Nuclear Pakistan and nuclear India: Stable deterrent or proliferation challenge
Nuclear proliferation, a security issue which has transcended the cold war, has been, and is, particularly troublesome in South Asia. There, India and Pakistan, neighbors with unresolved disputes since they were granted independence at the end of World War II, are believed to have nuclear weapons (although the leaders of both nations deny it) and are intermittently engaged in conflict with each other. Professor Quester has examined this unique nuclear relationship, analyzing the attitudes and behavior of both nations. He concludes with a paradox: both have 'bombs in the basement', if not in their respective military inventories, and these weapons present serious dangers to the world simply because of their destructive potential, even if their leaders have the best intentions. On the other hand, Indian and Pakistani leaders appear to have low levels of concern about each others' nuclear (not conventional military) developments. It is possible to be optimistic and conclude that the relationship is actually stable and, like the U.S.-Soviet nuclear relationship of the cold war, helps prevent war on the subcontinent, or to be cynical and conclude that each regime cares more about the prestige of membership in the nuclear club than the ominous threat posed thereby against their populations.
- Research Organization:
- Army War Coll., Carlisle Barracks, PA (United States). Strategic Studies Inst.
- OSTI ID:
- 6800211
- Report Number(s):
- AD-A-258426/6/XAB
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
Similar Records
Beyond Kargil: The technology of peace in India-Pakistan border relations
Indo-Pakistani nuclear issue: A US policy perspective. Master's thesis
Related Subjects
INDIA
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
NUCLEAR WEAPONS
PROLIFERATION
PAKISTAN
ASIA
ATTITUDES
BOMBS
FOREIGN POLICY
GLOBAL ASPECTS
INVENTORIES
MILITARY STRATEGY
POLITICAL ASPECTS
POPULATIONS
RISK ASSESSMENT
SECURITY
US DOD
USSR
DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
EUROPE
GOVERNMENT POLICIES
INSTITUTIONAL FACTORS
NATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
US ORGANIZATIONS
WEAPONS
350200* - Arms Control- Proliferation- (1987-)