ABSTRACT
This book is the first scholarly book to take a comprehensive look at Germany’s nuclear weapons policies in the 21st century.
German foreign and security policy is facing a profound reorientation. Great power competition between the United States and both a revanchist Russia and a rising China, the return of war and nuclear threats to Europe, and the emergence of new technologies all force Germany to adapt. German policymakers and scholars increasingly speak of a pivotal Zeitenwende, an epochal turning point in history. How does Germany adapt its nuclear policies to these changing conditions?
The volume brings together internationally renowned nuclear scholars and policy analysts from Germany and abroad. Focussing on German nuclear deterrence, arms control and disarmament as well as nonproliferation policies, the contributors assess how German leaders have navigated continuity and change, domestically and abroad. The volume concludes that Germany remains bound by dependence on the United States and its own conservatism. Within these parameters, German leaders have adapted slowly to change and continue to balance seemingly contradictory deterrence and disarmament goals.
This book will be of much interest to students of nuclear proliferation, security studies, German politics and International Relations, as well as policymakers.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|70 pages
Sources of Change
part II|70 pages
Deterrence
chapter 6|19 pages
German Public Opinion on Nuclear Weapons
part III|76 pages
Arms Control and Disarmament
chapter 7|25 pages
German Efforts to Halt the Disintegration of Nuclear and Conventional Arms Control
chapter 9|28 pages
The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons
part IV|84 pages
Nonproliferation