Indian Nuclear Deterrence : Its Evolution, Development, and Implications for South Asian Security
by Cheema, Zafar Iqbal
Edition statement:1st Published by : Oxford University Press (Karachi ) Physical details: xxiii,609 Pages 24x16 cm | HB ISBN:9780195979039. Year: 2010Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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General Stacks | 355.033554 C514I 2010 (Browse shelf) | Available | 17789 |
Inlcude Appendicies, Bibliography and Index
The significance of Indian Nuclear Deterrence is that it establishes the fallacy of conventional perspectives on Indian nuclear deterrence--that the Indian nuclear program entailed 'exclusively peaceful uses' during the Nehru era and the development of weapons capability was initiated by the government of Lal Bahadur Shastri after the first Chinese nuclear explosion in 1964. On the contrary, the book provides incontrovertible documentary evidence that Dr. Homi J. Bhabha formulated with Nehru's approval a nuclear weapons development strategy within the structural framework of the Indian civilian nuclear program. Nehru was interested in a nuclear weapons capability for a 'deterrent in extremis'. The central premise of Indian Nuclear Deterrence is that BJP government's decision to carry out the May 1998 nuclear tests was not an original one, but a step prefigured in a strategic continuum whose genesis dates back to the late 1950s. It suggests that the declaration of Indian nuclear deterrence after the May 1998 nuclear tests, the weaponization of Indian nuclear capability and the pronouncement of the Draft Nuclear Doctrine (DND) were not separate from earlier policies, but instead were part of that strategic continuum. The study analyzes the dynamics of Indian nuclear deterrence, Indian nuclear doctrine, and their implications for South Asian security.
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