapter |11 pages

Theories of Nuclear Proliferation

The State of the Field

chapter |11 pages

Anticipating Nuclear Proliferation

Insights from the Past

chapter |11 pages

Countering Proliferation

Insights from Past “Wins, Losses, and Draws”

chapter |17 pages

Nuclear Proliferation Motivations

Lessons from Pakistan

chapter |15 pages

Nuclear U-Turns

Learning from South Korean and Taiwanese Rollback

chapter |13 pages

Egypt’s Nuclear Weapons Program

Lessons Learned

chapter |11 pages

Nuclear Proliferation in Europe

Could It Still Happen?

chapter |13 pages

Peering Into the Abyss

Non-State Actors and the 2016 Proliferation Environment