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Since North Korea’s first nuclear weapons test in 2006, its threat to South Korea has grown significantly. This article assesses South Korea’s changing threat environment and explores its options for strengthening deterrence. We make three key arguments. First, South Korea’s concerns about the state of deterrence on the Peninsula are well founded with growing nuclear dangers and declining credibility of the US extended deterrent. Second, leaders in South Korea have options for responding to these growing threats. Third, one of these options―a nuclear sharing agreement with the US―offers a sensible middle course. Nuclear sharing represents a compromise between the status quo (which leaves South Korea dependent on questionable US extended deterrence) and acquisition of independent capabilities (which may entail high political and economic costs).
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Jennifer Lind
University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
Daryl G. Press
Dartmouth College
Asian Journal of Peacebuilding
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Lind et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a10cf69acd1dbe064647216 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.18588/202505.00a548