Strategic Stability in the Post-Cold War World and the Future of Nuclear Disarmament

NATO Science Partnership Subseries: 1 3

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Bibliografische Daten
ISBN/EAN: 9780792338055
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: x, 330 S.
Einband: gebundenes Buch

Beschreibung

This Report contains a Consensus Report and the papers submitted to the April 6 -10, 1995 NATO Advanced Research Workshop on Strategic Stability In The Post-Cold War World And The Future Of Nuclear Disarmament, held in Washington D. C., United States Of America of at The Airlie Conference Center. The workshop was sponsored by the NATO Division Scientific and Environmental Affairs as part of its ongoing outreach programme to widen and deepen scientific contacts between NATO member countries and the Cooperation Partner countries of the former Warsaw Treaty Organization. The participants recognize that the collapse of the former Soviet Union has left a conceptual vacuum in the definition of a new world order. Never before have the components of world order all changed so rapidly, so deeply, or so globally. As Henry Kissinger points out, the emergence of the new world order will have answered three fundamental questions:" What are the basic units of the international order? What are their means of interacting? and What are the goals on behalf of which they interact? " The main question is whether the establishment and maintenance of an international system will turn out to be a conscious design, or the outgrowth of a test of strength. The concept of a planning framework that could shape or govern these interactions is emerging and may now be at hand. Capturing this emerging framework is the thrust of this NATO-sponsored Advanced Research Workshop.

Autorenportrait

InhaltsangabePreface. 1. Consensus report. 2. Contributing papers. Deterrence, disarmament, and post-cold war stability: enhancing security for both `haves' and `have nots'; R.F. Lehmann II. 2.1: Qualitative - global. On deterrence, balance of power, and geopolitics; R.W. Chandler. Proliferation stability and instability: conditioning factors; F. Ermarth. Verifying the future: towards and international conventional arms control and conversion regime for the 21st century; R. Giles. Crisis stability in a multipolar world; R. Linhard. 2.2: Qualitative - European. Russia and the west: a partnership? R. Braithwaite. Possibilities for cooperation of Russia and the USA in designing, correction and realization of national security doctrines; D.S. Chereshkin. Deterrence and stability; V.I. Krivokhizha. 2.3: Qualitative - Asian. Geo- political stability and the balance of power in East Asia; A. Farrar-Hockley. Strategic stability in the early 2000s: an Indian view of a south Asian model; K. Sundarji. Non-nuclear proliferation and strategic stability in the Asia-Pacific region; Xia Liping. 2.4: Quantitative: geopolitical stability and balance of power. Balance of power versus collective security: a game-theoretic analysis; E.M.S. Niou. Russia's nuclear strategy: 90s and after; A. Piontkowsky, A. Skorokhodov. 2.5: Quantitative: deterrence, crisis stability and first strike stability. Multipolar nuclear stability: incentives to strike and incentives to preempt; J. Bracken. Controlling instabilities caused by rogue governments; G.A. Kent. From MAD to MAD; M. Rudnianski. FSSI as a universalmeasure of stability: from MAD-stability toward MAP-stability; A. Piontkowsky, A. Skorokhodov. 2.6: Quantitative: arms race. Analyzing three-way arms races; F.S. Nyland. New patterns in the arms race: some guidelines; C. Schmidt. Approaches to mathematical modeling of the process of world-wide strategic nuclear conflict used in the former USSR; A.V. Surikov. 2.7: Quantitative: proliferation. Stability, reassurance and non-proliferation; I. Amit. Index.

Inhalt

Preface. 1. Consensus report. 2. Contributing papers. Deterrence, disarmament, and post-cold war stability: enhancing security for both haves'' and have nots''; R.F. Lehmann II. 2.1: Qualitative - global. On deterrence, balance of power, and geopolitics; R.W. Chandler. Proliferation stability and instability: conditioning factors; F. Ermarth. Verifying the future: towards and international conventional arms control and conversion regime for the 21st century; R. Giles. Crisis stability in a multipolar world; R. Linhard. 2.2: Qualitative - European. Russia and the west: a partnership? R. Braithwaite. Possibilities for cooperation of Russia and the USA in designing, correction and realization of national security doctrines; D.S. Chereshkin. Deterrence and stability; V.I. Krivokhizha. 2.3: Qualitative - Asian. Geo- political stability and the balance of power in East Asia; A. Farrar-Hockley. Strategic stability in the early 2000s: an Indian view of a south Asian model; K. Sundarji. Non-nuclear proliferation and strategic stability in the Asia-Pacific region; Xia Liping. 2.4: Quantitative: geopolitical stability and balance of power. Balance of power versus collective security: a game-theoretic analysis; E.M.S. Niou. Russia''s nuclear strategy: 90s and after; A. Piontkowsky, A. Skorokhodov. 2.5: Quantitative: deterrence, crisis stability and first strike stability. Multipolar nuclear stability: incentives to strike and incentives to preempt; J. Bracken. Controlling instabilities caused by rogue governments; G.A. Kent. From MAD to MAD; M. Rudnianski. FSSI as a universal measure of stability: from MAD-stability toward MAP-stability; A. Piontkowsky, A. Skorokhodov. 2.6: Quantitative: arms race. Analyzing three-way arms races; F.S. Nyland. New patterns in the arms race: some guidelines; C. Schmidt. Approaches to mathematical modeling of the process of world-wide strategic nuclear conflict used in the former USSR; A.V. Surikov. 2.7: Quantitative: proliferation. Stability, reassurance and non-proliferation; I. Amit. Index.