Uncovering the Sources of Nuclear Behavior: Historical Dimensions of Nuclear Proliferation Zurich, Switzerland June 2010

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Uncovering the Sources of Nuclear Behavior: Historical Dimensions of Nuclear Proliferation Zurich, Switzerland 18-20 June 2010 PROVISIONAL CONFERENCE PROGRAM Thursday, 17 June 2010 Arrival of Participants 18:00 Welcome Reception and Dinner at Altes Klösterli Welcome Address Andreas Wenger (CSS, ETH) Friday, 18 June 2010 (Semper-Aula, ETH Zurich) 8:30 Coffee at Foyer, HG G 60 (Semper-Aula), ETH-Zurich 8:50 Opening by Andreas Wenger (CSS, ETH) & Roland Popp (CSS, ETH) PANEL 1: THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES: STATE OF THE FIELD Chair: T.V. Paul (Mc Gill University) 9:00 Nina Tannenwald (Brown University), The Identity of a Non-Nuclear State Nicholas Wheeler (Aberystwyth University), Nuclear Security Communities William Walker (University of St Andrews), TBD 10:30 Coffee Break PANEL 2: HISTORY AND THEORY OF NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION Chair: TBA 11:00 Etel Solingen (University of California-Irvine), Nuclear Logics: History and Theory

Francis Gavin (University of Texas at Austin), Rethinking Nuclear Weapons and the Berlin Crisis, 1958-1962 Itty Abraham (University of Texas at Austin), Other Histories of Nuclear Proliferation 12:45 Lunch, Dozentenfoyer, ETH HG J PANEL 3: HISTORICAL REALITIES OF NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION: EUROPEAN DYNAMICS Chair: Andreas Wenger (CSS) 14:30 John Baylis (Swansea University), Britain and the Development of Nuclear Weapons: The Role of Belief Systems and Strategic Culture Leopoldo Nuti (Rome Tre University), The Italian Nuclear Posture Georges-Henri Soutou (Sorbonne), TBD: French Nuclear Behavior 16:00 Coffee Break PANEL 4: HISTORICAL REALITIES OF NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION: SMALL AND MEDIUM POWERS Chair: Jussi Hanhimäki (Graduate Institute, Geneva) 16:30 Thomas Jonter (Stockholm University), Why Sweden did not Build the Bomb. Testing the Swedish Case against International Relation Theories Anna-Mart van Wyk (Monash University, South Africa Campus), From Nuclear Power to Non-Proliferation Hero: South Africa's Nuclear Legacy Peter Braun (Federal Department of Defence, Switzerland), Dreaming of the Bomb! The Development of Switzerland's Nuclear Option, from the End of World War II to the Non-Proliferation Treaty 18:00 Concluding Remarks, First Day 2

19:30 Dinner at Hotel Zürichberg Saturday, 19 June 2010 (Hotel Zürichberg) PANEL 5: HISTORICAL REALITIES OF NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION: THE SOUTHERN CONE Chair: Nicholas J. Wheeler (Aberystwyth) 8:30 Sara Z. Kutchesfahani (University College London), Nuclear Rivalry to Nuclear Cooperation: The Role of an Argentine and Brazilian Nuclear Non-Proliferation Epistemic Community in the Creation of ABACC Matias Spektor (Getulio Vargas Foundation, Rio de Janeiro), Explaining Brazil s Nuclear Behavior Roberto Durán (Catholic University of Chile), Argentinean and Brazilian Nuclear Policies in the Light of Tlatelolco and NPT Treaties: Looking for a New Inter-American Security Framework 10:00 Coffee Break PANEL 6: HISTORICAL REALITIES OF NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION: THE MIDDLE EAST Chair: Roland Popp (CSS) 10:15 Avner Cohen (University of Maryland), TBD (Israeli Nuclear Behavior) Maria Rost Rublee (University of Auckland), Egypt's Nuclear Ambitions: Historical Roots, Future Intentions Dima Adamsky (Harvard University), Ideational Foundations of the Israeli Nuclear Behavior 12:00 Lunch, Hotel Zurichberg, Restaurant R21 3

PANEL 7: HISTORICAL REALITIES OF NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION: EAST AND SOUTH ASIA Chair: Itty Abraham (Austin) 13:15 Naeem Salik (National Defence University, Islamabad), Pakistan s Nuclearisation Imperatives of National Security & Survival of a Smaller State Sumit Ganguly (Indiana University, Bloomington), A Second Look at India s Pathway to Pokhran II TBA 14:45 Coffee Break PANEL 8: PREVENTING NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION I: THE ROLE OF GREAT POWERS Chair: Vojtech Mastny (PHP) 15:00 Jenny Nielsen (University of Southampton), U.S. Nuclear Non- Proliferation Policy and Iran (1969-1980): Objectives, Drivers, Issues and the Role of Norms Roland Popp (CSS, ETH Zurich), U.S. Non-Proliferation Policies and Israel Bill Burr (National Security Archive, Washington, DC), The Impact of the Indian Peaceful Nuclear Explosion (May 1974) on U.S. Policy 16:45 Concluding Remarks, Second Day 19:00 Dinner at Zunfthaus zur Waag 4

Sunday, 20 June 2010 (Hotel Zürichberg) PANEL 9: PREVENTING NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION II: THE ROLE OF INSTITUTIONS Chair: Oliver Thränert (German Institute for International and Security Affairs, Berlin) 9:00 Edoardo Sorvillo (Roma Tre University), The Milk is Spilt - The Indian Nuclear Test and the Rise of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Regime, 1974-1978 Dane Swango (University of California, Los Angeles), Reassessing Article IV of the NPT Using New Archival Evidence Kai-Henrik Barth (Georgetown University/Qatar), The Nuclear Establishment as Domestic Driver of Iran s Nuclear Ambitions Vojtech Mastny (Parallel History Project), The Eighteen-Nation Disarmament Committee, 1962-1969: Could It Have Done Better? 10:30 Coffee Break PANEL 10: PREVENTING NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION III: ALTERNATIVE MEANS OF COUNTERPROLIFERATION Chair: TBA 11:00 John Krige (Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta), Proliferation and World Order: The U.S. and EURATOM, 1955-60 Sarah E. Kreps (Cornell University), Attacking the Atom: Does Bombing Nuclear Facilities Delay Proliferation? Thomas Nichols (Harvard University, U.S. Naval War College), Nuclear Attack and Conventional Retaliation 12:30 Lunch, Hotel Zürichberg Departure of Participants 5