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STRATEGIC NUCLEAR FORCES (8) answer(s).
 
SrlItem
1
ID:   122350


After the reset: A glimpse of what U.S.-Russian relations may be like towards 2020 / Fenenko, Alexei   Journal Article
Fenenko, Alexei Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract The general environment of U.S.-Russian relations up to 2020 will remain conflict-prone, especially as Russia and the United States lack a complex of stabilizing economic ties, like those in U.S.-Chinese relations. The nuclear missile parity remains the sole stabilizer.
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2
ID:   153463


Donald Trump's nuclear strategy: first outlines / Kozin, V   Journal Article
Kozin, V Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract U.S. PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP has inherited large strategic and tactical nuclear arsenals from his predecessor, Barack Obama, and a strategy of "unconditional offensive nuclear deterrence," which allows for the possibility of a preemptive nuclear strike against practically any country that is not an ally, friend or partner of the United States.
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3
ID:   003065


Military balance 1993-1994 / IISS 1993  Book
IISS Book
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Publication London, Brassey's, 1993.
Description 267p.: maps, tablespbk
Standard Number 1857530381
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Copies: C:2/I:0,R:1,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
034850355.03/IIS 034850MainOn ShelfGeneral 
034871355.03/IIS 034871MainOn ShelfReference books 
4
ID:   189814


Nuclear deterrence amid the development of a US global missile defense system / Sukhorutchenko, V.V. ; Kreydin, S.V.   Journal Article
SUKHORUTCHENKO, V.V. Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This article examines measures to counter US missile defense (MD) to make it impossible to block the response of Russia's strategic nuclear forces (SNF) in operations involving nuclear and nonnuclear weapons and strategic defense systems.
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5
ID:   191506


Role of strategic missile forces in counteracting a NATO strategic multi-domain operation / Fazletdinov, I.R. ; Lumpov, V.I.   Journal Article
I.R. FAZLETDINOV, V.I. LUMPOV Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper provides a brief description of a strategic multi-domain operation by US and NATO forces; its goals, objectives, content, and emanating threats to Russia's national security; and possible measures to counteract it with the participation of the Strategic Missile Forces.
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6
ID:   036290


SIPRI yearbook 1972: world armaments and disarmament / SIPRI 1972  Book
SIPRI Book
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Publication Stockholm, Almquist and Wiksell., 1972.
Description xxiv, 611p.hbk
Standard Number 918511412X
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
008871327.17405/SIP 008871MainOn ShelfGeneral 
7
ID:   005806


SIPRI yearbook 1995: armaments, disarmament and international security / SIPRI 1995  Book
SIPRI Book
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Publication Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1995.
Description xxxviii, 920p.hbk
Series SIPRI Yearbook 1995
Standard Number 0198291930
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
037261327.17405/SIP 037261MainOn ShelfGeneral 
8
ID:   130025


Smart defense from new threats: future war from a Russian perspective: back to the future after the war on Terror / Kipp, Jacob W   Journal Article
Kipp, Jacob W Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract In 2012 Vladimir Putin pledged that Russia would over the next decade invest in a smart defense, embracing new technologies to modernize its conventional forces and its strategic nuclear arsenal to ensure strategic stability in Eurasia. At the core of the demands for Russian military modernization is a very pessimistic appraisal of the current capabilities of Russia's conventional forces and the future deterrence power of its strategic nuclear forces in the face of emergence US ballistic missile defenses and global precision-strike conventional systems. Driving the Russia's notion of future war is threat environment that is complex and raises risks of local crises leading to foreign military intervention. These threats include a persistent terrorism within its own territories and Central Asia, an ideological fear of psychological subversion from the "color revolutions" of the last decade, the geopolitical threat of NATO expansion into Post-Soviet territory, and the stated fear that US military modernization will undermine the credibility of Russia's conventional and nuclear forces. Finally, in spite of the Sino-Russian strategic partnership, there is also an unspoken fear that an emergent China could some day become a threat to Russia's Eastern Siberia and the Far East.
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