Nuclear Insecurity: Understanding the Threat from Rogue Nations and Terrorists

Nuclear Insecurity: Understanding the Threat from Rogue Nations and Terrorists

by Jack Caravelli
Nuclear Insecurity: Understanding the Threat from Rogue Nations and Terrorists

Nuclear Insecurity: Understanding the Threat from Rogue Nations and Terrorists

by Jack Caravelli

Hardcover

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Overview

Nuclear Insecurity is an insider's account of official American efforts to prevent the theft or diversion of nuclear and radiological weapons that could be used by rogue nations or terrorist groups. This perspective draws heavily from the author's work on the White House National Security Council Staff (1996-2000), where he was directly responsible to President Clinton for the development of U.S. nuclear material security policies and, subsequently, at the U.S. Department of Energy, where he directed the department's largest international nuclear security program, focused primarily on Russia.

In Caravelli's assessment, despite exceptional bipartisan political support and very high funding levels that have reached over $9 billion, a series of policy mistakes and programmatic bureaucratic missteps have badly compromised the United States government's efforts to protect against the spread of nuclear weapons and materials. The most striking example of the current situation is that the U.S. government, some 12 years after the start of these programs, still has failed to enhance the security of more than 300 metric tons of nuclear materials in Russia alone, enough to make hundreds of nuclear devices. The book concludes with recommendations and policy prescriptions for addressing some of these problems.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275997465
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 11/30/2007
Series: Praeger Security International
Pages: 192
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

Jack Caravelli is one of America's leading experts on nonproliferation and nuclear terrorism. He is a Senior Visiting Fellow at the U.K. Defence Academy and Visiting Professor at Cranfield University. He was Deputy Assistant Secretary at the U.S. Department of Energy (2000-2003), and he served on the White House National Security Council (1996-2000), where he was the president's principal advisor for nonproliferation policies and programs involving Russia and the Middle East. He began his governmental career in 1982 at the Central Intelligence Agency. Caravelli is a Chatham House Fellow and member of the advisory board of Oxford University's Pluscarden Program on Intelligence and Terrorism.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments     ix
Introduction     1
Securing Nuclear and Radiological Materials     13
The Clinton Years: Where Are the Nukes?     15
The Bush Years: Securing Nuclear Materials in an Age of Terrorism     30
Securing Radiological Sources     59
Proliferation Case Studies     71
Pakistan     73
Iran     94
Options for Ending the Iranian Nuclear Threat     117
Policy and Programmatic Recommendations     131
Toward a New Strategic Framework for Nuclear Nonproliferation: Policy Recommendations     133
Toward a New Strategic Framework for Nuclear Nonproliferation: Programmatic Recommendations     144
Concluding Observations: Finding Political Solutions to Security Problems     151
Notes     161
Selected Bibliography     171
Index     175

What People are Saying About This

Margaret Thatcher

"With the end of the Cold War there was a tendency in some quarters to believe that a great shadow had been lifted and that Western security could no longer be challenged. But such optimism was never wholly realistic. The downfall of the Soviet Union and the consequent removal of the discipline it exerted over its client states created new dangers and this book is a timely reminder that complacency is never acceptable. Materials once controlled and secured by the Soviet military are becoming a traded commodity for those who seek to threaten and injure the West. Where once only nations could wage war, now relatively small groups, with access to the right components, might wreak destruction on a scale we could not have imagined only a decade or so ago. Yes, we have had some successes, but more are needed if we are to remain safe. Jack Caravelli offers us much to ponder and some pressing options for the future."

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