Arms and disarmament: SIPRI findings
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Oxford
Oxford Univ.
1986
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | 491 S. |
ISBN: | 0198291116 |
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adam_text | Contents
Preface
Introduction: On
the
Nature
of SIPRI s
Peace Research Studies
..... 1
F. Blackaby
I. Objective
II. The military sector and its consequences
III. The demilitarization of political relations
IV. Arms control and disarmament
V. Arms control and public opinion
VI. Research into the military sector
VII.
Conclusion
Part
1.
The Quantitative and Qualitative Dimensions of the Arms Race
1.
World Military Expenditure
................................. 17
R.
Tullberg
I. The historical perspective
II. The growth rate and shares in recent years
III. Why does military spending matter?
IV. Military expenditure estimates
-
current data
2.
Military Research and Development
.......................... 23
M. Acland-Hood
I. Fuelling the arms race
II. The largest spenders
III. Operational and institutional pressures
IV. US expenditures
V. Soviet expenditures
3.
Nuclear Testing
............................................ 31
R.
Ferm
I. Nuclear explosions
1985
II. Estimated nuclear explosions,
1945-1985
4.
Trade in Major Conventional Weapons: the Changing Pattern
... 35
M. Brzoska
&
T. Ohlson
I. Arms exports and imports
II. Structural changes
III. Arms transfer control at a dead end
5.
Military-Related Debt in Non-Oil Developing Countries,
1972-1982..................................................
51
R.
Tullberg
I. Politics replaced by arsenals
II. Arms purchases and debt
III. US budget deficit and the debt burden
6.
Arms Production in the Third World
......................... 55
M. Brzoska
&
T. Ohlson
I. The growth of production
II. Producers, weapons, employment
HI. The horizontal spread of weapon technology
7.
The World Military System: Inadequacy of Data
............... 61
F. Blackaby
&
T. Ohlson
I. Massively deficient knowledge
II. Military expenditure
III. The arms trade
8.
Soviet Military Expenditure and Defence Burden
.............. 69
C. G.
Jacobsen
I. Weakness and strength
II. Growth rates
HI. Political manipulation
IV. Cost assumptions
V. International considerations and other variables
Part
2.
Nuclear Armaments
9.
World Nuclear Weapon Stockpiles
........................... 77
R. W.
Fieldhouse
I. Estimates of size
II. National stockpiles: US, Soviet, British, French and Chinese
10.
Nuclear
Weapons
1986...................................... 83
M. Arkin, A. S.
Burrows,
T. C. Cochran, R. S. Norris, J.
I. Sands,
A. M.
Din
&
R. W.
Fieldhouse
I. Words and action
II. US nuclear weapon programmes
III. Soviet nuclear weapon programmes
IV. Other nuclear weapon programmes
Tables and figures:
US strategic nuclear forces
US European nuclear stockpile
Soviet strategic nuclear forces
British nuclear forces
French nuclear forces
Chinese nuclear forces
US and Soviet proposals for the reduction of launchers
-
warheads
11.
US-Soviet Strategic Force Comparisons in
1982 ............... 95
S. Lunn
&
J. Seabright
I. Composition and characteristics
II. Measurement of strategic nuclear capability
12.
Chinese Nuclear Potential
...................................
97
R. W.
Fieldhouse
I. The political-strategic context
II. China s nuclear policy
III. Nuclear self-reliance
IV. Nuclear forces
V. China, arms control and the arms race
13.
Third-Generation Nuclear Weapons
..........................
105
K. Tsipis
I. Fission and fusion
II. Maximizing weapon properties
III. Salient propositions
14.
The Neutron Bomb
H. ScoviUe, Jr.
I. What is a neutron bomb?
II. The effects
III. Risk of escalation
15.
Nuclear
Weapon Command,
Control
and Communications
...... 115
W.
M. Arkin
&
R.
W.
Fieldhouse
I. The system
II. C3 and nuclear strategy
III. Fragility of the system
Part
3.
Military Use of Outer Space
16.
