Maintenance of Strategic Models for Arms Control Analysis. Volume III, Part I. Description Strategic International Relations Nuclear Exchange Model (SIR NEM 9).

Maintenance of Strategic Models for Arms Control Analysis. Volume III, Part I. Description Strategic International Relations Nuclear Exchange Model (SIR NEM 9).
Author: Harold Davis
Publisher:
Total Pages: 234
Release: 1974
Genre:
ISBN:

SIR NEM (derived from Strategic International Relations Nuclear Exchange Model) is a simulation system involving a group of special purpose computer programs which serve as modules to be assembled according to the analysts' purposes and problems. This flexibility in assembling components makes it possible to apply the SIR NEM simulation system to a large variety of arms control problems involving weapon system analyses, and to conduct each analysis as is logically valid and with the desired detail, the necessary constraints, and the required precision. The SIR NEM system is designed to simulate the use of weapon and reconnaissance systems, including aircraft, missile, and satellite systems, from fixed or mobile bases on land and sea, against urban, industrial, or military targets.

Strategic Stalemate

Strategic Stalemate
Author: Michael Krepon
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 206
Release: 1984-06-18
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1349077194

Quantitative Assessment in Arms Control

Quantitative Assessment in Arms Control
Author: Rudolf Avenhaus
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 472
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1461328055

This book originates in a series of contributions to the 1983 Systems Science Seminar at the Computer Science Department of the German Armed Forces University Munich. Under the topic "Quantita tive Approaches to Arms Control" that seminar attempted to review the present state-of-the-art of systems analysis and numerate meth ods in arms control. To this end, the editors invited a number of experts from Europe, the United St~tes and Canada to share and dis cuss their views and assessments with the faculty and upper class computer science students of the university as well as numerous guests from the defence community and the interested public. In three parts, this book presents a selection of partly re vised and somewhat extended versions of the seminar presentations followed, in most cases, by brief summaries of the transcripts of the respective discussions. In addition to an introduction by the editors, part I contains six papers on the present state and prob lems of arms control with emphasis on START (Strategic Arms Re duction Talks), INF (Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces negotia tions), and MBFR (Mutually Balanced Force Reduction talks). The seven contributions to part II are devoted to mathematical models of arms competition and quantitative approaches to force balance assessment of both, the static and dynamic variety. Part III pre sents five papers which address technical and operational aspects and legal implications of arms control negotiations and verifica tion.