Twenty-First Century Weapons Proliferation: Are We Ready?James M. Ludes, Henry Sokolski Routledge, 2014 M01 14 - 208 pages Leading US security practitioners fromt he Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush and Clinton administrations, plus other experts on proliferation, clarify the weapons proliferation threats that the US and its allies will face, and suggest what new policies their governments should consider. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 31
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... University journal, National Security Studies Quarterly. Marianne Oliva, research coordinator at the Nonproliferation Policy Education Center, and Sally Green of Frank Cass Publishers tackled many of the final volume's remaining ...
... University journal, National Security Studies Quarterly. Marianne Oliva, research coordinator at the Nonproliferation Policy Education Center, and Sally Green of Frank Cass Publishers tackled many of the final volume's remaining ...
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... University, focuses on this set of emerging threats in his chapter, 'The Next Strategic Threat'. In it he analyzes three conventional weapons developments that have strategic implications: India's development of precise ballistic ...
... University, focuses on this set of emerging threats in his chapter, 'The Next Strategic Threat'. In it he analyzes three conventional weapons developments that have strategic implications: India's development of precise ballistic ...
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... University's Center for Energy and Environmental Studies details the technical challenges the world's nuclear nations would face in any effort to reduce existing civil and military stockpiles of nuclear weapons-usable materials. These ...
... University's Center for Energy and Environmental Studies details the technical challenges the world's nuclear nations would face in any effort to reduce existing civil and military stockpiles of nuclear weapons-usable materials. These ...
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... University, insists that the supposed gap between various theorizing about proliferation and promoting sound nonproliferation policy is neither necessary, nor conducive to good policy. After evaluating the practical value of the most ...
... University, insists that the supposed gap between various theorizing about proliferation and promoting sound nonproliferation policy is neither necessary, nor conducive to good policy. After evaluating the practical value of the most ...
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Contents
HOW APPROPRIATE IS OUR RESPONSE? | |
PART III IS THERE CAUSE FOR OPTIMISM? | |
Notes on Contributors | |
Index | |
Other editions - View all
Twenty-first Century Weapons Proliferation: Are We Ready? Henry D. Sokolski,James M. Ludes Limited preview - 2001 |
Twenty-first Century Weapons Proliferation: Are We Ready? Henry D. Sokolski,James M. Ludes Limited preview - 2001 |
Twenty-First Century Weapons Proliferation: Are We Ready? James M. Ludes,Henry Sokolski Limited preview - 2014 |
Common terms and phrases
Affairs Aires American Argentina arms Asia attack Aum Shinrikyo ballistic Bangladesh become biological weapons Brazil building cent chemical and biological China civilian concern continue conventional cooperation counterproliferation countries Defense democracy democratic Department destruction East economic effective efforts Energy example experience export fact forces foreign fuel fundamentalist future groups growth important increase India initiative Institute interests International Iran Iraq Islam issues launch leading least less major March military missile Muslims nonproliferation North Korea nuclear nuclear weapons operations Pakistan peace plans plutonium political possible potential predictions Press problem production projection proliferation reactor regime regional relations Report require response result rule Russia scientists Security social South spread stockpiles strategic Studies Terrorism terrorist tests theory threats Treaty United University uranium Washington Western York