The Strategic Defense Initiative and Its Implications
........... 123
F. Blackaby
I. Origins of
SDI
II. Star Wars I and Star Wars II
III.
SDI
and the ABM Treaty
IV. The NATO allies
V. The Soviet position
VI. Arms control consequences and measures
17.
Expansion of the Arms Race into Outer Space
................ 133
B. Jasaní
I. The militarization of space
II. Reconnaissance satellites
III. AS AT weapons
IV. BMD weapons
V. Space weapons
VI. Soviet space research programmes
VII.
Implications
18.
Strategic Computing: New Risks and Vulnerabilities
........... 145
A. Din
I. Computer revolution
II. Artificial intelligence
(AI)
III. Tactical weapons
IV. Command and control
V. Strategic defence implications
Part
4.
The Contemporary Battlefield
19.
Warfare in a Fragile World: Conventional, Nuclear and
Environmental Weapons
........................................
A. H. Westing, M. Lumsden, J. Rotblat, A. S.
Ginsburg,
G. S. GoUtsyn,
A. A. Vasiliev,
Ρ.
Berg &
G. Herolf
I.
Violent,
deadly and
destructive
II.
Waste
of natural resources
III. The influence of weaponry on warfare
IV. Emerging technologies
(ET)
for conventional deep strikes
V. Effects of nuclear weapons
From conventional to nuclear warfare
Blast, heat and fire storms
Nuclear radiation
Destruction of the
ozon
layer in the stratosphere
Electromagnetic pulse (EMP)
Nuclear winter
Synergic effects
VI. Environmental warfare
Celestial bodies and space
The atmosphere
The
lithosphère
The hydrosphere
The biosphere
Conclusion
VII.
Epilogue
20.
Chemical and Biological Warfare
.............................
179
J. P. Perry Robinson
I. Renewed attention as instruments of war-fighting
II. Main forms of chemical warfare
III. The range of potential
С
W
agents
IV. The principal threat agents
V. Horizontal proliferation of chemical weapons
VI. New technology
Part
5.
Conceptual and Strategic Issues
191
21.
No-First-Use of Nuclear Weapons
...........................
F. Blackaby, J. Goldblat
&
S. Lodgaard
I. Nuclear weapons and international law
II. The strategy of flexible response
III. Deterrence and war-fighting
IV. No-first-use and deployment of nuclear forces
V. Limited nuclear war
VI. European and US concerns
VII.
The unity of the Western Alliance
VIII.
Unilateral commitments
IX. No-first-use and force posture
X. No-first-use and conventional forces
XI. Summary
22.
The Concept of Common Security
........................... 203
F. Blackaby, R.
Väyrynen,
E.
Bahr,
M. Kaldor,
E.
Rothschild,
J. E.
Wiesner,
S.
Lodgaard,
M.
Saeter &
J. J.
Holst
I. The basic idea
II. Between political realism and political idealism
III. Security organized jointly
IV. A new vision
V. An alternative way to think about security
VI. Unilateral actions as confidence-building measures
VII.
Common security in Europe
Vni.Détente
and common security
IX. Confidence-building and common security
23.
Nuclear Disengagement in Europe
........................... 223
S. Lodgaard
I. Threats to European security
II. A continuous north-south disengagement zone
III. Non-deployment of nuclear weapons
IV. The meaning of nuclear weapon-free
V. Negative security assurances
VI. Disengagement in Central Europe
VII.
Disengagement in northern and southern Europe
24.
Nuclear Weapon-Free Central Europe
........................ 231
J. Goldblat
I. The corridor proposal
II. Objections and comments
25.
Trust and Confidence in East-West Relations
................. 237
K.
Birnbaum
I· Trust and mistrust in international politics
II. Vital common interests
III. Mutual reassurance versus deterrence
26.
Agenda for European Security
.............................. 243
F. Blackaby
I. A more secure Europe
II. Demilitarization of international relations
III. The ways to proceed
Part
6.
Regional Conflicts
27.
