STRATEGIC ANALYSIS

Reforms in the NPT and Prospects for India's Accession: A Situational Analysis

He was working at Manohar Parrikar Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses from 2006 to 2021.
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  • March 2010
    Volume: 
    34
    Issue: 
    2
    Articles

    Since its indefinite extension in 1995, the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) has been on the sidelines, with its utility eroding in the post-Cold War security environment, as new instruments took over the anti-proliferation mantle. Being the cornerstone of the regime and near-universal in character, the NPT has nonetheless survived despite a host of challenges threatening its existence. Its future, however, is imperilled unless the member states take remedial actions, including a restructuring of the treaty to suit 21st century requirements. Such structural reforms should meet new challenges as well as redress existing shortcomings, including the means to ensure total universalisation.

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