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Record Nr. |
UNINA9910956357203321 |
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Titolo |
United States and India strategic cooperation / / Henry Sokolski, editor |
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Pubbl/distr/stampa |
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New York, : Nova Science Publishers, c2010 |
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ISBN |
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Edizione |
[1st ed.] |
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Descrizione fisica |
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1 online resource (240 p.) |
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Collana |
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Asian political, economic and security issues series |
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Altri autori (Persone) |
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Disciplina |
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Soggetti |
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Nuclear energy - Government policy - India |
Nuclear energy - Government policy - United States |
Nuclear energy - International cooperation |
United States Foreign relations India |
India Foreign relations United States |
India Strategic aspects |
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Lingua di pubblicazione |
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Formato |
Materiale a stampa |
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Livello bibliografico |
Monografia |
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Note generali |
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Description based upon print version of record. |
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Nota di bibliografia |
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Includes bibliographical references and index. |
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Nota di contenuto |
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Intro -- UNITED STATES AND INDIASTRATEGIC COOPERATION -- UNITED STATES AND INDIA STRATEGIC COOPERATION -- CONTENTS -- PREFACE* -- GAUGING U.S.-INDIAN STRATEGIC COOPERATION -- NEGOTIATING THE OBSTACLES TO U.S.-INDIAN STRATEGIC COOPERATION -- ATOMIC ENERGY -- WILL THE U.S.-INDIA CIVIL NUCLEAR COOPERATION INITIATIVE LIGHT INDIA? -- INTRODUCTION -- WHAT IS INDIA'S CURRENT AND FUTURE DEMAND FOR ELECTRICITY? -- Indian Sector Composition -- Population Growth -- Geographic Distribution -- Electricity Demand Projections -- WHAT ELECTRICITY SUPPLY OPTIONS ARE AVAILABLE TO INDIA? -- Total Potential Capacity -- ENERGY EFFICIENCY: VIRTUAL RESOURCES OF "NEGAWATTS" -- RELATIVE COSTS -- Coal -- Hydro -- Natural Gas -- Nuclear -- Renewables -- PACE OF DEVELOPMENT AND TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION -- Coal -- Hydro -- Nuclear -- LOCATION OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND -- ENVIRONMENTAL CONSIDERATIONS -- ENERGY INDEPENDENCE -- CONCLUSIONS -- APPENDIX A: KEY FINDINGS BY CRITERION -- APPENDIX B: MAIN POWER PLANTS IN INDIA -- APPENDIX C: COAL PRODUCTION, USE AND IMPORTS -- BIBLIOGRAPHY -- End Notes -- NUCLEAR POWER IN INDIA:FAILED PAST, DUBIOUS FUTURE -- |
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INITIATION -- ORGANIZATIONS AND STRUCTURE -- EXTERNAL INPUTS -- PROJECTIONS AND ACHIEVEMENTS -- BREEDER REACTORS -- EXPENSIVE POWER -- ACCIDENTS AND INCIDENTS -- NUCLEAR POWER, CLIMATE CHANGE, AND THE ENVIRONMENT -- NUCLEAR POWER AND THE INDO-U.S. NUCLEAR DEAL -- CONCLUSIONS -- End Notes -- PLUTONIUM PRODUCTION IN INDIA AND THE U.S.-INDIA NUCLEAR DEAL -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- INTRODUCTION -- INDIA'S NUCLEAR PROGRAM -- FISSILE MATERIALS IN INDIA -- Weapons Grade Plutonium -- Civil Plutonium -- The Uranium Constraint -- Power Reactor Spent Fuel -- The Fast Breeder Reactor Program -- CONCLUSIONS -- APPENDIX I: POWER REACTORS IN INDIA AND PAKISTAN -- End Notes -- TERRORISM, MISSILES, AND ARMS CONTROL. |
