

The world's major vendor companies of civilian nuclear power plants have agreed to apply a common set of principles in their exporting decisions and practices.

Ten years after the attacks on September 11, the United States and Pakistan have little to show for the strategic cooperation they proclaimed in the aftermath of the attacks.

Congressman Michael Turner spoke on the House defense act and its relation to the New START agreement, further nuclear reductions, U.S. nuclear targeting strategy, missile defense, and non-strategic nuclear weapons in Europe.

Ambassador Celso Amorim explores how the nuclear nonproliferation regime fits into the broader dynamic of international relations.

Over the past 40 years, India’s foremost defense strategist K. Subrahmanyam or “Subbu,” as he was fondly known to his friends, profoundly shaped India’s foreign and defense policy through his work and writings.

Given the current status of nuclear security and nonproliferation in South Asia, nuclear powers like China, Russia, and the United States should look for a path of engagement for India and Pakistan to be brought into the global nonproliferation regime.

In November, NATO will meet in Lisbon to craft a new Strategic Concept and address the future of its nuclear posture, which has caused controversial debate in recent months both within the Alliance and externally.

As President Obama prepares to visit India, observers there and in the United States are debating the wisdom of his administration's policies toward the country.

Mutual understanding and cooperation between the United States, China, and other countries is essential for overcoming the challenges facing the nonproliferation regime.

After the New START reduced U.S. and Russian deployments of strategic nuclear arms, Russia has decided to rely even more on relatively fast-flying ground-launched missiles to deliver the strategic nuclear weapons that remain.