ABSTRACT
Assuming a movement towards detente, East-West Arms Control assesses the role and relevance of arms control in an era of rapidly eroding bipolarity and East-West confrontation. It takes a sober look at the significance of what has been achieved so far, where the arms control process is currently heading and what prospects and challenges the Western Alliance will face.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
Part I Arms control, NATO strategy and alliance politics
chapter 1|30 pages
Strategy, arms control and reassurance: dilemmas in German–American security relations
Herbert Dittgen
part |2 pages
Part II Arms control after the INF Treaty
chapter 3|11 pages
Requirements for successful negotiations on force reductions in Europe
Jonathan Dean
part |2 pages
Part III The role of confidence-building measures
chapter 5|30 pages
Confidence- and security-building measures: an evolving East–West security regime?
Volker Rittberger, Manfred Efinger and Martin Mendler
part |2 pages
Part IV Public opinion, domestic policies and arms control
chapter 8|21 pages
Towards an anti-nuclear consensus? West Germany, INF and the future of nuclear arms control in Europe
Thomas Risse-Kappen
chapter 9|33 pages
Up (or down) on arms: American and Canadian public attitudes in the mid-1980s
Don Munton
part |2 pages
Part V European arms control in the 1990s