ABSTRACT

The chapters of this proposed volume are intended to shed light on the diverse themes surrounding this very important issue area in international security. Each of the six major sections addresses an aspect of nuclear proliferation that will be critical in determining the future trajectory of global politics in the years to come.

The first section examines the major thematic issues underlying the contemporary discourse on nuclear proliferation. How do we understand this period in proliferation? What accounts for a taboo on the use of nuclear weapons so far and will it survive? What is the present state of nuclear deterrence models built during the Cold War? What is the relationship between the pursuit of civilian nuclear energy and the risks of proliferation? Why are we witnessing a move away from non-proliferation to counter-proliferation?

The second section gives an overview of the evolving nuclear policies of the five established nuclear powers: the USA, Russia, the United Kingdom, France and the People's Republic of China.

Section three looks at the three de facto nuclear states: India, Pakistan and Israel.

The fourth section examines the three problem areas in the proliferation matrix today – Iran, North Korea and the potent mix of non-state actors and nuclear weapons.

The fifth section sheds light on an important issue often ignored during discussions of nuclear proliferation – cases where states have made a deliberate policy choice of either renouncing their nuclear weapons programme, or have decided to remain a threshold state. The cases of South Africa, Egypt and Japan will be the focus of this section.

The final section will examine the present state of the global nuclear non-proliferation regime, which most observers agree is currently facing a crisis of credibility. The three pillars of this regime – the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), and the Fissile Material Cut-Off Treaty (FMCT) – will be examined. This is followed by an analysis of the present trends and prospects for US-Russia nuclear arms control. The impact of missile defenses and the US-India civilian nuclear energy co-operation pact will be examined so as to ascertain whether they have weakened or strengthened the global non-proliferation regime.

The chapters in this volume aim to document the increasing complexity of the global nuclear proliferation dynamic and the inability of the international community to come to terms with a rapidly changing strategic milieu. The future, in all likelihood, will be very different from the past, and the chapters in this volume will try to develop a framework that may help gain a better understanding of the forces that will shape the nuclear proliferation debate in the years to come.

Proposed Contents

Introduction – Overview

Part 1: Thematic Issues

The Second Nuclear Age

The Nuclear Taboo

Nuclear Deterrence

Nuclear Energy and Non-Proliferation

Non-Proliferation and Counter Proliferation

Non-State Actors and Nuclear Weapons

Part 2: The Five Nuclear Powers

USA

Russia

United Kingdom

France

People's Republic of China

Part 3: De Facto Nuclear States

India

Pakistan

Israel

Part 4: The ‘Problem’ States

Iran

North Korea

Part 5: The ‘Threshold’ States

South Africa

Japan

Egypt

Part 6: The Global Non-Proliferation Regime

The NPT

The CTBT

The FMCT

US-Russia Nuclear Arms Control

The Impact of Missile Defenses

The US-India Nuclear Deal

The Future: What It May Hold In Store

Conclusion

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

part I|1 pages

Thematic issues

chapter 2|12 pages

Nuclear deterrence

Enduring relevance but growing need for re-evaluation

chapter 3|14 pages

The peaceful atom

Its economic and security costs

chapter 4|11 pages

Non-proliferation and counter-proliferation

Necessary, complementary and often interchangeable concepts 1

chapter 5|10 pages

Nuclear weapons and non-state actors

The evolving threat of nuclear terrorism

chapter 6|13 pages

The nuclear taboo

part II|1 pages

The five nuclear powers

chapter 7|9 pages

The United States

Setting the stage for disarmament

chapter 8|17 pages

Russia’s contradictory nuclear lessons

Arms control, deterrence and proliferation in contemporary Russian thinking

chapter 9|13 pages

The United Kingdom

A conflicted nuclear weapons state

chapter 10|16 pages

France

The evolution of a nuclear exception 1

chapter 11|14 pages

China

A deterrence paradox

part III|1 pages

De facto nuclear states

chapter 12|12 pages

India

The (accepted) gatecrasher

chapter 13|12 pages

Pakistan

The politics of nuclear force building

chapter 14|12 pages

Israel

Origins and implications of nuclear ambiguity

part IV|1 pages

The ‘problem’ states

chapter 15|10 pages

Iran

From power generation to weapons proliferation?

chapter 16|16 pages

North Korea

An isolationist nuclear state

part V|1 pages

The ‘threshold’ states

chapter 17|11 pages

South Africa

Disarmament trendsetter

chapter 18|11 pages

Japan

Between pacifism and pragmatism

chapter 19|11 pages

Egypt

Flirtations, frustration and future uncertainty

part VI|1 pages

The global non-proliferation regime

chapter 20|10 pages

The Non-Proliferation Treaty

Foundation of disarmament policy

chapter 21|13 pages

The Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty

Foundations, context and outlook*

chapter 22|19 pages

A cut-off of production of weapon-usable fissionable material

Considerations, requirements and IAEA capabilities

chapter 23|12 pages

Trends in missile defence and space security

Challenging non-proliferation priorities

chapter 24|12 pages

The US–India nuclear deal

Great power politics versus non-proliferation

chapter 25|10 pages

Nuclear proliferation and nuclear disarmament

A complicated relationship

chapter 26|15 pages

The nuclear future

A cautious prognosis