articles relating to this years bisa conference
DESCRIPTION
Whether you are attending the British Internationals Studies Association Conference 2011, or if you are staying at home to watch the Royal Wedding, we here at Routledge would like to bring you some of the most popular and leading research from our collection of Security, Defence and Strategic Studies journals that cover some of the key conference themes:TRANSCRIPT
Defence, Security and Strategic StudiesJournals from Routledge
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Are you attending this years British International Studies Association
(BISA) Conference?
Whether you are attending the British Internationals Studies Association Conference 2011, or if you are staying at home to watch the Royal Wedding, we here at Routledge would like to bring you some of the most popular and leading research from our collection of Security, Defence and Strategic Studies journals that cover some of the key conference themes:
US and British Foreign PolicyInternational Organisations & GovernanceReligion and Security StudiesTerrorismHealthNuclear DeterrenceClimate ChangeRussian Foreign PolicyInternational Relations in Africa and ChinaSecurity in Turkey, Arab Middle East, Russia, Eurasia and South Asia
Look inside to access these free articles until 30th May 2011
www.informaworld.com/mass
Military&StrategicStudies
Journals from Routledge 2011
The Military Balance is an authoritative assessment of the military
capabilities and defence economics of 170 countries. Detailed
country-by-country entries list their military organisation, personnel,
weapons and equipment holdings, and relevant economic and
demographic data.
Region-by-region analyses cover the major military and economic
developments affecting security policy and the trade in weapons and
other military equipment. A comprehensive tabular section portrays
key data on weapons and defence economics. The Military Balance is
an indispensable handbook for anyone conducting serious studies of
security policy and military affairs.
The International Institute for Strategic Studies, founded in 1958, is
an independent centre for research, information and debate on the
problems of conflict, however caused, that have, or potentially have,
an important military content.
www.iiss.orgwww.tandf.co.uk/journals
TheMilitaryBalance2011
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The InTernaTIonal InsTITuTe For sTraTegIc sTudIes
TheMilitary Balance2011The annual assessment of global military capabilities and defence economics
About the Contributors v
ARTICLESFrom Combined Arms to Combined Intelligence: Philosophy, Doctrine and OperationsJames J. Wirtz and Jon J. Rosenwasser 725
Congressional Intelligence Oversight: The Electoral Disconnection Amy Zegart and Julie Quinn 744
Whatʼs the Use of Cryptologic History?Stephen Budiansky 767
Missing the Wake-up Call: Why Intelligence Failures Rarely Inspire Improved PerformanceErik J. Dahl 778
Organizing Intelligence: An Introduction to the 1955 Report on Colonial SecurityRory Cormac 800
The British Far Rightʼs South African Connection: A.K. Chesterton, Hendrik van den Bergh, and the South African Intelligence ServicesGraham Macklin 823
REVIEW ESSAYSAnglo-Saxon Susceptibilities: The Special Relationship and the WorldAlex Danchev 843
An Ancient Clash of Civilizations?Rose Mary Sheldon 856
The Formative Years of Canadian Foreign IntelligenceTimothy Andrews Sayle 862
The Tortured and the Torturers: Six Films on Prisoner AbuseGary Kern 868
Volume 25 Number 6 December 2010
Volume 25 Num
ber 6 December 2010
ISSN 0268-4527
Intelligence and National Security
Volume 25 Number 6 December 2010 INTELLIGENCE andNATIONAL SECURITY
INTELLIGENCE andNATIONAL SECURITY
About the Contributors
ARTICLESFrom Combined Arms to Combined Intelligence:Philosophy, Doctrine and OperationsJAMES J. WIRTZ AND JON J. ROSENWASSER
Congressional Intelligence Oversight: The ElectoralDisconnectionAMY ZEGART AND JULIE QUINN
Whatʼs the Use of Cryptologic History?STEPHEN BUDIANSKY
Missing the Wake-up Call: Why Intelligence FailuresRarely Inspire Improved PerformanceERIK J. DAHL
Organizing Intelligence: An Introduction to the 1955Report on Colonial SecurityRORY CORMAC
The British Far Rightʼs South African Connection:A.K. Chesterton, Hendrik van den Bergh, and theSouth African Intelligence ServicesGRAHAM MACKLIN
REVIEW ESSAYSAnglo-Saxon Susceptibilities: The Special Relationshipand the WorldALEX DANCHEV
An Ancient Clash of Civilizations?ROSE MARY SHELDON
The Formative Years of Canadian Foreign IntelligenceTIMOTHY ANDREWS SAYLE
The Tortured and the Torturers: Six Films on PrisonerAbuseGARY KERN
FINT_I_25_06_COVER.QXP:FINT_I_25_06_COVER 10/12/10 6:21 PM Page 1
