Multidomain deterrence and strategic stability in China / (Record no. 80135)

MARC details
000 -LEADER
fixed length control field 02104nam a22003377a 4500
001 - CONTROL NUMBER
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003 - CONTROL NUMBER IDENTIFIER
control field SE-LIBR
005 - DATE AND TIME
control field 20220207160817.0
007 - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION FIXED FIELD--GENERAL INFORMATION
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008 - GENERAL INFORMATION
fixed length control field 220131s2022 sw |||||o|||||000 ||eng|c
040 ## - CATALOGUING LIBRARY
Original cataloging library Sipr
041 ## - LANGUAGE CODE
Language code eng
100 1# - AUTHOR
Personal name Saalman, Lora
245 10 - TITLE
Title Multidomain deterrence and strategic stability in China /
Medium [electronic resource]
Author, etc Lora Saalman
260 ## - PUBLICATION DATA
Place of publication Solna :
Publisher SIPRI,
Year 2022
300 ## - PAGES ETC
Pages 11 p.
490 0# - SERIES TITLE
Series title SIPRI insights on peace and security ;
Number 2022:2
500 ## - GENERAL NOTE
General note SIP2223
500 ## - GENERAL NOTE
General note Over the past few years, China has displayed a wide range of advances in military capabilities and infrastructure, including its test of a hypersonic glide vehicle coupled with a fractional orbital bombardment system and evidence of new intercontinental ballistic missile silos. While China and the United States remain at political odds, there are indications that China’s strategies in space, cyberspace and nuclear domains are increasingly converging with those of the USA, as well as Russia. A key question is whether this strategic convergence is a stabilizing or destabilizing phenomenon.<br/>To answer the question, this paper explores the current state of Chinese discussions on multidomain deterrence and strategic stability, with a focus on active defence and proactive defence. It then examines how these concepts are manifesting themselves in China’s postural and technological indicators, including pre-mating of nuclear warheads to delivery platforms, expanded nuclear arsenal size, possible shifts towards launch on warning, integration of dual-capable systems, and advances in machine learning and autonomy. It concludes with a discussion of what these trends mean for future strategic stability talks.
650 #4 - KEYWORD
Keyword strategy
650 #4 - KEYWORD
Keyword space technology
650 #4 - KEYWORD
Keyword defence policy
651 #4 - KEYWORD/GEOGRAPHIC
Geographic keyword arms race
651 #4 - KEYWORD/GEOGRAPHIC
Geographic keyword China
653 ## - UNCONTROLLED KEYWORD
Uncontrolled keyword deterrence
653 ## - UNCONTROLLED KEYWORD
Uncontrolled keyword WMD
710 2# - ADDED INSTITUTION
Institution SIPRI
852 ## - LOCATION
Classification part Fri e-publikation
856 41 - ELECTRONIC LOCATION
URI https://doi.org/10.55163/FYXQ3853
942 ## - ITEM TYPE (KOHA)
Koha item type electronic publication
Holdings
Withdrawn status Lost status Damaged status Not for loan Home library Current library Date acquired Total Checkouts Full call number Acquisition no. Date last seen Koha item type
        SIPRI Library and Documentation SIPRI Library and Documentation 2022-02-02   CD2022 G22_11 G22/11 2022-02-02 electronic publication
        SIPRI Library and Documentation SIPRI Library and Documentation 2022-03-30   341.67SIPRI Insights G22/81 2022-03-30 electronic publication
        SIPRI Library and Documentation SIPRI Library and Documentation 2022-03-30   341.67SIPRI Insights G22/82 2022-03-30 electronic publication