search for books and compare prices
Tables of Contents for Nuclear Weapons in a Transformed World
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Acknowledgments
viii
1
Foreword
ix
 
Fred Charles Ikle
PART ONE: INTRODUCTION
3
30
1. The Notion of Virtual Arsenals
3
30
Michael J. Mazarr
PART TWO: ELEMENTS OF VIRTUAL DETERRENCE
33
140
2. Nuclear Doctrine and Virtual Nuclear Arsenals
33
22
Michael Brown
3. Command, Control, and Warning for Virtual Arsenals
55
22
Bruce Blair
4. Issues of Force Structure, Nuclear Infrastructure, and Survivability
77
26
Peter Wilson
5. The Challenge of Inspecting and Verifying Virtual Nuclear Arsenals
103
20
David Kay
6. Reconstitution and Reassembly of a Virtual Nuclear Arsenal
123
22
Michael Wheeler
7. Strategic Defenses and Virtual Nuclear Arsenals
145
28
Keith Payne
PART THREE: CASE STUDIES
173
116
8. The Established Nuclear Powers and Virtual Arsenals
173
26
Michael J. Mazarr
9. Virtual Nuclear Arsenals: A View from Moscow
199
8
Konstantin Sorokin
10. China and Virtual Nuclear Arsenals
207
12
Taeho Kim
11. France and Virtual Nuclear Deterrence
219
10
Philip Gordon
12. Britain
229
10
Stuart Croft
13. Virtual Nuclear Deterrence and the Opaque Proliferants
239
24
Devin Hagerty
14. VNAs and the Contemporary Latent Weapon State
263
26
Brad Roberts
PART FOUR: REACTIONS
289
80
15. Emerging Nuclear Weapons Policy and the Role of Virtual Nuclear Arsenals
289
4
Charles Horner
16. Virtual Arsenals: A French View
293
16
Francois Heisbourg
17. Thoughts on Virtual Nuclear Arsenals
309
10
Kenneth Waltz
18. Virtual Arsenals: A Russian View
319
18
Alexei Arbatov
19. Managing Asymmetries and Instabilities in Nuclear Reconstitution
337
14
Patrick Garrity
20. A Japanese Reaction to the Idea of Virtual Nuclear Arsenals
351
8
Akio Watanabe
21. Virtual Visions, Past and Future
359
10
Philip Zelikow
PART FIVE: CONCLUSION
369
24
22. Virtual Nuclear Arsenals: A Second Look
369
24
Michael J. Mazarr
Contributors
393
4
Index
397