A solution from hell: the United States and the rise of humanitarian interventionism, 1991-2003Stephen WertheimJournal of Genocide ResearchVolume 12, Issue 4http://bit.ly/gzEcpq
American and Chinese Power after the Financial CrisisJoseph S. Nye, JrThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 33, Issue 4http://bit.ly/hRxbej
An Endangered Partnership: The Anglo-American Defence Relationship in the Early Twenty-first CenturyJames WitherEuropean SecurityVolume 15, Issue 1http://bit.ly/fPVdNv
Britain and the Missile Gap: British Estimates on the Soviet Ballistic Missile Threat, 1957-61Huw DylanIntelligence and National SecurityVolume 23, Issue 6 http://bit.ly/gpNy9G
Britain and the Wider WorldWyn ReesDefense & Security AnalysisVolume 27, Issue 1
British Defence Policy and the War in Iraq, 2003-9Warren ChinnDefense & Security AnalysisVolume 27, Issue 1
British Intelligence and the Mandate of Palestine: Threats to British National Security Immediately After the Second World WarCalder WaltonIntelligence and National SecurityVolume 23, Issue 4http://bit.ly/dIo29A
Faith and DiplomacyMadeleine AlbrightThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 4, Issue 2http://bit.ly/hGEnyY
Foregoing Limited Force: The George W. Bush Administration’s Decision Not to Attack Ansar Al-IslamMicah ZenkoJournal of Strategic StudiesVolume 32, Issue 4http://bit.ly/gKz3He
International Religious Freedom Policy: Taking StockAllen HertzkeThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 6, Issue 2http://bit.ly/h08G6D
Keeping our Powder Dry? UK Defence Policy Beyond AfghanistanMalcolm ChalmersRUSI JournalVolume 156, Issue 1http://bit.ly/ib6dXn
NATO’s Transformation Gaps: Transatlantic Differences and the War in AfghanistanTheo Farrell and Sten RynningJournal of Strategic StudiesVolume 33, Issue 5http://bit.ly/fN4IGa
Obama’s Dilemma: Iran, Israel and the Rumours of WarDana H. Allin and Steven SimonSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 52, Issue 6http://bit.ly/fnGWok
Rebooting the West: The US, Europe and the Future of the Western AllianceChristopher CokerWhitehall PaperVolume 72, Issue 1http://bit.ly/exHpu2
Reconciliation and Iraq: Faith-Based Advice for the Next PresidentDaniel PhilpottThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 6, Issue 3http://bit.ly/hWAvF7
US & BRITISH FOREIGN POLICY
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Military&StrategicStudies
Journals from Routledge 2011
Religious Realism in Foreign Policy: Lessons from Vatican IIThomas FarrThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 3, Issue 3http://bit.ly/f6PVka Revisiting the Future: Geopolitical Effects of the Financial CrisisMathew J. Burrows and Jennifer HarrisThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 0, Issue 2http://bit.ly/g3PuuM
Strategic Engagement’s Track RecordThomas WrightThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 33, Issue 3 http://bit.ly/dRnp4A
Threat and Anxiety in US Foreign PolicyChristopher J. FettweisSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 52, Issue 2http://bit.ly/hhWEek
UK-US Relations after the three “Bs” - Blair, Brown and BushDavid DunnDefense & Security AnalysisVolume 27, Issue 1
Unintentional Militarism: Over-reliance on Military methods and mindsets in US National SecurityCathy DownesDefense & Security AnalysisVolume 26, Issue 4http://bit.ly/gs4iFU
‘US Intelligence and Vietnam’: The Official Version(s)Michael WarnerIntelligence and National SecurityVolume 25, Issue 5http://bit.ly/fG6e8I
Why Britain Doesn’t Do Grand StrategyPatrick PorterRUSI JournalVolume 155, Issue 4http://bit.ly/fWPv91
A European View on the Future of MultilateralismManuel Lafont RapnouilThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 32, Issue 3http://bit.ly/gYLL1q
Conflict datasets: A Primer for Academics, Policymakers, and Practitioners Charles H. Andertona and John R. CarteraDefence and Peace EconomicsVolume 22, Issue 1http://bit.ly/g80Hd7
European Union security governance: putting the ‘security’ back inGeorge Christoua, Stuart Crofta, Michela Ceccorullib and Sonia LucarellibEuropean SecurityVolume 19, Issue 3http://bit.ly/gZlOME
“Good News” in the Fight Against CorruptionRoberto LaverThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 8, Issue 4http://bit.ly/fRy0uo
INTERNATIONAL ORGANISATIONS & GOVERNANCE
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Military&StrategicStudies
Journals from Routledge 2011
Inspiring Development in Fragile StatesSeth KaplanThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 8, Issue 4http://bit.ly/emZE4w
Investing for Peace: The Private Sector and the Challenges of PeacebuildingMats Berdal and Nader MousavizadehSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 52, Issue 2http://bit.ly/egN2vJ
