How New Technologies Are Reshaping Traditional Nuclear Relations


When and Where

  • 19/07/2016
    10:45 am-12:15 pm

  • Benxi Room (Room F), Liaoning International Hotel
    No. 2 A North 4th Ring Road West
    Haidian District
    Beijing
    China
    (get map)

Event Details

Carnegie–Tsinghua’s Tong Zhao will moderate a discussion with Chinese and international experts to analyze precisely how missile defense, counter-space capabilities, hypersonic missiles, and cyber weapons are altering nuclear interactions between major military powers. The conversation will shed new light on what policy measures can be taken to address the challenges likely to be ushered in by these new technologies.

Since the close of World War II, nuclear weapons have helped determine the degree of stability in the international political system, and have been a cornerstone of many leading powers’ national security strategies. However, in recent years, the United States, Russia, and other major powers have increasingly invested in new technologies, such as cyberspace capabilities, missile defense, and conventional strategic weapons, that are challenging long-held notions of nuclear balancing and strategic deterrence, and by extension making traditional nuclear relations more complex.

Carnegie–Tsinghua’s Tong Zhao will moderate a discussion with Chinese and international experts to analyze precisely how missile defense, counter-space capabilities, hypersonic missiles, and cyber weapons are altering nuclear interactions between major military powers. The conversation will shed new light on what policy measures can be taken to address the challenges likely to be ushered in by these new technologies.

Speakers
Lora Saalman Ofner is a senior associate and director of the China and Global Security Programme at the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI).

Jaganath Sankaran is a research scholar at the Center for International and Security Studies at the University of Maryland’s School of Public Policy.

Wu Riqiang is an associate professor at the School of International Studies at Renmin University.

Discussant
Li Bin is a senior associate working jointly in the Nuclear Policy Program and the Asia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Moderator
Tong Zhao is an associate in Carnegie’s Nuclear Policy Program based at the Carnegie–Tsinghua Center for Global Policy.

Register here.

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