The Midlife Crisis of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty

By (author) Peter Pella

Paperback - £25.00

Publication date:

01 March 2016

Length of book:

78 pages

Publisher

Morgan & Claypool Publishers

Dimensions:

255x177mm
7x10"

ISBN-13: 9781681748603

The Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) has been the principle legal barrier to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons for the past 45 years. It promotes the peaceful uses of nuclear technology and insures, through the application of safeguards inspections conducted by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), that those technologies are not being diverted toward the production of nuclear weapons. It is also the only multinational treaty that obligates the five nuclear weapons states that are party to the treaty (China, France, Great Britain, Russia, and the USA) to pursue nuclear disarmament measures.

Though there have been many challenges over the years, most would agree that the treaty has largely been successful. However, many are concerned about the continued viability of the NPT. The perceived slow pace of nuclear disarmament, the interest by some countries to consider a weapons program while party to the treaty, and the funding and staffing issues at the IAEA, are all putting considerable strain on the treaty. This manuscript explores those issues and offers some possible solutions to ensure that the NPT will survive effectively for many years to come.

Dr. Pella has produced a timely and accessible discussion of how the science and technology that lies behind nuclear programs can be used for peaceful or non-peaceful purposes, and the proliferation challenges this duality presents to the international community. He has combined a superb primer for non-technical readers with a valuable discussion of the global nonproliferation architecture that has been established to address these challenges. Professor Pella makes a compelling case that preventing the further spread of nuclear weapons is a tough, challenging, and urgent task, and requires more than just “political will.”

Anyone interested in or critical of the nuclear landscape and the steps needed to address it should read this book.

Susan Burk 2018 Ambassador and Special Representative of the President for Nuclear Nonproliferation (2009-2012)