Preventing the spread of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) is an
urgent national and international security objective. How to
realize this goal is a controversial matter, though. Chemical and
biological weapons and missile technology are threats to peace
equaled only by nuclear weapons. Yet for the grave dangers they
pose, and despite the intense alarm expressed over the
proliferation of non-nuclear WMD over the past decade, scholarly
studies of national endeavors to stop the spread of these weapons
is scant. Cooper remedies this by developing conceptual and
normative frameworks to better understand national
non-proliferation efforts, then examines competing U.S. and
Australian strategies, respectively, of capability denial,
non-possession norm building and consequence management. While not
wholly incompatible, these competing strategies often impede one
another's progress and illuminate larger fissures in Western
non-proliferation policies; fissures that ultimately may splinter
international coordination and enervate future attempts to prevent
the pernicious multiplication of WMDs.
Based on extensive primary research, including hundreds of
previously classified documents, and interviews with dozens of
present and past officials ranging from desk officers to cabinet
ministers, Cooper's book will appeal to anybody interested in the
issues of implementing effective non-proliferation policies. Policy
analysts and scholars alike will benefit from the scholarly account
written by a U.S. arms control expert.
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