The nuclear arsenals of the United States and the Soviet Union
are larger, better equipped, and deadlier than at any other time in
history. This incisive book contends that the superpowers, while
exhibiting enormous ingenuity in the area of arms development, have
shown only a minimal interest toward the containment of arms. This
is a carefully documented evaluation of the mismanagement of
nuclear arms control by the superpowers, and of their failure to
contain the nuclear arms race despite their involvement in the
process for over a quarter of a century. Only the superpowers can
reduce the proliferation of nuclear arms and in the process lessen
the likelihood of nuclear war through accident, miscalculation, or
crisis escalation. Yet forty-four years after Hiroshima, not a
single wanted nuclear weapon has been eliminated by them.
"The Superpowers and Nuclear Arms Control" addresses a broad
spectrum of nuclear arms control issues, beginning with the history
of the nuclear arms race, the lukewarm attempts by the superpowers
at nuclear arms control, and the role of the nuclear havenots. The
book then considers current threats to arms control evidenced by
the termination of the SALT regime and plans to discard the ABM
Treaty. A discussion of the congressional-executive split on
numerous key arms control issues is followed by conclusions drawn
from observing decades of negotiation. Comprehensive appendices
contain valuable charts and other documents that reinforce the
content of the text. This resource is a useful tool for arms
control and disarmament activists, students, and researchers, and
for the many men and women everywhere who are at a loss to
understand why so little is being accomplished in this critical
area.
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