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Center for the Study of Weapons of Mass Destruction


Now Accepting Applications!


Program for Emerging Leaders 

Applications are now being accepted for the Program for Emerging Leaders.  For information about the program, eligibility, and application instructions, please visit the PEL webpage. Frequently asked questions about PEL can be found here.


New Resource 


WMD Case Study Series

 

What types of weapons make up Weapons of Mass Destruction? What are their characteristics and uses? How can one identify and deal with such weapons? The WMD Center Case Study Series can be used to teach about the threat of WMD, while meeting JPME educational objectives, including national security decision-making, deterrence strategies, operational considerations, and others. These studies, written by leading experts in the field, are 15-25 pages so that they can be used as the core of a classroom discussion. Each case study comes with an instructor’s note, which can be obtained by contacting Dr. Erin Mahan by email or at (202) 433-6343.


Save the Date! 


WMD Center's 10th Annual Symposium

The WMD Center's 10th Annual Symposium will be held on 5-6 May 2010 at National Defense University.  Please watch this site for more details as they are made available.


New Publications


President Nixon’s Decision to Renounce the U.S.

October 2009

Offensive Biological Weapons Program

 

Jonathan Tucker and Erin Mahan

November 25, 2009 marks the 30th anniversary of President Richard Nixon’s announcement to end the U.S. offensive biological weapons program. This case study, the first in the WMD Center Case Study Series, sheds light on the interagency policymaking process at multiple levels of the U.S. national security bureaucracy and shows how the BW decision emerged from a confluence of international, domestic, bureaucratic, and personal factors. Electronic copies of this publication can be downloaded here. Instructors may request a copy of the teaching note for classroom use by email or calling (202) 433-6343.


Countering WMD:

September 2009

Looking Back, Looking Ahead

Paul I. Bernstein, John P. Caves Jr., and W. Seth Carus

Nearly 20 years have passed since the United States began worrying in earnest about the risks of regional weapons of mass destruction (WMD) proliferation.  Never have weapons so seldom used commanded such attention for so long.  It is one of the more notable continuities across the post–Cold War administrations.  Countering WMD:  Looking Back, Looking Ahead, the seventh Occasional Paper of the Center for the Study of Weapons of Mass Destruction at the National Defense University, examines the evolution of U.S. perceptions of the WMD threat and major responses to that threat from the Clinton administration to the first few months of the Obama administration.  It also considers why our worst fears for WMD use and proliferation have not been realized and anticipates some of the major WMD challenges that lie ahead.  Electronic copies of this publication can be downloaded here [PDF].


Aligning Disarmament to Nuclear Dangers:

July 2009

 Off to a Hasty START?

Dr. David A. Cooper

Confronted by a daunting array of nuclear threats, and having pledged to reinvigorate the application of disarmament tools to address these dangers, the Obama administration has decided to focus its initial efforts on negotiating a new bilateral agreement with Russia to replace the Cold War–era Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START), which expires at the end of this year. To download the article, please click here.  [PDF]















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