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단행본

Asia's latent nuclear powers: Japan, South Korea and Taiwan

개인저자
Mark Fitzpatrick
발행사항
London: International Institute for Strategic Studies, 2016
형태사항
175 p. ; 24cm
ISBN
9781138930803
청구기호
349.9 F559a
서지주기
Includes bibliographical references and index
소장정보
위치등록번호청구기호 / 출력상태반납예정일
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책 소개
If the nuclear weapons club were to further expand, would America?s democratic allies in Northeast Asia be among the next entrants? Japan, South Korea and Taiwan all have robust civilian nuclear energy programmes that make them ?virtual nuclear powers? according to many analysts. All three once pursued nuclear weapons and all face growing security threats from nuclear-armed adversaries. But will they ? or rather, under what circumstances might they? This book analyses these past nuclear pursuits and current proliferation drivers. In explaining the nuclear technology that the three now possess, it considers how long it would take each to build a nuclear weapon if such a fateful decision were made. Although nuclear dominoes Northeast Asia cannot be ruled out, the author does not predict such a scenario. Unlike when each previously went down a nuclear path, democracy and a free press now prevail as barriers to building nukes in the basement. Reliance on US defence commitments is a better security alternative -- as long as such guarantees remain credible, an issue that is also assessed. But extended deterrence is not a tight barrier to proliferation of sensitive nuclear technologies. Nuclear hedging by its Northeast Asian partners will challenge Washington?s nuclear diplomacy.

The book asks and answers what might cause Japan, South Korea and/or Taiwan to again seek nuclear weapons, how long would it take them, and how can this be prevented?

목차

Acknowledgements, Glossary, Introduction, Chapter One: Republic of Korea, Chapter Two: Japan, Chapter Three: Taiwan, Conclusions, Index