No End in Sight: The Continuing Menace of Nuclear
Proliferation. By Nathan E. Busch. Lexington: The University Press of
Kentucky, 2004. 512p. $40.00.
This new work on the core issue of nuclear proliferation is somewhat
unique in its focus and organization. Most of the works on this subject
have a virtually standard organization involving a country-by-country
breakdown of the most recent and most likely proliferators (India,
Pakistan, Israel, Iraq, Iran, North Korea, etc.), according to their
motives (why they want to go nuclear) and their capacity to do so, either
by themselves or with the help of existing nuclear powers. The focus of
these works is, therefore, on what often is called “horizontal
proliferation,” having to do with the addition of extra members to
the “nuclear club.” Regarding the Cold War superpowers, the
United States and former USSR, there has been a largely separate
literature devoted to “vertical proliferation,” and associated
arms control measures and possibilities, in the context of nuclear
deterrence theories and concepts. The uniqueness of Nathan Busch's
book is that he combines these two genres, treating various aspects of the
nuclear programs of the long-existent large nuclear powers, as well as the
emerging nuclear programs of Iran, Iraq, North Korea, and so on as an
integrated subject.