Dean A. Wilkening
RAND Corporation
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Featured researches published by Dean A. Wilkening.
Survival | 2010
Dean A. Wilkening
A key issue with regard to achieving deep cuts in nuclear arms is the role of defences, in particular ballistic-missile defences. Defences are often viewed as obstructions to deep cuts, because strategic stability may be compromised when offensive nuclear forces are reduced to the point where the defence can absorb an opponents retaliatory strike, thereby undermining the opponents deterrent. But ballistic-missile defence in a world without ballistic missiles and, ultimately, without nuclear weapons has benefits. The transition from an offence-dominant strategic balance to one dominated by defences can be managed without significantly disrupting strategic stability. Ballistic-missile defence will, in fact, be essential for stabilising a world without ballistic missiles just as defences in general help stabilise a world where nuclear weapons are eliminated entirely.
Survival | 2012
Dean A. Wilkening
Concerns that the later phases of the proposed European missile-defence architecture threaten Moscows strategic deterrent lack technical merit.
Survival | 1995
David C. Gompert; Kenneth Watman; Dean A. Wilkening
Archive | 1994
Dean A. Wilkening; Kenneth Watman
Survival | 1987
Dean A. Wilkening; Kenneth Watman; Michael Kennedy; Richard E. Darilek
Archive | 1995
Kenneth Watman; Dean A. Wilkening
Archive | 1989
Dean A. Wilkening; Ken Watman; Michael Kennedy; Richard E. Darilek
Archive | 1995
Brian Nichiporuk; John Arquilla; Dean A. Wilkening; Ken Watman
publisher | None
author
Archive | 1995
Ken Watman; Dean A. Wilkening; Brian Nichiporuk; John Arquilla