ASSESSING THE VULNERABILITYOF THE INDIAN CIVILIAN NUCLEAR PROGRAMTO MILITARY AND TERRORIST ATTACK -- GROWING DANGERS -- INDIA'S CIVILIAN NUCLEAR INFRASTRUCTURE -- Indian Nuclear Facilities -- Nuclear Power Plants -- Research Reactors -- Plutonium Production Reactors -- Breeder Reactors -- Spent Fuel Pools -- Reprocessing Plants -- High-Level Radioactive Waste Storage Areas -- Uranium Enrichment Facilities -- Electricity Distribution Grid -- Modes of Attack or Sabotage -- Airplane Crashes or Bombings -- Truck Bombs -- Commando-Type Attacks -- Cyber-Attacks -- Insider Collusion -- Regulation, Safety, Secrecy, and Security -- TERRORISM AND SECTARIAN VIOLENCE -- PROTECTIVE MEASURES -- Guarding against Unintended Consequences -- RECOMMENDATIONS -- Separate Civilian and Military Nuclear Programs -- Develop Cooperative Nuclear Security -- Implement Best Safety and Security Practices -- Create a More Open Civilian Nuclear Infrastructure -- End Notes -- U.S. SATELLITE SPACE LAUNCH COOPERATIONAND INDIA'S INTERCONTINENTAL BALLISTIC MISSILE PROGRAM -- The "Glide Path" -- India's ICBM-What and Why -- How India Got Here -- How the United States Got Here -- India's Exports -- Analysis -- Recommendations -- CONCLUSION -- End Notes -- A REALIST'S CASE FOR CONDITIONINGU.S NUCLEAR COOPERATION -- End Note -- STRATEGIC MATTERS -- WHAT SHOULD WE EXPECT FROM INDIAAS A STRATEGIC PARTNER? -- U.S-INDIAN RELATIONS HISTORICALLY: A GIANT SINE WAVE -- THE VALUE OF A TRANSFORMED U.S.-INDIAN RELATIONSHIP -- THE PRACTICAL CONSEQUENCES OF TRANSFORMING THEU.S.-INDIAN RELATIONSHIP -- End Notes -- INDIA-IRAN SECURITY TIES:THICKER THAN OIL -- BACKGROUND ON THE INDO-IRANIAN RAPPORT -- INDIA'S STRATEGIC ENVIRONMENT -- Iran Matters -- INDO-IRANIAN RELATIONSHIP -- In Structure -- In Substance -- Energy and Commercial Interests -- Defense and Intelligence Ties?. |
Technical Areas of Cooperation -- CONCLUDING THOUGHTS ON CONSTRAINTS AND IMPLICATIONS -- Constraints -- End Notes -- WILL INDIA BE A BETTER STRATEGICPARTNER THAN CHINA? -- U.S. AND CHINA: LESSONS LEARNED? -- 1972: The Opening -- 1979: The Normalization -- The Reagan Era: Haig and His Critics -- The Bush-Clinton Years: From Accommodation to Accommodation -- Lessons Learned? -- WILL INDIA BE A BETTER PARTNER THAN CHINA? -- What the United States Wants -- What India Wants -- India and China: Uneven Convergence -- Defense Relations -- The Strategic Weapons Problem -- INDIA AND IRAN: CAUSE FOR CAUTION -- THE POWER GAP -- CONCLUSION -- End Notes -- THE HENRY J. HYDE UNITED STATES AND INDIA ENERGY COOPERATION ACT OF 2006 -- Sec. 101. Short Title -- Sec. 102. Sense of Congress -- Sec. 103. Statements of Policy -- Sec. 104. Waiver Authority and Congressional Approval -- Sec. 105. United States Compliance with Its Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty Obligations -- Sec. 106. Inoperability of Determination and Waivers -- |
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Sec. 107. MTCR Adherent Status -- Sec. 108. Technical Amendment -- Sec. 109. United States-India Scientific Cooperative Nuclear Nonproliferation Program -- Sec. 110. Definitions -- TITLE II-UNITED STATES ADDITIONAL PROTOCOLIMPLEMENTATION -- Sec. 201. Short Title -- Sec. 202. Findings -- Sec. 203. Definitions -- Sec. 204. Severability -- SUBTITLE A-GENERAL PROVISIONS -- Sec. 211. Authority -- SUBTITLE B-COMPLEMENTARY ACCESS -- Sec. 221. Requirement for Authority to Conduct Complementary Access -- Sec. 222. Procedures for Complementary Access -- Sec. 223. Consents, Warrants, and Complementary Access. -- Sec. 224. Prohibited Acts Relating to Complementary Access -- SUBTITLE C-CONFIDENTIALITY OF INFORMATION -- Sec. 231. Protection of Confidentiality of Information -- SUBTITLE D-ENFORCEMENT -- Sec. 241. Recordkeeping Violations -- Sec. 242. Penalties. |
Sec. 243. Specific Enforcement -- SUBTITLE E-ENVIRONMENTAL SAMPLING -- Sec. 251. Notification to Congress of IAEA Board Approval of Wide-AreaEnvironmental Sampling -- Sec. 252. Application of National Security Exclusion to Wide-Area Environmental Sampling -- Sec. 253. Application of National Security Exclusion to Location-SpecificEnvironmental Sampling -- Sec. 254. Rule of Construction -- SUBTITLE F-PROTECTION OF NATIONAL SECURITYINFORMATION AND ACTIVITIES -- Sec. 261. Protection of Certain Information -- Sec. 262. IAEA Inspections and Visits -- SUBTITLE G-REPORTS -- Sec. 271. Report on Initial United States Declaration -- Sec. 272. Report on Revisions to Initial United States Declaration -- Sec. 273. Content of Reports on United States Declarations -- Sec. 274. Report on Efforts to Promote the Implementation of Additional Protocols -- Sec. 275. Notice of IAEA Notifications -- SUBTITLE H-AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS -- Sec. 281. Authorization of Appropriations -- ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS -- INDEX. |
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Sommario/riassunto |
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This work looks at the research that the Non-proliferation Policy Education Center (NPEC) commissioned and vetted throughout 2006. For at least half of the chapters, the authors have presented versions of their work as testimony before Congressional oversight committees. |
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