Is Asia-Pacific Regionalism Outgrowing ASEAN?See Seng TanRUSI JournalVolume 156, Issue 1http://bit.ly/dE1lQJ
Peacekeeping in Crisis? Confronting the Challenges AheadBruse JonesRUSI JournalVolume 154, Issue 5http://bit.ly/i6OcYu
The G20 and Global Governance: An ExchangeDavid Shorr and Thomas WrightSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 52, Issue 2http://bit.ly/eCwSTU
The Humanitarian Community Needs a Foreign ServiceGeorge Ward, JrThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 8, Issue 4http://bit.ly/eOzkdx
The Illusion of UN Security Council ReformThomas G. WeissThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 26, Issue 4http://bit.ly/iiJdbV
Theorising the EU’s role in regional conflict managementMichael Schulza and Fredrik SderbaumabEuropean SecurityVolume 19, Issue 3http://bit.ly/gzgiUt
Toward Effective Multilateralism: Why Bigger May Not Be BetterThomas WrightThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 32, Issue 3http://bit.ly/enazed
Unavoidable Tensions: The Liberal Path to Global NATODr. Tobias Bunde and Dr. Timo NoetzelContemporary Security PolicyVolume 32, Issue 1http://bit.ly/hG6p6D
When and How the Fighting Stops: Explaining the Duration and Outcome of Civil WarsPatrick T. Brandt, T. David Mason, Mehmet Gurses, Nicolai Petrovsky and Dagmar RadinDefence and Peace EconomicsVolume 19, Issue 6http://bit.ly/hcsUo3
THE
NONPROLIFERATION
REVIEW
March 2011 • Volume 18 • Number 1
The James Martin Center for Nonproliferation StudiesMonterey Institute of International Studies
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THE NONPROLIFERATION REVIEWMarch 2011 • Volume 18 • Number 1
ContentsEDITOR’S NOTE 1
CONTRIBUTORS 5
CORRESPONDENCE
Leonard Weiss • Page van der Linden • Lani Miyoshi Sanders, Sharon M. DeLand & Arian L. Pregenzer 11
SPECIAL ISSUE
ARMS, DISARMAMENT & INFLUENCE:INTERNATIONAL RESPONSES TO THE 2010 NUCLEAR POSTURE REVIEW
Introduction: Reviewing the Nuclear Posture Review 17
Instrumental Influences: Russia and the 2010 Nuclear Posture Review 39
Worrying about Washington: China’s Views on the US Nuclear Posture 51
‘‘More Posture than Review’’: Indian Reactions to the US Nuclear Posture Review 69
The Limits of Influence: US-Pakistani Nuclear Relations 85
Flexible Responses: NATO Reactions to the US Nuclear Posture Review 103
Extended Deterrence and Disarmament: Japan and the New US Nuclear Posture 125
Finding a Balance between Assurances and Abolition: South Korean Viewsof the Nuclear Posture Review 147
Mindful of the Middle East: Egypt’s Reaction to the New US Nuclear Posture Review 165
The Position of an Emerging Global Power: Brazilian Responses to the 2010US Nuclear Posture Review 183
Acceptance and Anxiety: Turkey (Mostly) Embraces Obama’s Nuclear Posture 201
A Nuclear Nonproliferation Test: Obama’s Nuclear Policy and the 2010NPT Review Conference 219
Conclusion: Lessons Learned from the 2010 Nuclear Posture Review 237
ARTICLES
Undergraduate Nonproliferation Education in the United States: A NonproliferationReview Survey of Teaching at Leading US Colleges and Universities 263
The Oracles of Proliferation: How Experts Maintain a Biased Historical Readingthat Limits Policy Innovation 297
BOOK REVIEW
Exporting the Bomb: Technology Transfer and the Spread of Nuclear Weapons 315
RNPR_18_1_Cover.qxp:RNPR_18_1 2/10/11 8:20 PM Page 1
SurvivalIISS |
The InTernaTIonal InsTITuTe For sTraTegIc sTudIes
Survival global politics and strategy
Raad Alkadiri on the new Iraqi governmentCrises in Korea: Benjamin Schreer and Brendan Taylor
Cyber threatsJames Farwell and Rafal Rohozinski on Stuxnet; Alexander Klimburg
and Bruno Tertrais on cyber power; François Heisbourg on WikiLeaks
February–March 2011
Volu
Me 53 N
uM
ber 1 February–March 2011
The InTernaTIonal InsTITuTe For sTraTegIc sTudIes
strategic dossiersfrom the iiss
strategic dossier series – harnessing the institute’s technical expertise to present detailed information on a key strategic issue
orders for the bound books may be placed in london with the iiss reception book shop at arundel House, 13–15 arundel street, temple place, london, Wc2r 3dX, UK.email: [email protected] tel.: +44 (0)20 7379 7676orders can also be placed at www.iiss.org
IRAN’S NUCLEAR, CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL CAPABILITIESA net assessmentIran’s pursuit of dual-use technologies that could be used for strategic weapons have raised global concerns and even, in some quarters, consideration of pre-emptive military action. There is compelling evidence that Iran is seeking the capability to produce nuclear weapons should its leaders make this fateful decision.
