Proponents of India’s nuclear weapons programme have felt  vindicated ever since the 2009 Indo–US Civilian Nuclear Deal allowed India  to have access to advanced civilian nuclear technology without renouncing its  nuclear weapons programme. Over the next few years, supporters of nuclear  weaponisation within have gained greater importance in the country’s strategic  discourse. Against this backdrop, Achin Vanaik, a prominent critic of nuclear  weapons, warns of the dangers of indulging in sabre-rattling with weapons of  mass destruction. 
  After the Bomb analyses the main flaws in the  arguments favouring nuclear weapons. The volume presents ten dilemmas of  nuclear deterrence followed by a politico-psychological analysis of why the  Indian bomb lobby takes the effectiveness of nuclear deterrence as an article  of faith. It also tells us why nations should not overestimate the danger of  nuclear terrorism by non-state actors. 
  The author discusses the contrasts and similarities in the  viewpoints of prominent advisors involved in formulating the nuclear policy  while presenting an extended critique of India’s professed path to nuclear  disarmament. The conclusion forcefully argues why India needs to go beyond the  Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) to ensure a world free of nuclear weapons.
  This book is a must-read for students  and scholars of political science, international relations, strategic studies,  peace and conflict studies as also for every concerned  citizen of the world.