Conflict and Conflict Resolution in Central America
........... 249
J. Goldblat
&
V. Millan
I. The socio-political background
II. Militarization of the Central American Isthmus
Military expenditure
Armed forces
Foreign military presence
Military hardware
III. The
Contadora
peace initiative
IV. The
Nicaraguán
objectives
V. An equitable basis for a peaceful settlement
28.
Afghanistan: a Protracted Conflict
...........................
263
J.-Ch. Victor
I. Recent history
II. The PDPA military coup
III. Prior to the arrival of Soviet troops
The Soviet version of events
The Western version of events
IV. The military operation
V. Occupation and resistance
Soviet strategy and tactics
Morale and casualties
The Afghan resistance
VI. Regional consequences: role of Pakistan
VII.
The search for a political solution
277
29.
Militarization and Conflict in Africa
..........................
R. Luckham
I. The process of militarization
II. Trends in military expenditure
III. Disparities in military capability
IV. Military government
V. Armed conflict
VI. The pattern of foreign intervention
VII.
Regional conflicts:
. .
North Africa, West and Central Africa, Southern Africa
VOLRole of the Organization of African Unity
30.
South Africa: Arms Embargo Disimplemented
................ 289
S.
Landgren
I. The single most embargoed nation
II. Efficiency of the arms embargo
III. Countervailing factors
Part
7.
Arms Control and Disarmament
31.
Arms Control Agreements and Humanitarian Laws of War
..... 297
J. Goldblat
I. Limitation of nuclear weapon tests
II. Strategic arms limitation
III. Non-proliferation of nuclear weapons
IV. Security assurances to non-nuclear weapon states
V. Biological Weapons Convention and chemical weapons
VI. The ENMOD Convention
VII.
Outer space
VIII.
Sea-bed
IX. Antarctica
X. Latin America: Tlatelolco Treaty
XI. Prevention of war
XII.
Prevention of nuclear accidents
ХШ.
Prevention of nuclear war
XIV.
Prevention of accidents at sea
XV. Humanitarian laws of war
The Hague Conventions
The Geneva Conventions
Convention on inhumane weapons
32.
A Comprehensive Test Ban
F. Blackaby
I. Ban on nuclear weapon tests
II. Discontinued negotiations
III. Significance of a CTB
IV. The issue of verification
33.
Nuclear Weapons and Arms Control
S. Lodgaard
& F.
Blackaby
I. The START and INF (LRTNF) negotiations
II. The race for nuclear superiority
III. Arms buildup and strategic doctrines
IV. The European dilemma
V. Trade-offs between asymmetric force positions
VI. Destabilizing technologies
34.
The Nuclear Non-Proliferation Imperative
.................... 333
J. Goldblat
I. The Third Review Conference of the Non-Proliferation Treaty
II. State motivations regarding nuclear proliferation
The claim that nuclear weapons are essential for national security
The claim that nuclear weapons have political value
The claim that there is advantage in nuclear ambiguity
The claim on the use of nuclear energy for peaceful purposes
HI. NPT and nuclear arms control
Appendix. Nuclear plants under construction or operating in the developing
countries outside Europe
35.
Geneva Negotiations on Chemical Weapons
.................. 345
R.
Trapp
I. Major issues
II. Scope
III. Declarations
IV. Definitions
V. Verification
36.
The Geneva Protocol of
1925
and the Ban on Chemical Weapons
351
J. Goldblat
I. Alleged weaknesses of the Geneva Protocol
II. The no-first-use commitment
HI. Verification of compliance
IV. Responses to established violations
37.
The South Pacific Nuclear-Free Zone
........................ 355
G. E.
Frey
I. The Treaty of Rarotonga
II. Nuclear prohibitions
III. Attitude of nuclear powers
IV. Rarotonga and Tlatelolco
38.
A Chemical Weapon-Free Zone in Europe
.................... 361
J. Goldblat
I. Focus on Central Europe
II. Western objections
HI. Advantages of a chemical weapon-free zone
39. Confidence-Building
and Security in Europe
.................. 365
S. Lodgaard
I. Information and constraint measures
II. The functions of CBMs
III. Political and military requirements
40.
