Religion and American Foreign Policy, 1945–1960: The Soul of Containment. by William Inboden |
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Authors: | Molly Worthen |
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Institution: | University of North Carolina , USA |
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Abstract: | This article predicts that the nuclear weapon states may opt sooner for nuclear elimination than generally expected. This delegitimation of nuclear weapons is due to five factors whose importance has grown since the mid-1990s: nuclear proliferation, the risk of nuclear terrorism, the nuclear taboo, missile defence, and the increased importance of international law. The article starts with categorizing nuclear weapons policies: nuclear primacy, maximum deterrence, minimum deterrence, existential deterrence, and post-existential deterrence. The nuclear weapon states will probably shift their policies from nuclear primacy (US), maximum deterrence (Russia), minimum or existential deterrence (UK, France, Israel, China, India, Pakistan, North Korea) to post-existential deterrence (or elimination), taking one step at a time. |
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Keywords: | Nuclear Weapons Nuclear Deterrence Nuclear Proliferation |
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