Strategic Consequences of Nuclear Proliferation in South Asia (1986) examines the consequences for particular states should India and Pakistan decide to deploy nuclear weapons. It looks in detail at the positions of both India and Pakistan and the responses of the United States, the Soviet Union and China and their respective strategic positions. This book includes contributions on the larger question of how nuclear pariah states pose a separate problem of nuclear proliferation as well as on the broader challenges to the nuclear non-proliferation regime.
Part 1. Introduction 1. The Strategic Consequences of Nuclear Proliferation in South Asia Neil Joeck Part 2. Global Perspectives 2. The Non-Proliferation Regime: Managing the Impending Crisis Jed C. Snyder 3. Strategic Consequences of Nuclear Proliferation in South Asia: Outlook from the United States Rodney W. Jones 4. The Strategic Consequences of Nuclear Proliferation in South Asia for the Soviet Union William C. Potter 5. The Strategic Consequences of Nuclear Proliferation in South Asia for China Robert Sutter Part 3. Regional Perspectives 6. The Strategic Consequences of Nuclear Proliferation in South Asia for Iran Michael Brenner 7. The Strategic Consequences of Nuclear Proliferation in South-west Asia: India’s Perspective Raju G.C. Thomas 8. Pakistani Security and Nuclear Proliferation in South Asia Neil Joeck 9. Some Pakistani Problems and a Nuclear Non-Solution
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