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ID124766
Title ProperArrival of tactical nuclear weapons in south Asia
Other Title Informationdeterrent stability or instability
LanguageENG
AuthorKhan, Zafar
Publication2013.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article examines the arrival of Tactical Nuclear Weapons (TNWs) amid the rapid arms race in South Asia. It analyzes the stability and instability prospects linked to the arrival of and dependence on TNWs. It states that TNW is a murky term that confronts a definitional issue. Although TNW has not been used yet, it entails the risk of its use on the battlefield in the event of a limited war. Conceptually, this sets the stage for an interesting debate on whether or not the arrival of TNWs is stabilizing for the South Asian region, which has confronted many wars and minor border skirmishes during pre- and post-nuclear periods. Since it is viewed that a possible limited military escalation to a nuclear level may not be ruled out and the arrival of TNWs has become a reality, the article concludes that a centralized command and control system bolstered with the non-deployed deterring posture of TNWs is the immediate solution to avert the related worries of pre-delegation, force protection, and the use-or-lose dilemma. It is expected that, learning from their nuclear predecessors, the South Asian nuclear leadership would practice restraint, remain rational, and call for the need of political trust and military reassurances to avert nuclear weapon use.
`In' analytical NoteComparative Strategy Vol.32, No.5; 2013: p.402-417
Journal SourceComparative Strategy Vol.32, No.5; 2013: p.402-417
Key WordsTactical Nuclear Weapons - TNW ;  Nuclear Weapons ;  Weapons ;  Modern Warfare ;  Military Strategy ;  Nuclear Leadership ;  South Asian Region ;  SAARC ;  Dilemma ;  Global Leadership ;  Strategy ;  War ;  Political Trust ;  Military Reassurances


 
 
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