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Nuclear Designs - Great Britain, France and China in the Global Governance of Nuclear Arms (Paperback)
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Nuclear Designs - Great Britain, France and China in the Global Governance of Nuclear Arms (Paperback)
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Global politics has changed with unaccustomed swiftness since the
end of the Cold War. Eastern Europe is free; the Soviet Union has
broken up; China presses free market economic reform; and the
United States and Russia have declared a joint commitment to end
nuclear war. The force of these changes has created a new agenda
for global politics and security policy. This does not mean that
nuclear weapons have lost their centrality. Nuclear development
programs continue in the major holders of advanced weapons. In
Israel, Pakistan, India, North Korea, Iraq, and Iran nuclear
intentions are subject to widespread speculation and scrutiny.
Negotiations for renewal of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
remind us that the treaty requires serious efforts to abolish
nuclear weapons. Nuclear Choices points out that the Cold War's end
has not banished mistrust. Instead, it has opened the door to frank
conversation about the usefulness of force and the need to address
common fears. States now face a global choice among alternative
nuclear futures. If they desire to avoid runaway nuclear
development, the choices come down to three: the status quo,
disengagement, or abolition. Larkin argues that if they chose the
status quo, they elect a world in which only terror and
self-restraint keep devastation at bay, a world in which instant
destruction is possible. This study focuses on the nuclear weapons
programs of Great Britain, China, and France, because they may be
less familiar to students of international affairs. Each of these
countries has developed a substantial nuclear capability that could
decisively shape the result of coming global nuclear decisions.
Larkin concludes that these three minipowers could conclude that
nuclearism serves their interests, refuse disengagement, and
encourage proliferation. If they are prepared to abandon
nuclearism, they have tremendous political leverage on Russia, the
United States, and also on undeclared and aspiring nuclear weapons
states. For now, only the United Kingdom, France, and China
maintain sufficient warhead inventories and production capabilities
to have strong effects on how the United States and Russia view
their own strategic capabilities. Nuclear Choices asserts that
governments, polities, and parties today do not know how to
guarantee themselves against weapons of mass destruction. They must
either acquire the political and social means to achieve such
guarantees or accept a world in which nuclearism will continue to
cast its shadow over all aspects of nation building. It will be of
interest to political scientists, policymakers, military analysts,
and those interested hi the nuclear issue.
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