The dilemmas of developing an indigenous advanced arms industry for developing countries the case of India and China

This thesis will investigate the feasibility of developing nationsâ ability to create a wholly indigenous advanced arms industry in the 21st century using China and India as case studies. I propose it is not possible for developing nations in the current context of the globalized arms race to buil...

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Main Author: Nosek, Paul C.
Other Authors: Chatterjee, Anshu
Format: Others
Published: Monterey California. Naval Postgraduate School 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/2486
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-24862017-05-24T16:07:47Z The dilemmas of developing an indigenous advanced arms industry for developing countries the case of India and China Nosek, Paul C. Chatterjee, Anshu Looney, Robert Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.). Department of National Security Affairs National security Nuclear weapons This thesis will investigate the feasibility of developing nationsâ ability to create a wholly indigenous advanced arms industry in the 21st century using China and India as case studies. I propose it is not possible for developing nations in the current context of the globalized arms race to build an advanced arms industry because of the high political and economic costs. Diverse competing interests force politicians to make decisions about distribution and usage of resources that will maintain their legitimacy. The hypothesis does not rule out that some domestic advancements may be made in certain sectors, such as nuclear bombs and missiles, because resources may be spent on narrowly defined goals instead of the development of the whole industry. Nor does it rule out that a developing nation cannot have a modern military with advanced weaponry, just that the weapons will not all be wholly domestic. They will obtain advanced weapons through joint development, purchasing, or licensing. Political and economic cost will explain the failure of a wholly indigenous advanced arms industry to fully develop, as well as illustrate the few successes within certain sectors of the industry. 2012-03-14T17:35:20Z 2012-03-14T17:35:20Z 2006-12 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/2486 80776718 Approved for public release, distribution unlimited xii, 83 p. ; application/pdf Monterey California. Naval Postgraduate School
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic National security
Nuclear weapons
spellingShingle National security
Nuclear weapons
Nosek, Paul C.
The dilemmas of developing an indigenous advanced arms industry for developing countries the case of India and China
description This thesis will investigate the feasibility of developing nationsâ ability to create a wholly indigenous advanced arms industry in the 21st century using China and India as case studies. I propose it is not possible for developing nations in the current context of the globalized arms race to build an advanced arms industry because of the high political and economic costs. Diverse competing interests force politicians to make decisions about distribution and usage of resources that will maintain their legitimacy. The hypothesis does not rule out that some domestic advancements may be made in certain sectors, such as nuclear bombs and missiles, because resources may be spent on narrowly defined goals instead of the development of the whole industry. Nor does it rule out that a developing nation cannot have a modern military with advanced weaponry, just that the weapons will not all be wholly domestic. They will obtain advanced weapons through joint development, purchasing, or licensing. Political and economic cost will explain the failure of a wholly indigenous advanced arms industry to fully develop, as well as illustrate the few successes within certain sectors of the industry.
author2 Chatterjee, Anshu
author_facet Chatterjee, Anshu
Nosek, Paul C.
author Nosek, Paul C.
author_sort Nosek, Paul C.
title The dilemmas of developing an indigenous advanced arms industry for developing countries the case of India and China
title_short The dilemmas of developing an indigenous advanced arms industry for developing countries the case of India and China
title_full The dilemmas of developing an indigenous advanced arms industry for developing countries the case of India and China
title_fullStr The dilemmas of developing an indigenous advanced arms industry for developing countries the case of India and China
title_full_unstemmed The dilemmas of developing an indigenous advanced arms industry for developing countries the case of India and China
title_sort dilemmas of developing an indigenous advanced arms industry for developing countries the case of india and china
publisher Monterey California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/2486
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