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ID137828
Title ProperINF treaty
Other Title Informationits success, failures and the future
LanguageENG
AuthorGhoshal, Debalina
Summary / Abstract (Note)Post the Cuban missile crisis, the arms race started to be viewed as a “necessary evil.”1 A predominant feature of the US-Soviet relationship comprised the efforts made by the two superpowers to indulge in nuclear arms reduction for strategic stability. The Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty was one such effort of the arms control measures. On December 8, 1987 President Reagan and General Secretary Gorbachev signed the treaty and agreed to a ‘double global zero’ in which both short range and intermediate range missiles would be eliminated.2 This paper aims to study the background of the treaty by briefly tracing the reasons for the signing of the treaty, the obligations of the treaty, the successes of the treaty, its limitations, and the implications of withdrawing from the treaty.
`In' analytical NoteAir Power Vol. 9, No.3; Jul/Sep 2014: p.99-120
Journal SourceAir Power 2014-09 9, 3
Key WordsNATO ;  INF Treaty ;  INF ;  Soviet Union ;  INF Future ;  INF Success ;  ABMs ;  GLCMs ;  SALT