Arms Control Verification
.................................. 371
A. S.
Krass
I. Technical mystification and rhetorical distortion
II. The technological dimension
III. Trust and adequacy
IV. International satellite monitoring
41.
Arms Control and Disarmament
............................. 379
S. Lodgaard
I. Arms control and arms restraint
II. Diplomacy of strength
III. Offense and defense
IV. Persistence, openness, equal security
Appendix. Arms control agreements
Appendix. Status of the implementation of the major multilateral arms
control agreements, as of
1
January
1986
Appendix. UN member states and year of membership
42.
The United Nations and Disarmament
........................
423
J. Goldblat
I. National and international interests
II. Recommended principles
III. Abolition of war
43.
Restraining the Qualitative Arms Race
.......................
M. Acland-Hood
I. Arms control measures for military R&D
II. A. Comprehensive Test Ban
III. Restrictions on testing ballistic missiles
IV. Ban or moratorium on the development of MARVs
V. Ban or moratorium on LRSCMs
VI. Outer space restraints
VII.
Reduction of military R&D expenditures and conversion
Vm.Transparency, confidence-building and evaluation
44.
Military Technology,
the Arms Race and Arms Control ........
437
M.
Thee
I. A self-sustaining technological momentum
II. The fundamental lesson
III. Constraining military technology
IV. Rethinking of peace and security
45.
Public Opinion on Peace and War
........................... 443
E. den Oudsten
& F. Blackaby
I. The force of public opinion
II. Fear of war and fear of nuclear weapons
III. Public opinion in the United States
IV. Public opinion in the Federal Republic of Germany
V. Public opinion in the United Kingdom
Tables:
The threat of war and fear of nuclear weapons
Arms control issues in six European countries
47.
Chronology of Major Events Related to Arms Control
Issues,
1981-85 ............................................ 451
J. Goldblat
&
R.
Ferm
Index
......................................................... 479
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spelling | Arms and disarmament SIPRI findings ed. by Marek Thee Oxford Oxford Univ. 1986 491 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Kernwaffe (DE-588)4003434-3 gnd rswk-swf Rüstungsbegrenzung (DE-588)4115804-0 gnd rswk-swf Abrüstung (DE-588)4000197-0 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content Kernwaffe (DE-588)4003434-3 s Rüstungsbegrenzung (DE-588)4115804-0 s DE-604 Abrüstung (DE-588)4000197-0 s Thee, Marek 1918-1999 (DE-588)170743179 edt Stockholm International Peace Research Institute Sonstige (DE-588)2033929-X oth Digitalisierung UB Bamberg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=000423592&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Arms and disarmament SIPRI findings Kernwaffe (DE-588)4003434-3 gnd Rüstungsbegrenzung (DE-588)4115804-0 gnd Abrüstung (DE-588)4000197-0 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4003434-3 (DE-588)4115804-0 (DE-588)4000197-0 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | Arms and disarmament SIPRI findings |
title_auth | Arms and disarmament SIPRI findings |
title_exact_search | Arms and disarmament SIPRI findings |
title_full | Arms and disarmament SIPRI findings ed. by Marek Thee |
title_fullStr | Arms and disarmament SIPRI findings ed. by Marek Thee |
title_full_unstemmed | Arms and disarmament SIPRI findings ed. by Marek Thee |
title_short | Arms and disarmament |
title_sort | arms and disarmament sipri findings |
title_sub | SIPRI findings |
topic | Kernwaffe (DE-588)4003434-3 gnd Rüstungsbegrenzung (DE-588)4115804-0 gnd Abrüstung (DE-588)4000197-0 gnd |
topic_facet | Kernwaffe Rüstungsbegrenzung Abrüstung Aufsatzsammlung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=000423592&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT theemarek armsanddisarmamentsiprifindings AT stockholminternationalpeaceresearchinstitute armsanddisarmamentsiprifindings |