The cooperative nuclear control regime that was built up over decades has shown serious signs of decay. An effort, not just to bolster the old regime, but to build a new conceptual and institutional foundation for nuclear restraint is urgently needed. In this final chapter, the authors lay out the considerations that might guide governments in moving to a new institutional framework from today's increasingly dysfunctional methods of addressing nuclear dangers.
The War That Must Never Be Fought: Dilemmas in Nuclear Deterrence - Part Three, Edited by George P. Shultz... by Hoover Institution