Publication

Apr 2010

The international nuclear nonproliferation regime—the principal objective of which is to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons - is under severe strain. The North Korean and Iranian nuclear programs have exploited and underscored weaknesses in the regime that must be fixed if it is to serve its purpose. Those weaknesses are both structural - ambiguities and limitations in the current rules—and result from a failure to enforce the rules that exist.

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Author Paul Lettow
Series CFR Council Special Reports
Issue 54
Publisher Council on Foreign Relations (CFR)
Copyright © 2010 Council on Foreign Relations (CFR)
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