Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book

Title Global security engagement : a new model for cooperative threat reduction / Committee on Strengthening and Expanding the Department of Defense Cooperative Threat Reduction Program, Committee on International Security and Arms Control, Policy and Global Affairs, National Academy of Sciences
Published Washington, D.C. : National Academies Press, ©2009

Copies

Description 1 online resource (xiv, 165 pages) : illustrations
Contents FrontMatter -- Preface -- A Note on Terminology -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Executive Summary -- Overview -- Introduction -- 1 The Evolution of Cooperative Threat Reduction -- 2 Cooperative Threat Reduction in the 21st Century: Objectives, Opportunities, and Lessons -- 3 The Form and Function of Cooperative Threat Reduction 2.0: Engaging Partners to Enhance Global Security -- 4 The Role of the Department of Defense in Cooperative Threat Reduction 2.0 -- 5 Cooperative Threat Reduction 2.0: Implementation Checklist -- List of Acronyms -- Appendixes
Appendix A: H.R. 1585: National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008Appendix B: Biographical Sketches of Committee Members -- Appendix C: Department of Defense Cooperative Threat Reduction Program History: References -- Appendix D: List of Committee Meetings and Speakers -- Appendix E: The Evolution of U.S. Government Threat Reduction Programs -- Appendix F: Nunn-Lugar Scorecard -- Appendix G: The G8 Global Partnership: Guidelines for New or Expanded Cooperation Projects
Appendix H: A Comparison of the Characteristics of Six Weapons Systems from the Perspective of a State or Terrorist OrganizationAppendix I: Department of Defense Cooperative Threat Reduction Programs -- Appendix J: Congressional Guidelines and Corresponding Findings and Recommendations
Summary "The government's first Cooperative Threat Reduction (CTR) programs were created in 1991 to eliminate the former Soviet Union's nuclear, chemical, and other weapons and prevent their proliferation. The programs have accomplished a great deal: deactivating thousands of nuclear warheads, neutralizing chemical weapons, converting weapons facilities for peaceful use, and redirecting the work of former weapons scientists and engineers, among other efforts. Originally designed to deal with immediate post-Cold War challenges, the programs must be expanded to other regions and fundamentally redesigned as an active tool of foreign policy that can address contemporary threats from groups that are that are agile, networked, and adaptable. As requested by Congress, Global Security Engagement proposes how this goal can best be achieved. To meet the magnitude of new security challenges, particularly at the nexus of weapons of mass destruction and terrorism, Global Security Engagement recommends a new, more flexible, and responsive model that will draw on a broader range of partners than current programs have. The White House, working across the Executive Branch and with Congress, must lead this effort."--Publisher's description
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Notes Print version record
Subject Confidence and security building measures (International relations) -- United States
Arms control -- United States
Security, International.
Terrorism -- Prevention -- International cooperation
Weapons of mass destruction.
POLITICAL SCIENCE -- International Relations -- Arms Control.
Arms control.
Confidence and security building measures (International relations)
Security, International.
Terrorism -- Prevention -- International cooperation.
Weapons of mass destruction.
United States.
Form Electronic book
Author National Academy of Sciences (U.S.). Committee on Strengthening and Expanding the Department of Defense Cooperative Threat Reduction Program.
ISBN 9780309131070
0309131073