"Kapur's important new book Dangerous Deterrent sets out to challenge the idea that nuclear weapons are a 'factor for stability' in South Asia and to... go beyond the standard arguments of scholars who consider the spread of nuclear weapons to be a danger principally because of the intrinsic character and limitations of the politics, technology, and organizations associated with these weapons."—<i>Japanese Journal of Political Science</i>
"Scholars often assume that after decades of intense study during the Cold War, the political effects of nuclear weapons are well understood. The innovative arguments in Kapur's <i>Dangerous Deterrent</i>, which explores the consequences of India's and Pakistan's acquisition of nuclear weapons on conventional conflict between them, suggest that much room remains for insightful scholarship."—<i>Political Science Quarterly</i>
"This book represents a landmark in South Asian security studies. It carefully blends significant empirical research with deft theoretical analysis."—Sumit Ganguly, Indiana University
"This is an important book, containing valuable analysis about the effects of nuclear weapons on security in South Asia and broader insights about the potential effects of nuclear proliferation elsewhere around the globe." —Scott Sagan, Stanford University
"[T]his book offers a succinct and theoretically and empirically sophisticated treatment of the dangers of proliferation in South Asia. [I]t is a major advance over many competing works." —T.V. Paul, McGill University
"This is a well argued, nicely written analysis of a very important problem, and it deserves wide attention." —<i>Pacific Affairs</i>