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Pakistan's nuclear future : reining in the risk / Henry Sokolski, editor.

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Format:
Book
Government document
Contributor:
Sokolski, Henry D., editor.
Army War College (U.S.). Strategic Studies Institute, issuing body.
Standardized Title:
Pakistan's nuclear future (2009)
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Nuclear weapons--Pakistan.
Nuclear weapons.
Arms race--Pakistan.
Arms race.
Pakistan.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (v, 290 pages)
Place of Publication:
Carlisle, PA : Strategic Studies Institute, U.S. Army War College, 2009.
Language Note:
English.
Summary:
Unfortunately, a nuclear terrorist act is only one-- and hardly the most probable-- of several frightening security threats Pakistan now faces or poses. We know that traditional acts of terrorism and conventional military crises in Southwest Asia have nearly escalated into wars and, more recently, even threatened Indian and Pakistani nuclear use. Certainly, the war jitters that attended the recent terrorist attacks against Mumbai highlighted the nexus between conventional terrorism and war. For several weeks, the key worry in Washington was that India and Pakistan might not be able to avoid war. Similar concerns were raised during the Kargil crisis in 1999 and during the Indo-Pakistani conventional military tensions that arose in 2001 and 2002-- crises that most analysts (including those who contributed to this volume) believe could have escalated into nuclear conflicts. The intent of this book is to conduct a significant evaluation of these threats. Its companion volume, Worries Beyond War, published in 2008, focused on the challenges of Pakistani nuclear terrorism. These analyses offer a window into what is possible and why Pakistani nuclear terrorism is best seen as a lesser included threat to war, and terrorism more generally. Could the United States do more with Pakistan to secure Pakistan's nuclear weapons holdings against possible seizure? It is unclear. This book argues that rather than distracting our policy leaders from taking the steps needed to reduce the threats of nuclear war, we would do well to view our worst terrorist nightmares for what they are: subordinate threats that will be limited best if the risk of nuclear war is reduced and contained.-- Source other than Library of Congress.
Contents:
Introduction : Pakistan's nuclear plans : what's worrisome, what's avertable? / Henry Sokolski
The Indo-Pakistani nuclear confrontation : lessons from the past, contingencies for the future / Neil Joeck
Reducing the risk of nuclear war in South Asia / Feroz Hassan Khan
Is nuclear power Pakistan's best energy investment? : assessing Pakistan's electricity situation / John Stephenson and Peter Tynan
Pakistan's economy : its performance, present situation, and prospects / Shahid Jarved Burki
Surviving economic meltdown and promoting sustainable economic development / S. Akbar Zaidi
Pakistan 2020 : the policy imperatives of Pakistani demographics / Craig Cohen
Imagining alternative ethnic futures for Pakistan / Maya Chadda.
Notes:
PDF version; title from title screen (viewed on Jan. 20, 2009).
"December 2009."
Includes bibliographical references.
Other Format:
Print version: Pakistan's nuclear future
ISBN:
1584874228
9781584874225
OCLC:
501176972

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