Contents Acknowledgments IntroductionAdam N. Stulberg and Lawrence Rubin Part I: General Approaches to Regional Stability 1. Sources of Instability in the Second Nuclear Age: An American PerspectiveEvan Braden Montgomery 2. The Russian Approach to Strategic Stability: Preserving a Classical Formula in a Turbulent World Andrey Pavlov and Anastasia Malygina 3. Pakistan's View of Strategic Stability: A Struggle between Theory and PracticeSadia Tasleem 4. Strategic Stability in the Middle East: Through the Transparency Lens Emily B. Landau 5. Beyond Strategic Stability: Deterrence, Regional Balance, and Iranian National SecurityAnnie Tracy Samuel Conclusion to Part I: Regional Approaches to Strategic StabilityRajesh Basrur Part II: Cross-Domain Deterrence and Strategic Stability6. Strategic Stability and Cross-Domain Coercion: The Russian Approach to Information (Cyber) WarfareDmitry "Dima" Adamsky 7. Conventional Challenges to Strategic Stability: Chinese Perceptions of Hypersonic Technology and the Security Dilemma Tong Zhao 8. The India-Pakistan Nuclear Dyad: Strategic Stability and Cross-Domain Deterrence Happymon Jacob 9. The Road Not Taken: Defining Israel's Approach to Strategic Stability Ilai Z. Saltzman 10. Maintaining Sovereignty and Preserving the Regime: How Saudi Arabia Views Strategic Stability Ala' Alrababa'h Conclusion to Part II: Regional Variations on Deterrence and StabilityJeffrey W. Knopf Part III: Findings and Implications 11. Foreign Views of Strategic Stability and US Nuclear Posture: The Need for Tailored Strategies Matthew Kroenig 12. Implications for US Policy: Defending a Stable International System Adam Mount Conclusion to the BookLawrence Rubin and Adam N. Stulberg List of ContributorsIndex