This IISS Strategic Dossier provides a detailed and objective technical assessment of Iran’s nuclear, chemical and biological programmes, and offers a careful estimate of how long it would take Iran to produce nuclear weapons under different scenarios. The Dossier traces the political and technical history of the programmes and the diplomatic efforts to dissuade Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapons capability. Written and reviewed by internationally recognised experts, the Dossier evaluates the programmes, and the concerns they raise, on the basis of what is known and not known. This publication complements the recent IISS Strategic Dossier Iran’s Ballistic Missile Capabilities: a net assessment. Both books provide dispassionate, fact-rich analysis to fuel the policy debate on how to deal with the growing crisis over Iran.
Published February 2011; IsBn 978-0-86079-207-9; a4 paperback; £30.00
Price £20 for IISS members
buy online at
www.iiss.org
www.informaworld.com/mass
Military&StrategicStudies
Journals from Routledge 2011
Security, subjectivity and space in postcolonial Europe: Muslims in the diasporaCatarina Kinnvall and Paul Nesbitt-LarkingEuropean SecurityVolume 18, Issue 3http://bit.ly/gZMthR
The Bush Doctrine: A Niebuhrian AssessmentMark AmstutzThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 5, Issue 4http://bit.ly/ffyt6u
The Role of Islam in Pakistan’s FutureHusain HaqqaniThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 28, Issue 4http://bit.ly/fQAQz2
The Vatican and the White HouseMassimo FrancoSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 52, Issue 3http://bit.ly/dINoVR
U.S. Military Chaplains: Redirecting a Critical AssetDoug JohnstonThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 7, Issue 4http://bit.ly/fN3nM7
A Post-Secular World?Cesare MerliniSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 53, Issue 2http://bit.ly/hmqm2C
Cashing in on Religion’s Currency?: Ethical Challenges for a Post-secular MilitaryJohn CarlsonThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 7, Issue 4http://bit.ly/gfAdpu
Europe and Islam: Crescent Waxing, Cultures ClashingTimothy M. SavageThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 27, Issue 3http://bit.ly/e854Sv
In Search of the Twin TolerationsDaniel PhilpottThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 6, Issue 2http://bit.ly/eZryA7
Ready … or Not?: Equipping the U.S. Military Chaplain for Inter-Religious LiaisonChris SeipleThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 7, Issue 4http://bit.ly/hITdpN
Religion and Security in the Post-Modern WorldSteven MeyerThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 6, Issue 3http://bit.ly/h24MT4
Religious Freedom: Good for What Ails Us?Brian GrimThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 6, Issue 2http://bit.ly/fiRSRS
RELIGION AND SECURITY STUDIES
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Military&StrategicStudies
Journals from Routledge 2011
7/7 Revisited: The Question of ‘Preventability’Margaret GilmoreRUSI JournalVolume 155, Issue 5http://bit.ly/f5g2Wq
9/11: What Did We Know and When Did We Know It?Beom S. Lee, Walter Enders and Todd SandlerDefence and Peace EconomicsVolume 20, Issue 2http://bit.ly/eizGPE
Al Qaida’s Views of Authoritarian Intelligence Services in the Middle EastJessica M. Huckabey and Mark E. StoutIntelligence and National SecurityVolume 25, Issue 3http://bit.ly/gW2Inz
Before and after Lisbon: legal implementation as the ‘Achilles heel’ in EU counter-terrorism?Javier ArgomanizEuropean SecurityVolume 19, Issue 2http://bit.ly/fIyBb1
Betraying a certain corruption of mind: how (and how not) to define ‘terrorism’Timothy ShanahanaCritical Studies on TerrorismVolume 3, Issue 2http://bit.ly/fzQGpF
Counter-Insurgency and Human Rights in Northern IrelandBrice DicksonJournal of Strategic StudiesVolume 32, Issue 3http://bit.ly/hdi9FG
Deliberations of a Nuclear Terrorist: Patience or Opportunism?Simen EllingsenDefense & Security AnalysisVolume 26, Issue 4http://bit.ly/g52IY8
Deterring the Undeterrable: Coercion, Denial, and Delegitimization in CounterterrorismAlex S. WilnerJournal of Strategic StudiesVolume 34, Issue 1http://bit.ly/eYwATr
Keep Calm and Carry OnNigel Inkster and Alexander NicollSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 52, Issue 2http://bit.ly/hsiNVS
Organized Crime and the Trafficking of Radiological Materials: The Case of GeorgiaAlexander KupatadzeThe Nonproliferation ReviewVolume 17, Issue 2http://bit.ly/f5EYIz
