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ID140918
Title ProperBeyond emboldenment
Other Title Informationhow acquiring nuclear weapons can change foreign policy
LanguageENG
AuthorBell, Mark S
Summary / Abstract (Note)What happens to the foreign policies of states when they acquire nuclear weapons? Despite its importance, this question has not been answered satisfactorily. Nuclear weapons can facilitate six conceptually distinct foreign policy behaviors: aggression, expansion, independence, bolstering, steadfastness, and compromise. This typology of foreign policy behaviors enables scholars to move beyond simple claims of “nuclear emboldenment,” and allows for more nuanced examination of the ways in which nuclear weapons affect the foreign policies of current and future nuclear states. The typology also sheds light on Great Britain's response to nuclear acquisition. Britain used nuclear weapons to engage in greater levels of steadfastness in responding to challenges, bolstering junior allies, and demonstrating independence from the United States, but it did not engage in greater levels of aggression, expansion, or compromise. The typology and the British case demonstrate the value of distinguishing among different effects of nuclear weapons acquisition, have implications for scholars' and policymakers' understanding of the role of nuclear weapons in international politics, and suggest avenues for future research.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Security Vol. 40, No.1; Summer 2015: p.87-119
Journal SourceInternational Security Vol: 40 No 1
Key WordsNuclear Weapons ;  Aggression ;  Independence ;  Expansion ;  Compromise ;  Foreign Policy ;  Beyond Emboldenment ;  Bolstering ;  Steadfastness


 
 
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