Abbreviations/Acronyms
Introduction
Chapter 1. World War II and the Race for the A-Bomb
Chapter 2. The Cold War
Part a: The Nuclear Arms Race and NSC 68
Part b: Reagan, Gorbachev and the end of the Cold War
Chapter 3. UN Security Council Nuclear Weapon States (NWS) – United
Kingdom, France and China
Chapter 4. Non-UN Security Council Nuclear Weapon States – Israel,
India, Pakistan, North Korea (and Iran)
Chapter 5. The Global Nuclear Non-proliferation Regime
Chapter 6. The Modern Era: The Post-Cold War and Beyond
Chapter 7. Biological and Chemical Weapons, and Nuclear
Terrorism
Conclusion
Bibliography
Joseph M. Siracusa is professor in human security and
international diplomacy at the Royal Melbourne Institute of
Technology (RMIT) University, in Melbourne, Australia, and
president of Australia’s Council for the Humanities, Arts and
Social Sciences (CHASS).
Aiden Warren is senior lecturer in the School of Global, Urban and
Social Studies and researcher in the Centre for Global Research
(CGR) at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT)
University, in Melbourne, Australia.
Comprehensive and timely, Weapons of Mass Destruction is focused
firmly upon the security challenges that WMD, nuclear and
non-nuclear, pose to the 21st century. It presents a finely-judged
account of the successive phases of nuclear history, blending
well-grounded historical summaries with acute policy commentary.
Writing with admirable clarity, Siracusa and Warren document how
the road from 1945 led us to where we are today, with nuclear
terror compounded by the insidious threats of chemical and
biological attack. They show how the knife-edge stability of the
Cold War was seceded by the emergence of new players and new
threats which together transform the global security threat.
*Ken Young, professor in the Department of War Studies, King's
College London*
If you want to understand the contemporary nuclear age, how we got
here, and where we are headed, look no further than this tour de
force by Joseph Siracusa and Aiden Warren. Unlike previous
treatments of the nuclear age which tended to focus overwhelmingly
on the superpower experience, Siracusa and Warren deftly
contextualize the entire nuclear age by giving equal treatment to
the proliferation histories and challenges presented by regional
nuclear powers—precisely those powers that pose the greatest
challenge to nuclear security and nonproliferation today. This book
belongs on the shelf of anyone who cares literally about the future
of the world.
*Vipin Narang, associate professor of political science,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)*
Joseph Siracusa and Aiden Warren are internationally-recognized
security studies scholars based in Australia and their new book,
Weapons of Mass Destruction, provides an excellent overview of the
past, present, and future of WMD challenges. The book is highly
recommend to students who will gain from a comprehensive
examination of the major issues and to more seasoned experts who
will benefit from the authors’ original insights and analysis.
*Matthew Kroenig, associate professor of government and foreign
service, Georgetown University*
Siracusa and Warren achieve an exceptional feat by packing several
decades worth of WMD history into a neat read. They take us on a
journey starting in the Cold War and guide us to today, telling the
story of how most destructive weapons remained a steady and
dangerous fixture of the international security landscape. The
authors provided true service to the field by writing a
foundational text that serves as a perfect introduction to the
field of WMD non-proliferation.
*Togzhan Kassenova, Nuclear Policy Program, Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace*
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