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Nuclear Nightmares

Securing the World Before It Is Too Late

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

There is a high risk that someone will use, by accident or design, one or more of the 17,000 nuclear weapons in the world today. Many thought such threats ended with the Cold War or that current policies can prevent or contain nuclear disaster. They are dead wrong—these weapons, possessed by states large and small, stable and unstable, remain an ongoing nightmare.
Joseph Cirincione surveys the best thinking and worst fears of experts specializing in nuclear warfare and assesses the efforts to reduce or eliminate these nuclear dangers. His book offers hope: in the 1960s, twenty-three states had nuclear weapons and research programs; today, only nine states have weapons. More countries have abandoned nuclear weapon programs than have developed them, and global arsenals are just one-quarter of what they were during the Cold War. Yet can these trends continue, or are we on the brink of a new arms race—or worse, nuclear war? A former member of Senator Obama's nuclear policy team, Cirincione helped shape the policies unveiled in Prague in 2009, and, as president of an organization intent on reducing nuclear threats, he operates at the center of debates on nuclear terrorism, new nuclear nations, and the risks of existing arsenals.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 30, 2013
      With the Cold War ending but more nations wanting to get into the nuclear weapons club, Cirincione, a former staffer of then senator Obama’s nuclear policy team and current member of the secretary of state’s International Security Advisory Board, sounds the alarm on the global arms race. He provides a wealth of material on currently nuclear-armed nations and their 17,000-strong stockpile, assessing the rapid spread of the weapons, the cost of the arsenals, and the damage they could wreak, with a keen emphasis on “nuclear terrorism.” The frightening assessment by Cirincione is further supported by a government document of 32 nuclear weapon accidents that occurred between 1950 and 1980—including six bombs “that were lost and never recovered.” Along with detailing the bombs’ enormous potency, he spells out the potential fatalities war could cause, estimating “between 35 to 77 percent of the U.S. population would be killed.” Cirincione explains the efforts to reduce the arsenals up to the revised START (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty) talks, while stressing the dreaded current exceptions of Iran, North Korea, and Pakistan. It’s wonk-oriented, but Cirincione’s gripping, harrowing account of the arms race debate is essential reading for those concerned with a fickle world prone to threats and terrorism.

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