Associate Fellow, IDSA, Dr Reshmi Kazi’s article on Pakistan’s aspirations for membership in the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), titled ‘Nuclear Suppliers Group: Why Pakistan Needs to do More’ was published in ‘The South Asian Voices’ on June 4, 2016.
Associate Fellow, IDSA, Dr Reshmi Kazi’s article on repercussions of China’s reaction to India’s NSG participation, titled ‘China’s Objections to India’s NSG Participation is Harmful to Global Non-proliferation Efforts’ was published in ‘The Dialogue’ on May 31, 2016.
China’s continuing complicity in nuclear proliferation networks would weaken the global nuclear security regime. Hence, China must cooperate with the international community for reinvesting the benefits achieved by the Nuclear Security Summit process, and help develop stronger nuclear security architecture in the Indian subcontinent.
Associate Fellow, IDSA, Dr Reshmi Kazi’s article on the Nuclear Security Summit, titled ‘Nuclear Security Summit Process (2010 – 2016) – What Next?’ was published in ‘The Dialogue’ on April 16, 2016.
Associate Fellow, IDSA, Dr Reshmi Kazi’s article on Nuclear Security Summit, titled ‘Classified: From Modi, to Obama #NSS2016’ was published in ‘South Asian Voices’ on March 24, 2016.
Ebola virus has been spreading exponentially. As of October 23, 2014, the total number of confirmed, probable, and suspected cases of Ebola infection stood at 10,141 including 4,922 reported deaths.1 With the number of new reported cases continuing to increase rapidly, the situation remains worrisome in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone.
Vipin Narang offers a critical analysis of why states adopt certain strategies and postures over others and how these choices affect their ability to deter conflicts. With the world already into the second nuclear age, strategic equations are no longer defined by a ‘bipolar global superpower competition involving massive nuclear arsenals with the capability to destroy each other multiple times over’ (p. 1).
The importance of nuclear security in Asia needs to be focused upon in view of the emerging challenges of nuclear proliferation, growing nuclear arsenals, expanding civilian nuclear energy programmes, weak export controls, zones of domestic instability and terrorism in several regions within the continent. This article focuses on the factors that pose potential risks to nuclear security in Asia. It emphasises the prevailing factors endangering the security of nuclear and radiological materials in Asia.
Alan J. Kuperman’s edited volume Nuclear Terrorism and Global Nuclear Security: The Challenge of Phasing out Highly Enriched Uranium explores the prospects and challenges involved in the process of global elimination of Highly Enriched Uranium (HEU). Global commerce in HEU poses the inherent dangers of nuclear terrorism and nuclear proliferation. Recognising the above, the volume asserts that, ‘given the vast majority of non-weapons HEU commerce persist[ing]’ (p. 3), the international community needs to undertake concerted measures to minimise the dangers of HEU commerce.
China Remains a Proliferation Concern in the Indian Subcontinent
China’s continuing complicity in nuclear proliferation networks would weaken the global nuclear security regime. Hence, China must cooperate with the international community for reinvesting the benefits achieved by the Nuclear Security Summit process, and help develop stronger nuclear security architecture in the Indian subcontinent.