Friday, December 28, 2018

The Growing Risk of Nuclear War


An unsettled year in nuclear weapons
By John Mecklin, December 24, 2018
In 2018, the world’s arms control architecture teetered on the brink of collapse as the United States withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal and threatened withdrawal from the landmark Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty. Negotiations between the United States and North Korea over Pyongyang’s nuclear program stalled. And Hawaii went through 38 dreadful minutes of believing it was under nuclear missile attack.
The Bulletin’s coverage of these events and many other aspects of the modern nuclear dilemma was truly comprehensive last year. What follows, then, is not a “best of” list, per se, but eight prime examples from the remarkably consistent and excellent offerings our expert authors provided throughout the year. I thank and applaud them all.
Facing nuclear reality, 35 years after The Day After
A special report by Dawn Stover
A comprehensive look at the meaning, in today’s world, of a landmark TV movie, including an interview with Ted Koppel, who led an expert panel discussion after the airing of a film that changed world nuclear history.
Dawn of a new Armageddon
By Cynthia Lazaroff
 The truly gripping account of 38 minutes of chaos that ensued after Hawaii received an all-too-believable warning that it was under what appeared to be a nuclear missile attack.

George H.W. Bush worked toward a soft nuclear landing for the dissolving Soviet Union
By Siegfried S. Hecker
How the late president aided the effort to secure the Soviet Union’s nuclear material and scientists as the USSR dissolved.
Expert comment: The INF and the future of arms control
By John Mecklin
A collection of extraordinary experts assesses the import of the Trump administration’s declared interest in leaving the landmark Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces Treaty, a foundation of the world’s arms control regime.
Robert Oppenheimer: The myth and the mystery
By Richard Rhodes
The Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Making of the Atomic Bomb explains, in brilliant detail, the reality of J. Robert Oppenheimer, in contrast with his portrayal in the opera Dr. Atomic.

Under siege: Safety in the nuclear weapons complex
By Robert Alvarez
One of the premier experts on the US nuclear weapons complex explores an Energy Department attack on the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board, which oversees and reports on safety practices in the complex.
Hiroshima & Nagasaki
A collection
Through the decades, the Bulletin has been home to distinguished analysis of the US atomic bombing of two Japanese cities at the end of World War II. This collection provides an authoritative starting point for anyone interested in understanding the lasting meaning of those attacks.

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