ABSTRACT

This work canvasses nuclear weapon abolition, proposals placed on the table since 1945 and the obstacles and issues which a realistic program for abolition confronts today. It has an ambitious purpose, to show that nuclear abolition can and should be placed on the public agenda.a The author terms it interpretive in that it incorporates his commentaries, never hiding his reasons and judgments. It is neither "just the facts" nor "all the facts." It is an encyclopedia in the original meaning of "a general course of instruction." He identifies himself with all who pursue the problem posed by nuclear weapons systematically and with seriousness of purpose, committed to self-instruction. In another sense, he writes, this work is a conversation with the Reader.

What is needed to abolish nuclear weapons? His starting-point is this: As long as nuclear weapons are stockpiled and deployed there is risk of their use, which would be catastrophic. Abolition, however, is inconceivable in the absence of a developed and articulated alternative to the nuclear status quo. Even with that, the politics of abolition, bringing the governments of the nuclear weapon states to believe that abolition is in their interest, is the sine qua non of achieving a world free of nuclear weapons.

Larkin's text is written for those, whether practitioners or citizens, interested in designing and bringing about denuclearization. Abolition cannot be achieved by political elites in the absence of broad concurrent public support. Governments, career policy officials and legislators have chosen to assume responsibility for the public agenda. They may be askedimust be asked,what they will do to bring about denuclearization.

part II|45 pages

Objections and Obstacles

part III|84 pages

Initiatives

chapter 23|4 pages

The Eisenhower Administration

chapter 25|6 pages

Zones

chapter 27|9 pages

Reykjavik

chapter 29|3 pages

Model Nuclear Weapons Convention

chapter 32|3 pages

The Weapons of Mass Destruction Commission

chapter 33|4 pages

Nuclear Security Project

part IV|53 pages

Technical and Organizational Measures

chapter 34|15 pages

Warhead and Fissile Material Accounting

chapter 35|5 pages

Verification

chapter 37|9 pages

Systematic and Open Modeling

chapter 38|3 pages

Simultaneous Move to Zero

chapter 39|3 pages

Transparence

part V|42 pages

Processes and Institutional Measures

chapter 40|2 pages

Review and Dispute Resolution Procedures

chapter 42|5 pages

Non-State Research Centers

chapter 43|13 pages

Designing Negotiability

chapter 44|2 pages

Focused Talks

part VI|36 pages

Political Measures

chapter 45|3 pages

Nine Tests

chapter 47|16 pages

Active Reassurance

chapter 48|3 pages

Conventional Force Limits

chapter 49|4 pages

Collective Security

part VII|21 pages

Urgent Interim and Preliminary Measures

chapter 50|3 pages

Detargeting

chapter 51|3 pages

Dealerting

chapter 52|3 pages

HEU Control and Buydown

part VIII|20 pages

Denuclearization Design

chapter 55|4 pages

Projects on Denuclearization Design

chapter 57|4 pages

Paths as I See Them