Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1077Hits:21390588Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID147684
Title ProperEliminating Libya’s WMD programs: creating a cooperative situation
LanguageENG
AuthorPatrick Terrell, Katharine Hagen & Ted A. Ryba Jr. ;  Terrell, Patrick ;  Hagen, Katharine ;  Ryba, Ted A Jr
Summary / Abstract (Note)Libya proved to be a unique example of WMD elimination. Unlike other WMD elimination cases, which arose out of an armed conflict that resulted in an opportunity to access and destroy a WMD program, Libya began as a cooperative WMD elimination effort that took a turn after violence erupted. The first phases of elimination arose from a combination of diplomacy, economic sanctions, and fears by the Libyan government of possible military action. This phase effectively reversed Muammar Qaddafi's attempt to develop a nuclear program and prevented the Libyan government from having access to chemical weapons when the “Arab Spring” reached Libya. The ensuing civil war brought new challenges to elimination: a breakdown in security, increased risk of chemical-weapons proliferation to violent extremists, and the discovery of a previously unknown stockpile of filled chemical munitions. Following Qaddafi's death, the second phase restarted the chemical-weapons elimination and presented new challenges still. These included the need for rapid action to complete the destruction, negotiating with an interim government, and assisting destruction without US personnel on the ground in Libya.
`In' analytical NoteNonproliferation Review Vol. 23, No.1-2; Feb-Mar 2016: p.185-196
Journal SourceNonproliferation Review Vol: 23 No 1-2
Key WordsChemical Weapons ;  Libya ;  Nuclear Program ;  Cooperative Threat Reduction