Preventing Dirty Bombs: Addressing the Threat at the “Source”Charles StreeperThe Nonproliferation ReviewVolume 17, Issue 3http://bit.ly/eybAK1
Privacy and Surveillance in the Age of TerrorSimon ChestermanSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 52, Issue 5http://bit.ly/eRXuQz
Ritual, strategy, and deep culture in the Chechen national movementHank JohnstonCritical Studies on TerrorismVolume 1, Issue 3http://bit.ly/ggPVln
Social network analysis and counterinsurgency: a counterproductive strategy?Roger Mac GintyaCritical Studies on TerrorismVolume 3, Issue 2http://bit.ly/hgYzwk
Suicide bombing as acts of deathly citizenship? A critical double-layered inquiryCharles T. LeeCritical Studies on TerrorismVolume 2, Issue 2http://bit.ly/gzFeOR
Terror, Support and RecruitmentJoao Ricardo Fariaa and Daniel G. ArcebDefence and Peace EconomicsVolume 16, Issue 4http://bit.ly/ex8rj6
TERRORISM
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Military&StrategicStudies
Journals from Routledge 2011
Terrorism: The New WaveMichael Clarke and Valentina SoriaRUSI JournalVolume 155, Issue 4http://bit.ly/gIHwi9
The New Jihad and Islamic TraditionJohn KelsayThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 7, Issue 2http://bit.ly/gbJXl9
The Randomization of Terrorist AttacksPeter PhillipsDefense & Security AnalysisVolume 26, Issue 3http://bit.ly/hdxiBc
The Role of Consensus in the Contemporary Struggle for IslamDaveed Gartenstein-RossThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 6, Issue 4http://bit.ly/i05D5m
The terror experts and the mainstream media: the expert nexus and its dominance in the news mediaDavid Miller and Tom MillsCritical Studies on TerrorismVolume 2, Issue 3http://bit.ly/f0yc1m
A Progressive Nuclear Policy: Rethinking Continuous-at-Sea DeterrenceNick Ritchie and Paul IngramRUSI JournalVolume 155, Issue 2http://bit.ly/gSvLjP
A Second Nuclear Revolution: From Nuclear Primacy to Post-Existential DeterrenceTom SauerJournal of Strategic StudiesVolume 32, Issue 5http://bit.ly/f8vAVm
Antelope, Poseidon or a Hybrid: The Upgrading of the British Strategic Nuclear Deterrent, 1970-1974Thomas RobbJournal of Strategic StudiesVolume 33, Issue 6http://bit.ly/eFwEkH
Criteria for DeterrencePaul LeverRUSI JournalVolume 156, Issue 1http://bit.ly/ejqIyD
Deterrence and Disarmament in the UKDesmond BowenSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 52, Issue 1http://bit.ly/hiRk29
Deterring a Nuclear 9/11Caitlin TalmadgeThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 30, Issue 2http://bit.ly/haJG0c
IPPNW’s 19th World Congress demands fulfillment of pledge for a nuclear-weapons-free worldJohn Loretza and Maria ValentiaMedicine, Conflict and SurvivalVolume 26, Issue 4http://bit.ly/i1LcKF
NUCLEAR DETERRENCE
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Military&StrategicStudies
Journals from Routledge 2011
Iran: Diplomacy and DeterrenceAndrew ParasilitiSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 51, Issue 5http://bit.ly/fPLnbj
Nuclear proliferation and ‘realistic deterrence’ in a new centuryStephen J. CimbalaEuropean SecurityVolume 11, Issue 2http://bit.ly/eZlWdZ
Nuclear Weapons as the Currency of Power: Deconstructing the Fetishism of ForceAnne Harrington de SantanaThe Nonproliferation ReviewVolume 16, Issue 3http://bit.ly/fQwXil
Nuclear Zero and Ballistic Missile DefenceDean A. WilkeningSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 52, Issue 6http://bit.ly/gMpIWR
Polaris, East of Suez: British Plans for a Nuclear Force in the Indo-Pacific, 1964-1968Matthew Jones and John W. YoungJournal of Strategic StudiesVolume 33, Issue 6http://bit.ly/fIoMPI
Strength in Numbers: The Labour Government and the Size of the Polaris ForceDavid James GillJournal of Strategic StudiesVolume 33, Issue 6http://bit.ly/hRYPrF
The Fourth Wave in Deterrence ResearchJeffrey W. KnopfContemporary Security PolicyVolume 31, Issue 1http://bit.ly/dZcBfN
The Future of the United Kingdom’s Nuclear DeterrentFranklin C MillerRUSI JournalVolume 155, Issue 2http://bit.ly/hqxhhy
Are Evangelicals Warming to Global Environmentalism?Noah TolyThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 5, Issue 1http://bit.ly/fN7k18
Climate Change and Security at the Third PoleKatherine MortonSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 53, Issue 1http://bit.ly/htwJjm
Creation Care: Religion and Environmental ActionDorothy BoorseThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 6, Issue 3http://bit.ly/eiajQY
