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ID086132
Title ProperStepping back from the brink
Other Title Informationavoiding a nuclear march of folly in South Asia
LanguageENG
AuthorDavis, Zachary
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Historian Barbara Tuchman described the trail of misperceptions and bad decisions that led to mankind's worst self-imposed disasters as a "March of Folly." Now is the time for India and Pakistan to take steps to ensure that another war or crisis between them does not result in a nuclear exchange that destroys both societies.
The prospects for rolling back India's or Pakistan's nuclear weapons programs during the Obama administration are zero. Nevertheless, the administration can help reduce the risk of nuclear war in South Asia. There is a growing recognition by New Delhi and Islamabad that a crisis, triggered by events such as the November terrorist attack in Mumbai, could escalate out of control and result in an unintended nuclear exchange. The Kargil crisis in 1999 and the 2002 cross-border attack on the Indian parliament brought the two nuclear rivals to the brink of war. Having survived two Cuban missile crises of their own, it is time India and Pakistan take steps to manage the risks inherent in their tense nuclear relationship.
`In' analytical NoteArms Control Today Vol. 39, No. 1; Jan-Feb 2009: p.21-22
Journal SourceArms Control Today Vol. 39, No. 1; Jan-Feb 2009: p.21-22
Key WordsNuclear March ;  March of Folly ;  South Asia ;  Nuclear Exchange ;  Terrorism ;  India ;  Pakistan