Nuclear and Conventional Disarmament: Progress or Stalemate?
USPID, Castiglioncello, settembre 1997
Contents
About the authors
About USPID
Paolo Cotta-Ramusino Preface
Bruce B. Blair, Brookings Institution Post-Cold War Nuclear Strategies
Jack Mendelsohn, Deputy Director, the Arms Control Association, Washington D. C. The status of treaties: the good, the bad and the ugly
Leon V. Sigal,Columbia University Fighting Proliferation Without Waging War
Alexander A. Konovalov, Director of the Center for Military Policy and System Analyses at the Institute for USA and Canada of the Russian Academy Nuclear Proliferation and the CIS
William C. Potter, Director of the Center for Non-Proliferation Studies of the Monterey Institute of International Studies Before the Deluge? Assessing the Threat of Nuclear Leakage from the Post-soviet States
Robert S. Norris, Natural Resources Defense Council Nuclear Weapons Reductions, Non-Proliferation and the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty: A Status Report
Waldo Stumpf, Chief Executive Officer of the Atomic Energy Corporation of South Africa, Pretoria S.A. Birth and death of the South African Nuclear Weapons Programme
Kenneth R. Timmerman, Middle East Data Project Inc. Iran's Nuclear Program: Myth and Reality
Shahram Chubin, Director, Geneva Centre for Security Policy Iran and Nuclear Weapons: arms control prospects
Paolo Farinella, University of Pisa The Vanunu case and the Israeli Nuclear Arsenal
Francesco Calogero The Legacy of Hiroshima and the Perspective of a Nuclear-Weapon-Free World
George Rathjens, M.I.T. Criteria and Requirements of Peace Operations
Alexander I. Nikitin, Director, Center for Political and International Studies, Moscow Formation and development of the Commonwealth of the Independent States (CIS) and peace support operations
Virginia Gamba, Institute for Defence Policy in South Africa Regional conflicts, peacekeeping and disarmament