Environmental Security in the Arctic Ocean: Promoting Co-operation and Preventing ConflictPaul Arthur BerkmanWhitehall PaperVolume 75, Issue 1http://bit.ly/fcFn8s
From the West to the rest: Climate change as a challenge to human security in AfricaDan KuwaliAfrican Security ReviewVolume 17, Issue 3http://bit.ly/gUiY6x
Global Warming and the Arab SpringSarah Johnstone and Jeffrey MazoSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 53, Issue 2http://bit.ly/ijsgb9
CLIMATE CHANGE
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Military&StrategicStudies
Journals from Routledge 2011
The climate security divide: Bridging human and national security in AfricaDenise GarciaAfrican Security ReviewVolume 17, Issue 3http://bit.ly/hOjwmc
The EU and climate security: a case of successful norm entrepreneurship?Kamil Zwolski and Christian KaunertaEuropean SecurityVolume 20, Issue 1http://bit.ly/fGhEEI
Instrumental Influences: Russia and the 2010 Nuclear Posture ReviewPavel PodvigThe Nonproliferation ReviewVolume 18, Issue 1http://bit.ly/dK44sh
Religion and Russia’s FutureJames BillingtonThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 7, Issue 2http://bit.ly/fv7APp
Resetting U.S.-Russian Relations: It Takes TwoDavid J. KramerThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 33, Issue 1http://bit.ly/gZNEYr
Russia and the European Union: Convergence or Divergence?Derek AverreEuropean SecurityVolume 14, Issue 2http://bit.ly/eZkPOW
Russia’s Spheres of Interest, not InfluenceDmitri TreninThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 32, Issue 4http://bit.ly/huM1Ve
Russian Military Reform: Prospects and Reforms
Bettina RenzRUSI JournalVolume 155, Issue 1http://bit.ly/fn62tX
The Sources of Russia’s InsecurityThomas GrahamSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 52, Issue 1http://bit.ly/h59xPK
The Unravelling of the Cold War SettlementDaniel Deudney and G. John IkenberrySurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 51, Issue 6http://bit.ly/f2DT30
Towards a NATO–Russia Strategic ConceptOksana Antonenko and Igor YurgensSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 52, Issue 6http://bit.ly/gOlTcM
RUSSIAN FOREIGN POLICY
The Security Implications of Climate ChangeJohn Podesta and Peter OgdenThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 31, Issue 1http://bit.ly/ghZrlQ
W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 V O L U M E 3 4 N U M B E R 1W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 V O L U M E 3 4 N U M B E R 1
C E N T E R F O R S T R A T E G I C A N D I N T E R N A T I O N A L S T U D I E S
PLAN A-MINUS FORAFGHANISTANMichael O’Hanlon and Bruce Riedel
AMERICA’S PAKISTAN STRATEGYPaul Staniland
PAKISTAN’S COUNTERTERRORISMSTRATEGYAyesha Siddiqa
ALSO FEATURING...
COPING WITH ACONFLICTED CHINA
David Shambaugh
THE THREATS SHAPINGCHINA’S RISE
Ely Ratner
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THE PA
KISTA
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34:1
“It is apparent that China is unprepared for its new international status, andthe rapidity of its rise has come much more quickly than anticipated.For Chinese, it is quite jarring to be confronted all of a sudden with
a whole new set of questions…about China’s international status.”— D AV I D S H A M B A U G H
“ C O P I N G W I T H A C O N F L I C T E D C H I N A ”
“[T]he new Iran presents both immense challenges and new opportunities:it will further erode the civil liberties of the Iranian people, but in the
long term, may very well prove to be more united, and thereforemore manageable, for U.S. foreign policymakers.”
— E L L I O T H E N - T O V A N D N AT H A N G O N Z A L E Z
“ T H E M I L I TA R I Z AT I O N O F P O S T- K H O M E I N I
I R A N : P R A E T O R I A N I S M 2 . 0 ”
“By bounding the future options for Afghanistan within the current strategyof comprehensive counterinsurgency and an alternative focusing…on the
Afghan security forces, the United States can improve the odds of achievingat least a minimally acceptable outcome in Afghanistan.”
— M I C H A E L O ’ H A N L O N A N D B R U C E R I E D E L
“ P L A N A - M I N U S F O R A F G H A N I S TA N ”
“The United States needs to step back from goals of reforming Pakistani societyand forging regional harmony to instead seek strategic room to maneuver on
a few key issues. …The United States can achieve core goals with a mixof containment, diplomacy, and aid.”
