ID | 140980 |
Title Proper | Is the Indian nuclear tiger changing its stripes? |
Language | ENG |
Author | Gaurav Kampani |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Sixteen years after stepping out of the nuclear closet, India's nuclear posture, some of its operational practices, and hardware developments are beginning to mimic those of the original five nuclear weapon states. Several proliferation scholars in the United States contend that India's national security managers are poised to repeat the worst mistakes of the superpowers’ Cold War nuclear competition, with negative consequences for deterrence, crisis, and stability in South Asia and the Asia-Pacific region. This article takes a contrarian view. It dissects the best available data to show why the alarmist view is overstated. It argues that not only are the alarmists’ claims unsupported by evidence, their interpretation of the skeletal and often contradictory data threatens to construct the very threat they prophesize. |
`In' analytical Note | Nonproliferation Review Vol. 21, No.3-4; Sep/Dec 2014: p.383-398 |
Journal Source | Nonproliferation ReviewVol: 21 No 3-4 |
Key Words | Nuclear policy ; South Asia ; India ; Modernization ; Nuclear Posture ; Ballistic Missile Defense ; Regional Stability ; Multiple Independently Targetable Re-entry Vehicles ; Operational Status |