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Bulletin

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A message from Tripoli: How Libya gave up its WMD A message from Tripoli: How Libya gave up its WMD thebulletin.org oldmarine
How to unsnag US-South Korea nuclear negotiations How to unsnag US-South Korea nuclear negotiations By Miles A. Pomper 25 September 2012 Article Highlights With negotiations toward a new nuclear cooperation agreement in full swing, Seoul wants US consent for South Korean uranium enrichment. Washington is resisting. Some in Seoul say enrichment is necessary for energy security and overseas reactor sales. But South Korea experiences no fuel-marke..
Nuclear weapons: The death of fusion? Nuclear weapons: The death of fusion? Daniel Clery 17 July 2013 Fusion energy has, since its earliest days, had an uncomfortable relationship with the military. The idea that you could produce energy by fusing atoms grew out of efforts to understand how the Sun and stars manage to pump out such prodigious quantities of energy for billions of years without flagging. It was an entirely academic pu..
How to unsnag US-South Korea nuclear negotiations How to unsnag US-South Korea nuclear negotiations By Miles A. Pomper 25 September 2012 Article Highlights With negotiations toward a new nuclear cooperation agreement in full swing, Seoul wants US consent for South Korean uranium enrichment. Washington is resisting. Some in Seoul say enrichment is necessary for energy security and overseas reactor sales. But South Korea experiences no fuel-marke..
Preview: The North Korean launch Preview: The North Korean launch By David Wright | 12 April 2012 Article Highlights The international community has condemned the planned launch of a North Korean rocket that aims to put a satellite in orbit, contending it could help Pyongyang militarily, but the North claims a right to a peaceful space program. The Unha-3 missile to be used in this launch has a slightly larger third stage but a..
The defensive nature of China`s `underground great wall` The defensive nature of China's "underground greatwall" By Hui Zhang 16 January 2012 Article Highlights A study by Georgetown University's Phillip Karber claims that a vast network of tunnels in China, often called the "underground great wall," could hide up to 3,000 nuclear weapons. The study leaps to unwarranted conclusions based on simplistic reasoning and questionable extrapolation from deca..