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The Delusions and Dangers of Missile Defense

By Jaganath Sankaran

 

A rethinking of the logic and purpose of the U.S. missile defense enterprise is urgently needed. (Login required)

 

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The Enduring Impact of Reagan’s Strategic Defense Initiative

By Aaron Bateman

Four decades later, SDI continues to shape the international dialogue on strategic stability (Login required)

Should Nuclear Weapons Be Made Less Lethal?

By Frank N. von Hippel


The enormous explosive yield of U.S. nuclear weapons is vastly in excess of what would be required to destroy most military targets of the major U.S. adversaries. (Login required)

The Oppenheimer Legacy:

"Atoms and Ambiguity"

By Stephen J. Cimbala

"The People the Oppenheimer Film Erased"

By Chantell L. Murphy

"Physicists Built the Bomb, Urged Restraint Too"

By Lisbeth Gronlund

 

Focus
Defending the De Facto Nuclear Test Ban

By Daryl G. Kimball

 

News and Analysis

NPT Meeting Underscores Chronic Divisions

 

U.S. Says Ukraine Gives Cluster Munitions Assurances

 

Allies Ponder the Future Of the CFE Treaty

 

Russia Still Awaiting Formal U.S. Arms Control Proposal

 

Lawmakers Seek Overdue Justice for Nuclear Victims

 

States Urge UN Investigation of Iran Drone Sales

 

North Korea Defends Nuclear Weapons Program at UN

 

 

 

U.S. Completes Landmark CWC Destruction

 

On Korean War Anniversary, Activists Seek Formal Peace



News Briefs

 

IAEA Inspects Zaporizhzhia for Explosives

 

Health Experts Urge Nuclear Risk Reduction

 

China Constructs Nuclear Reactor in Pakistan

 

Letter to the Editor

George Perkovich’s essay (Daniel Ellsberg: In Memoriam, July/August 2023) is terrific and raises points one doesn’t often read or hear.

But there is one small point he should know: Dan told me (we were close friends for 31 years) that on the drive from Detroit to Denver, where the accident occurred, Dan’s father told his mother he needed to pull over for a quick rest, since he was falling asleep at the wheel. His mother didn’t want to be late for a party her brother was hosting in Denver (where he lived), so she told him to keep driving—not to stop and rest. The result is history: His father fell asleep, hit an embankment and his sister and mother, in the front seat, were thrown from the car and died immediately. Dan only remembers waking up in a hospital, in a large cast. I’m aware that in his book, Dan says he didn’t trust adults because his father fell asleep at the wheel. But in fact, the story is more complicated. - Barbara Koeppel is a Washington, D.C.-based investigative reporter who writes on social, economic, and military issues.

         
 

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