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Nuclear Weapons Policy, Arms Control & Disarmament
Testing a Nuclear Test Ban: What Should Be Prohibited by a Comprehensive Treaty? by David A. Koplow β€” book cover

Testing a Nuclear Test Ban: What Should Be Prohibited by a Comprehensive Treaty?

by David A. Koplow
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Overview

This book is a study of the single most controversial issue arising in the single most important ongoing international arms control negotiation. The topic is the comprehensive nuclear test ban treaty (CTB) talks, and the core question concerns the likely 'scope' of the ultimate agreement: precisely which types of nuclear weapons-related events would be bared, and which would be preserved as legal, under a sound widely-acceptable, treaty? Weapons engineers in the United States, Russia, and elsewhere have created a range of ambiguous events some of which would help ensure the continuing 'reliability' of existing nuclear weapons, some of which would assist in the process of designing new genres of bombs, and some of which might be relevant to a range of wholly civilian activities, such as the production of fusion energy. Diplomats (aided by military, technical, legal, and other experts) are now attempting to resolve these issues in the treaty negotiations and the international - and for many countries, internal - political machinations are complex, important, and protracted.

Synopsis

This book is a study of the single most controversial issue arising in the single most important ongoing international arms control negotiation. The topic is the comprehensive nuclear test ban treaty (CTB) talks, and the core question concerns the likely 'scope' of the ultimate agreement: precisely which types of nuclear weapons-related events would be bared, and which would be preserved as legal, under a sound widely-acceptable, treaty? Weapons engineers in the United States, Russia, and elsewhere have created a range of ambiguous events some of which would help ensure the continuing 'reliability' of existing nuclear weapons, some of which would assist in the process of designing new genres of bombs, and some of which might be relevant to a range of wholly civilian activities, such as the production of fusion energy. Diplomats (aided by military, technical, legal, and other experts) are now attempting to resolve these issues in the treaty negotiations and the international - and for many countries, internal - political machinations are complex, important, and protracted.

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Book Details

Published
December 1, 1996
Publisher
Ashgate Publishing, Limited
Pages
184
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781855218062

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