In a previous paper [1], an analysis of static and dynamic considerations for achieving multilateral deterrence postures among nations was presented in summary form. This paper presents the computational techniques and theoretical results which were not included in the prior paper. In order to keep this paper relatively brief we shall use the notation in [1] and presume familiarity with its contents. To maintain coherence of this paper the reader must use [1] as a guide. In particular, the paper will discuss analytical and computational results for the n-country static case, the boundedness conditions for the dynamic 2-party case, and the optimization problems which arise with the introduction of unambiguous and ambiguous ABM capabilities. In addition, reliability and statistical confidence questions will be examined.