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  1. armscontrol.org

    Asymmetric Warfare in South Asia: The Causes and Consequences of the Kargil Conflict Edited by Peter R. Lavoy Cambridge University Press, 2009, 426 pp. Nuclear Proliferation In South Asia: Crisis Behaviour and the Bomb Edited by Sumit Ganguly and S. Paul Kapur Routledge, 2009, 251 pp. Inside Nuclear South Asia Edited by Scott D. Sagan
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  3. apln.network

    The population of the Asia-Pacific region, especially among the youth and technologically connected, will gradually be given the power to coalesce and drive the cause of combating nuclear weapons proliferation. It is not unthinkable to envisage a future when society will view nuclear weapons and deterrence with total dismay.
  4. apln.network

    May 17, 2024The 1995 Treaty of Bangkok established a Southeast Asian Nuclear Weapons Free Zone (SEANWFZ), which prohibits its ten members from the development, manufacture, acquisition or possession of nuclear weapons. While there are hopes that the nuclear-armed states would respect the SEANWFZ, the reality is that nuclear-armed and nuclear-propelled ...
  5. cisac.fsi.stanford.edu

    Pessimistic scholars maintain that nuclear weapons make the subcontinent war-prone, because of technological, political, and organizational problems. This book argues that nuclear weapons have destabilized the subcontinent, principally because of their interaction with India and Pakistan's territorial preferences and relative military capabilities.
    Author:S. Paul KapurPublished:2007
  6. Does the proliferation of nuclear weapons cause ongoing conflicts to diminish or to intensify? The spread of nuclear weapons to South Asia offers an opportunity to investigate this crucial question. Optimistic scholars argue that by threatening to raise the cost of war astronomically, nuclear weapons make armed conflict in South Asia extremely unlikely.
  7. Aug 20, 2024Over five decades into the "Asian peace," there are reasons to be pessimistic about the future security of the Indo-Pacific. Russia's invasion of Ukraine has ignited concerns of conflict in Asia and Moscow's nuclear threats have unearthed the specter of nuclear war as China rapidly augments its nuclear capabilities. An escalating arms race between the U.S. and China will inevitably ...
  8. apln.network

    Dec 18, 2024This essay summarises the findings of a series of essays that explore how regional states might react if South Korea acquired nuclear weapons. A state's acquisition of nuclear weapons is generally assumed to be driven most saliently by security considerations. [1] South Korea, a latent nuclear power, appears to be the most obvious example.
  9. academia.edu

    Global Asia, 2009. coNTINUING EMPhASIS oN non-proliferation and calls for elimination of nuclear weapons notwithstanding, it appears likely that nuclear weapons will persist and influence national security policies and strategies of major powers, as well as certain second-tier powers and isolated states in the foreseeable future.1 Initial anticipation in the West especially in the arms control ...
  10. asiasociety.org

    Thursday, September 5 — The Asia Society Policy Institute's Center for China Analysis (CCA) has released "Understanding China's Perceptions and Strategy Toward Nuclear Weapons: A Case Study Approach," a report sponsored by the Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) and authored by Lyle J. Morris, Senior Fellow on Foreign Policy and National Security at CCA, and Ambassador Rakesh Sood ...
  11. onlinelibrary.wiley.com

    2 days agoPyongyang continues to develop new WMDs and conduct military drills involving tactical nuclear weapons, enhancing Kim Jong Un's adventurous brinkmanship. In response, the United States must adopt a strong nuclear retaliation strategy, expedite its nuclear triad modernization plan, and support an effective South Korean missile defense system.
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