This new volume explores what the acquisition of nuclear weapons
means for the life of a protracted conflict.
The book argues that the significance of the possession of
nuclear weapons in conflict resolution has been previously
overlooked. Saira Khan argues that the acquisition of nuclear
weapons by states keeps conflicts alive indefinitely, as they are
maintained by frequent crises and low-to-medium intensity violence,
rather than escalating to full-scale wars. This theory therefore
emphasises the importance of nuclear weapons in both war-avoidance
and peace-avoidance. The book opens with a section explaining its
theory of conflict transformation with nuclear weapons, before
testing this against the case study of the India--Pakistan
protracted conflict in South Asia.
This book will be of much interest to students of strategic
studies, IR and Asian politics and security.
General
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