Saturday, February 22, 2014
International Politics and Security After Nuclear Disarmament
The Geneva Centre for Security Policy convened a conference last year looking at 'Security in A World Without Nuclear Weapons'. One meeting was held in Glion, Switzerland last summer and the report is now out. I contributed a chapter on "Power Balances and the Prospects for a Stable Post-Nuclear Weapons World." I suggested that a post-nuclear weapons world will not be very different for most states because they were not really affected one way or another by nuclear weapons, except indirectly if a nuclear war took place which would affect everybody. But nuclear disarmament would create issues for countries that were defended either directly or indirectly (i.e., with extended deterrence) with nuclear weapons. In some cases, especially for states such as Pakistan, North Korea and Israel, all of which perceive significant conventional threats and for whom nuclear weapons represent the great equalizer, nuclear abolition would create serious problems. I predict that they would be the ones most resistant to nuclear disarmament, should that become a serious possibility. GCSP organized a public discussion in Geneva to launch the report in which I participated.
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