As proven by the recent discovery of ongoing research and tests
in India and Pakistan, the nuclear age is not dead. Nuclear
weapons, deployed in plentiful numbers during the Cold War by the
Americans and Soviets, and, in lesser numbers, by others, were
nevertheless controlled in their use by the essential equivalence,
of U.S. and Soviet strategic power and by the ability of the U.S.
and the Soviet Union to dominate the international security
environment by means of their global military power. Now the
setting within which nuclear weapons exist has been
transformed.
Now that the Cold War has ended, and the Soviet Union has
vanished, states seeking nuclear weapons operate under decision
making rules that are sometimes opaque to Western observers. If the
end of the Cold War leads to the unrestrained spread of nuclear
weapons, Cimbala stresses that a combination of military hubris and
arms control insolvency could lead to new nuclear crises or worse.
The author provides a provocative analysis for policy makers and
professional military staff as well as scholars and researchers
involved with international relations, security studies, and arms
control.
General
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