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Proliferation





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April 11, 2008  
With China's expanding military power and Russia's increasing influence thanks to rising energy prices, the potential for conflict between the two powers becomes even more dangerous. In this analysis, CDI Science Fellow Eric Hundman looks at the prospects and challenges of pursuing a conventional arms limitation treaty in the region - similar to the Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty - that can reduce the potential for future, potentially nuclear conflict.
Author(s): Eric Hundman
 
August 25, 2003  
The Proliferation Security Initiative is of great interest to the Bush Administration but has not found enough support to allow the major changes in international law that would be necessary to legitimize itself in the eyes of most states.
Author(s): Colin Robinson
 
May 2, 2003  
As the story goes, Osama bin Laden offered criminals in Chechnya $30 million and two tons of opium in return for 20 Russian nuclear warheads. Republished from the Oct. 30, 2001, Christian Science Monitor
 
May 2, 2003  
President George W. Bush's new Nuclear Posture Review harks back to the stone age, or at least to the 1950s, when America's most beautiful minds struggled to devise a strategy to deal with the original rogue state — the Soviet Union.
Author(s): Bruce Blair
 
May 2, 2003  
In May 2002, U.S. President George W. Bush will be in Moscow. There, he and Russian President Vladimir Putin hope to sign a written document that will codify their November handshake agreement to reduce strategic nuclear arsenals from current levels of 6,000 apiece to 1,700-2,200 by 2012.
Author(s): Benjamin Friedman
 
May 2, 2003  
Press conference featuring analysis by Dr. Ivan Safranchuk, Director, CDI Moscow.