From the dawn of the atomic age to today, nuclear weapons have been central to the internal dynamics of US alliances in Europe and Asia. But nuclear weapons cooperation in US alliances has varied significantly between allies and over time. This book explores the history of America’s nuclear posture worldwide, delving into alliance structures and interaction during and since the end of the Cold War to uncover the underlying dynamics of nuclear weapons cooperation between the US and its allies.
Combining in-depth empirical analysis with an accessible theoretical lens, the book reveals that US allies have wielded significant influence in shaping nuclear weapons cooperation with the US in ways that reflect their own, often idiosyncratic, objectives. Alliances are ecosystems of exchange rather than mere tools of external balancing, the book argues, and institutional perspectives can offer an unprecedented insight into how structured cooperation can promote policy convergence.
Table of Content
Introduction
1 Realism, institutionalism, and nuclear weapons cooperation
2 Nuclear sharing and mutual dependence: Germany and NATO nuclear weapons cooperation
3 Local accommodation: Norway and nuclear weapons cooperation in NATO
4 Security at arm’s length: US–Japan nuclear weapons cooperation
5 Assurance and abandonment: Nuclear weapons in the US–South Korea alliance
6 Informal bargaining: Nuclear weapons cooperation and the US–Australia alliance
7 Understanding the drivers of nuclear weapons cooperation
Index
About the author
Stephan Frühling is Professor in the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre and Deputy Dean of the College of Asia & the Pacific at Australian National University Andrew O’Neil is Dean and Professor of Political Science in the Griffith Business School, Griffith University