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Justifying Ballistic Missile Defence

2009
Technology is championed as the solution to modern security problems, but also blamed as their cause. This book assesses the way in which these two views collide in the debate over ballistic missile defence: a complex, costly and controversial system intended to defend the United States from nuclear missile attacks.
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Japan, Ballistic Missile Defence and remilitarisation

Space Policy, 2013
Japan's future trajectory in security policy and the extent of deviation from the post-war course of a constrained military stance have been the source of constant academic and policy debate. Japanese policy-makers have maintained that national security policy has shown no fundamental deviation, and that this can be benchmarked against a range of ...
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Nuclear Zero and Ballistic-Missile Defence

Survival, 2010
A key issue with regard to achieving deep cuts in nuclear arms is the role of defences, in particular ballistic-missile defences. Defences are often viewed as obstructions to deep cuts, because strategic stability may be compromised when offensive nuclear forces are reduced to the point where the defence can absorb an opponent's retaliatory strike ...
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Back to the Future: Canada and Ballistic Missile Defence

2021
In 2005, Prime Minister Paul Martin, like all of his predecessors, refused to join the American ballistic missile defence (BMD) system. However, recent events, most notably North Korea’s nuclear weapons and ballistic missile testing, have put BMD back on the Canadian foreign policy agenda.
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Ballistic Missile Defences: Implications for India

Strategic Analysis, 2001
Given the profound implications of ballistic missile defences (BMD), it is imperative for India to accord adequate thought and attention to the issue.
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Ballistic Missile Defence and the Strategic Balance

1970
I n the years since the flurry of anxiety in the United States about an illusory ‘missile gap’ in I960, the impression has grown that the increasing numbers of strategic missiles possessed by the United States and the Soviet Union have created a completely stable balance of mutual destructive capacity that no effort on either side could upset. This has
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A Global Defence Against Ballistic Missiles

1987
Deterrence of war has been at the heart of Western security for the past forty years. Since the advent of nuclear weapons, Western leaders have sought to minimise the risk of destruction by maintaining effective nuclear-capable forces to deter aggression and by pursuing complementary arms control agreements. This approach appears to have worked.
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Rethinking strategic ballistic missile defences

Arms Control, 1993
(1993). Rethinking strategic ballistic missile defences. Arms Control: Vol. 14, RETHINKING THE UNTHINKABLE New Directions for Nuclear Arms Control, pp. 180-207.
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