Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)
1994 Ukraine Special Weapons News
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USAFA INSS Occasional Paper #2
The Ukranian Military: Instrument for Defense or Domestic Challenge? Oleg Strekal, November 1994
- NUCLEAR SECURITY IN KAZAKHSTAN AND UKRAINE:
AN INTERVIEW WITH VLADIMIR SHKOLNIK AND NICOLAI STEINBERG Conducted by William C. Potter, Emily Ewell, and Elizabeth Skinner The Nonproliferation Review:Fall 1994, Volume 2 - Number 1
- U.S. LAUDS UKRAINE'S NON-PROLIFERATION WORK USIA 22 August 1994
- U.S.-UKRAINE MISSILE AGREEMENT (State Department Factsheet) - 03 August 1994
- Ministry of Defense of Ukraine Refutes Reports on the Sale of Its S-300 ABM Interceptor Systems to Croatia, Simferopol KRYMSKAYA PRAVDA, 26 Jul 94
- PROLIFERATION AND NONPROLIFERATION IN UKRAINE: IMPLICATIONS FOR EUROPEAN AND U.S. SECURITY Stephen J. Blank Strategic Studies Institute, United States Army War College, Carlisle Barracks July 1, 1994 -- Ukraine, upon achieving independence, found itself in possession of nuclear missiles that were positioned in the former Soviet Union and on Ukraine's territory. Ukraine was reluctant to relinquish control of them for security reasons. Ukraine originally sought to retain the weapons and then, in 1994, agreed to dismantle them.
- U.S., UKRAINE AGREE ON DEFENSE CONVERSION JOINT VENTURE By Jacquelyn S. Porth
USIA Security Affairs Correspondent - 12 May 1994
- CLINTON-KRAVCHUK AGENDA TO FOCUS ON NUCLEAR ARMS AGREEMENT By Alexander M. Sullivan
USIA White House Correspondent - 11 January 1994
- Ukraine's Continuing Security Dilemmas: A Summary Update John F Dunn Soviet Studies Research Centre The Royal Military Academy Sandhurst Camberley, Surrey GU15 4PQ - February 1994
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