— PA U L S TA N I L A N D
“ C A U G H T I N T H E M U D D L E : A M E R I C A’ S
PA K I S TA N S T R AT E G Y ”
W I N T E R 2 0 1 1 V O L U M E 3 4 I S S U E 1
RWAQ_34_1_cover.qxp:Rwaq_34_1 12/9/10 2:43 PM Page 1
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Journals from Routledge 2011
A decade of kidnappings and terrorism in West Africa and the Trans-Sahel regionMartin EwiAfrican Security ReviewVolume 19, Issue 4http://bit.ly/hIhiyJ
Balancing Faith-Based Strategies in U.S.-Africa PolicyR. Drew SmithThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 6, Issue 3http://bit.ly/i0Oyxi
Can China Defend a “Core Interest” in the South China Sea?Toshi Yoshihara and James R. HolmesThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 34, Issue 2http://bit.ly/hA6pnD
Challenges in understanding terrorism in Africa: A human security perspectiveAnneli BothaaAfrican Security ReviewVolume 17, Issue 2http://bit.ly/dXWFGP
China in the Global Financial Crisis: Rising Influence, Rising ChallengesWilliam H. OverholtThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 33, Issue 1http://bit.ly/eZyClf
China’s ventures in AfricaKwesi Aninga and Delphine LecoutreAfrican Security ReviewVolume 17, Issue 1http://bit.ly/gXNMrW
Coping with a Conflicted ChinaDavid ShambaughThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 34, Issue 1http://bit.ly/dOs9E7
Dragon on the Horizon: China’s Defense Industrial RenaissanceTai Ming CheungJournal of Strategic StudiesVolume 32, Issue 1http://bit.ly/ebjvGt
Enhancing counterterrorism cooperation in southern AfricaEric Rosand and Jason IpeAfrican Security ReviewVolume 17, Issue 2http://bit.ly/iaTHkZ
Ever again? The United States, genocide suppression, and the crisis in DarfurEyal MayrozJournal of Genocide ResearchVolume 10, Issue 3http://bit.ly/esg3Oy
Power ShiftsHenry A. KissingerSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 52, Issue 6http://bit.ly/eKzFt7
Religion as a Factor in Sino-U.S. RelationsLiu PengThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 6, Issue 2http://bit.ly/eoNxth
Resetting the US–China Security Relationship’Lyle J. GoldsteinSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 53, Issue 2http://bit.ly/h6FQpY
Revisiting Hotel Rwanda: genocide ideology, reconciliation, and rescuersLars WaldorfJournal of Genocide ResearchVolume 11, Issue 1http://bit.ly/gaMgSg
The End of the African RenaissanceBruce GilleyThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 33, Issue 4http://bit.ly/hopsCt
The Persistent Military Security Dilemma between China and IndiaJonathan HolslagJournal of Strategic StudiesVolume 32, Issue 6http://bit.ly/gMYDRe
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS IN AFRICA AND CHINA
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Journals from Routledge 2011
The Tenuous Hold of China Inc. in AfricaBates Gill and James ReillyThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 30, Issue 3http://bit.ly/gTLuFG
Understanding Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood Laurence Caromba and Hussein Solomon African Security Review Volume 17, Issue 3http://bit.ly/f2OiKR
Why Culture Matters: Revisiting the Sino-Indian Border War of 1962Rudra ChaudhuriJournal of Strategic StudiesVolume 32, Issue 6http://bit.ly/h2WNnP
Will China Change the Rules of Global Order?Gregory Chin and Ramesh ThakurThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 33, Issue 4http://bit.ly/hM1LRE
SECURITY IN TURKEY, ARAB MIDLLE EAST, RUSSIA, EURASIA AND
SOUTH ASIA“More Posture than Review”: Indian Reactions to the US Nuclear Posture ReviewS. Paul KapurThe Nonproliferation ReviewVolume 18, Issue 1http://bit.ly/hxwGtl
A Strategy for Hearts and Minds in South and Central AsiaPeter Nasuti, Philip Reiner and Joshua WhiteThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 6, Issue 3http://bit.ly/ggiI5O
Acceptance and Anxiety: Turkey (Mostly) Embraces Obama’s Nuclear PostureMustafa KibarogluThe Nonproliferation ReviewVolume 18, Issue 1http://bit.ly/i9EZZf
Afghanistan: How Much is Enough?Steven Simon and Jonathan StevensonSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 51, Issue 5http://bit.ly/hMrYD8
Arms Race and Economic Growth: The Case of India and PakistanJülide Yildirim and Nadir ÖcalDefence and Peace EconomicsVolume 17, Issue 1http://bit.ly/e67Bqk
Caught in the Muddle: America’s Pakistan StrategyPaul StanilandThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 34, Issue 1http://bit.ly/fI5Wv7
Civil-Military Relations in India: The China Crisis and AfterSrinath RaghavanJournal of Strategic StudiesVolume 32, Issue 1http://bit.ly/dVcNlZ
Decoding Turkish Foreign Policy HyperactivityZiya Meral and Jonathan ParisThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 33, Issue 4http://bit.ly/hcUt0J
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Journals from Routledge 2011
Engaging Autocratic Allies to Promote DemocracyDavid Adesnik and Michael McFaulThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 29, Issue 2http://bit.ly/euh11c
