How Nuclear Weapons Spread

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A01=Frank Barnaby
Air Force
Author_Frank Barnaby
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Category=NH
Category=NHB
Category=NHW
enriched
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Explosive Yield
fissile
fissile material control
Fuel Elements
Gas Centrifuges
High Level Radioactive Waste
IAEA Safe Guard
Iraq's Nuclear Weapon Programme
light
Light Water Reactor
Low Enriched Uranium Fuels
material
National Atomic Energy Commission
non-state actor threats
nuclear arms control
nuclear deterrence theory
Nuclear Power Reactor
nuclear proliferation risk assessment
Nuclear Warhead
Pilot Reprocessing Plant
Plutonium Sphere
power
Pressurized Heavy Water Reactor
Pressurized Water Reactors
proliferation
reactor
Reactor Grade Plutonium
reactors
Reprocessing Plant
research
Spent Fuel Elements
Spent Reactor Fuel
Strategic Nuclear
uranium
Uranium Enriched
Uranium Enrichment Plant
uranium enrichment processes
Weapon Grade Uranium
weapons dismantlement procedures
Weapons Grade Plutonium

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138991774
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Jul 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In How Nuclear Weapons Spread, Frank Barnaby examines the far-reaching effects - both beneficial and detrimental - of nuclear weapons. He looks in detail at the nuclear programmes of Third World countries, including India, Israel and Pakistan which have or could very rapidly acquire nuclear weapons, and assesses the nuclear capabilities of countries such as Iran, Iraq and North Korea. He also considers the alarming possibility that terrorists might obtain nuclear weapons, and considers methods of controlling their spread.

Frank Barnaby is a former Guest Professor at the Free University in Amsterdam and a former Director of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. He is currently a defence analyst and is the author of many books, including Star Wars, 1987, The Automated Battlefield, 1987 and The Role and Control of Weapons, 1992.

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