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ID110292
Title ProperBritain and France as nuclear partners
LanguageENG
AuthorHarries, Matthew
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)In November 2010, as part of a broad-ranging bilateral defence agreement, the United Kingdom and France signed a treaty providing for limited cooperation on nuclear weapons. Modest in scope, and the product in immediate terms of economic pressure, the nuclear treaty's main substantive provision is for the joint construction of radiographic-hydrodynamic facilities. Beneath the surface of this treaty, however, lies a story of significant strategic shifts, and there are intriguing possibilities for future collaboration between the UK and France, and perhaps for trilateral cooperation involving the United States.
The potential for UK-French collaboration spans the spectrum of nuclear-weapons issues, from technology to policy, and perhaps to operational matters. These possibilities are sensitive, not only because they run into the everyday difficulties of political-military relations between the countries, but also for their relevance to two current debates: the ongoing battle over renewing the UK's fleet of strategic nuclear submarines, and international demands for multilateral nuclear disarmament.
`In' analytical NoteSurvival : the IISS Quarterly Vol. 54, No.1; Feb-Mar 2012: p.7-30
Journal SourceSurvival : the IISS Quarterly Vol. 54, No.1; Feb-Mar 2012: p.7-30
Key WordsBritain ;  France ;  Nuclear Partners ;  Nuclear Weapons ;  Bilateral Defence Agreement ;  Multilateral Nuclear Disarmament ;  NATO ;  Europe ;  Skybolt Crisis ;  European Economic Community ;  Kennedy ;  UK - US Relationship ;  Nuclear Force ;  Anglo - French Nuclear Alliance ;  Nassau ;  Henry Kissinger ;  United States ;  Harold Wilson ;  Cold War ;  Nuclear Doctrine


 
 
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