Ethical and Data-Integrity Problems in the Second Lancet Survey of Mortality in IraqMichael SpagatDefence and Peace EconomicsVolume 21, Issue 1http://bit.ly/dU2vk6
From Proliferation to Peace: Establishing a WMD-Free Zone in the Middle EastSara Kristine Eriksen and Linda Mari HolienThe Nonproliferation ReviewVolume 17, Issue 2http://bit.ly/giGZbS
Gulf States/Saudi Arabia and Russia’s Approach to IranDmitry SchlapentokhDefense & Security AnalysisVolume 26, Issue 3http://bit.ly/hAs8rG
How not to do post-invasion: Lessons learned from US decision-making in Iraq 2002-2008Charles-Phillipe DavidDefense & Security AnalysisVolume 26, Issue 1http://bit.ly/esx1Hj
How to Do Justice to Diverse Identities in the Middle EastJames SkillenThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 8, Issue 3http://bit.ly/fUXsF7
Minilateral Cooperation and Transatlantic Coalition-Building: The E3/EU-3 Iran InitiativeSebastian HarnischEuropean SecurityVolume 16, Issue 1http://bit.ly/eqOzeO
NATO: The View from the EastStephen White, Julia Korosteleva and Roy AllisonEuropean SecurityVolume 15, Issue 2http://bit.ly/eNPRTC
New Cold War, New NATO, and New States in a Desecularizing Eastern EuropeChris MarshThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 6, Issue 3http://bit.ly/hO1C44
Peacebuilding after Afghanistan: Between Promise and PerilDr. David H. UckoContemporary Security PolicyVolume 31, Issue 3http://bit.ly/hkv6av
Terrorism and Tourism: The Case of TurkeyMehmet E. YayaDefence and Peace EconomicsVolume 20, Issue 6http://bit.ly/hwMVAr
The Artful Dodger: On Pakistan, Reality BitesAllan OrrDefense & Security AnalysisVolume 26, Issue 3http://bit.ly/dFcOsB
The Limits of Influence: US-Pakistani Nuclear RelationsMichael KreponThe Nonproliferation ReviewVolume 18, Issue 1http://bit.ly/ghVBjz
The Other Side of the COIN: Perils of Premature Evacuation from IraqKenneth M. Pollack and Irena L. SargsyanThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 33, Issue 2http://bit.ly/gl41ez
The Power of Politics: Hamkari and the Future of the Afghan War’Anthony kingRUSI JournalVolume 155, Issue 6http://bit.ly/hrzJza
The Pragmatic Challenge to Indian Foreign PolicyDeepa Ollapally and RajeshThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 34, Issue 2http://bit.ly/dVoO1P
The Rollback of Libya’s Chemical Weapons ProgramJonathan B. TuckerThe Nonproliferation ReviewVolume 16, Issue 3http://bit.ly/gWlwNp
The Shifting Sands of State Power in the Middle EastAlastair CrookeThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 33, Issue 3http://bit.ly/fDZVdF
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Military&StrategicStudies
Journals from Routledge 2011
The Sorcerer’s Apprentice: Islamist Militancy in South AsiaSumit Ganguly and S. Paul KapurThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 33, Issue 1http://bit.ly/gOepG1
Tough Talking: The Case for Negotiations with the TalibanMatt WaldmanRUSI JournalVolume 155, Issue 6http://bit.ly/hAexTN
Turkey and Multilateral Nuclear Approaches in the Middle EastThomas Lorenz and Joanna KiddThe Nonproliferation ReviewVolume 17, Issue 3http://bit.ly/eiKYoZ
Turkey: Security, State and Society in Troubled TimesSevgi DrorianEuropean SecurityVolume 14, Issue 2http://bit.ly/ii7wAS
Waking the ArabsElham Fakhro and Emile HokayemSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 53, Issue 2http://bit.ly/hrIzDt
Who Really Dictates What an Existential Threat Is? The Israeli ExperienceKobi MichaelJournal of Strategic StudiesVolume 32, Issue 5http://bit.ly/elpWhj
Why America No Longer Gets AsiaEvan A. FeigenbaumThe Washington QuarterlyVolume 34, Issue 2http://bit.ly/hTKJHb
Why Iraq?Anton D. Lowenberg and Timothy MathewsDefence and Peace EconomicsVolume 19, Issue 1http://bit.ly/feamNl
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Journals from Routledge 2011
Development, Religion, and Women’s Roles in Contemporary SocietiesKatherine MarshallThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 8, Issue 4http://bit.ly/fEwCQm
IEDs and Military Fatalities in Iraq and AfghanistanSheila Bird and Clive FairweatherRUSI JournalVolume 154, Issue 4http://bit.ly/flprqV
Is Pandemic Flu a Security Threat?Christian EnemarkSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 51, Issue 1http://bit.ly/eSG8lB
Pathogens and Arms Control: Can Bioscience Policy Itself?Amy SmithsonSurvival: Global Politics and StrategyVolume 52, Issue 5http://bit.ly/gOnBpw
Russia as a ‘virtual great power’: Implications for its declining role in European and Eurasian securityFrank UmbachEuropean SecurityVolume 9, Issue 3http://bit.ly/fY18Hj
Spiritual Therapy for Drug Rehabilitation: The Case of YunnanWang AiguoThe Review of Faith & International AffairsVolume 7, Issue 3http://bit.ly/g79M99
The Mental Health of UK Armed Forces Personnel: The Impact of Iraq and AfghanistanHarriet J Forbes, Nicola T Fear, Amy Iversen and Christopher DandekerRUSI JournalVolume 156, Issue 2
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