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North Korea tested its first nuclear weapon in October 2006,
after more than three years of sporadic multilateral diplomacy and
negotiations aimed at forestalling its emergence as a new nuclear
state in Northeast Asia. Convincing North Korea it would be better
off without such weapons and related programs is fraught with
challenges, but the situation has mobilized North Korea’s neighbors
and the United States to begin to create a regional security and
economic framework that can reconcile their conflicting priorities
and threat perceptions.
A nuclear North Korea is now a catalyst in Northeast Asia, but it
is not yet clear whether it will spark a regional arms race that
could pit the United States and Japan against the East Asian
mainland or instead foster new trends of security cooperation and
institution building. With North Korea’s test the nuclear endgame
has begun, but the region is ill prepared to manage this
dilemma.
For three years the Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis has been
studying appropriate ways to build regional capacity for such
activities as monitoring nuclear dismantlement, developing mutual
confidence-building measures, and coordinating economic engagement
with North Korea. Based on more than a hundred interviews,
comparative research in other regions, and three multilateral
workshops involving leading scholars and policy makers from East
Asia and the United States, the authors present a practical
approach to achieve these goals.
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| James L. Schoff, Charles M. Perry and Jacquelyn K. Davis ISBN: 9781597971720 |
Paperback - 2007 |
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£19.00
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