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Nuclear Weapons and Cooperative Security in the 21st Century

Book

Nuclear Weapons and Cooperative Security in the 21st Century

DOI link for Nuclear Weapons and Cooperative Security in the 21st Century

Nuclear Weapons and Cooperative Security in the 21st Century book

The New Disorder

Nuclear Weapons and Cooperative Security in the 21st Century

DOI link for Nuclear Weapons and Cooperative Security in the 21st Century

Nuclear Weapons and Cooperative Security in the 21st Century book

The New Disorder
ByStephen J. Cimbala
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2009
eBook Published 9 September 2009
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203870648
Pages 208
eBook ISBN 9780203870648
Subjects Politics & International Relations
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Cimbala, S.J. (2009). Nuclear Weapons and Cooperative Security in the 21st Century: The New Disorder (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203870648

ABSTRACT

This book looks at the prospects for international cooperation over nuclear weapons proliferation in the 21st century.

Nuclear weapons served as stabilizing forces during the Cold War, or the First Nuclear Age, on account of their capability for destruction, the fear that this created among politicians and publics, and the domination of the nuclear world order by two superpowers: the United States and the Soviet Union. The end of the Cold War, the dissolution of the Soviet Union, and the potential for nuclear weapons acquisition among revisionist states, or even non-state actors including terrorists, creates the possibility of a 'wolves eat dogs' phenomenon in the present century.

In the 21st century, three forces threaten to undo or weaken the long nuclear peace and fast-forward states into a new and more dangerous situation: the existence of large US and Russian nuclear weapons arsenals; the potential for new technologies, including missile defenses and long-range, precision conventional weapons, and a collapse or atrophy of the nuclear nonproliferation regime, and the opening of the door for nuclear weapons to spread among more than the currently acknowledged nuclear states.

This book explains how these three 'weakening' forces interact with one another and with US and Russian policy-making in order to create an environment of large possibilities for cooperative security - but also of considerable danger. Instead, the choices made by military planners and policy-makers will create an early twenty-first century story privileging nuclear stability or chaos. The US and Russia can, and should, make incremental progress in arms control and nonproliferation.

This book will be of much interest to students of nuclear proliferation and arms control, strategic studies, international security and IR in general.

Stephen J. Cimbala is Distinguished Professor of Political Science at Pennsylvania State University. He is the author of numerous works in the fields of international security, defense studies, nuclear arms control and other topics. He has consulted for various US government agencies and defense contractors.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|23 pages

Alternative nuclear regimes

chapter 2|17 pages

Technology innovation and deterrence in the future

chapter 3|17 pages

Nuclear abolition or limitation? Choices and risks

chapter 4|19 pages

Nuclear first use: Facing the inevitable, or playing with fire?

chapter |14 pages

5U.S.–Russian nuclear force reductions after Bush: Prospects and implications

chapter 6|15 pages

The far side: Theoretical (and practical) nuclear worlds ahead

chapter 7|15 pages

Nuclear proliferation in Asia: Containment or chaos?

chapter 8|16 pages

Russia’s undersea nuclear deterrent: Vanishing or modernizing?

chapter |10 pages

Conclusion

chapter |17 pages

Notes

chapter |9 pages

Selected bibliography

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