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Academic Journals
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From:Science (Vol. 235) Peer-ReviewedTechniques and Strategies of Verification In this issue of Science we publish a Policy Forum on one of the most important controversies of our time: the verification of arms control agreements. The format differs from...
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From:Science (Vol. 246, Issue 4931) Peer-ReviewedDispelling Myths About Verification of Sea-Launched Cruise Missiles THE UNITED STATES AND THE SOVIET UNION ARE NOW engaged in negotiations to reduce their arsenals of strategic nuclear weapons. These Strategic Arms...
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From:Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (Vol. 53, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedPreserving the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency and restoring its budget are vital to pursuing a meaningful arms control agenda. Arms control is a complicated issue that requires a specialized agency with an...
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From:Science (Vol. 235) Peer-ReviewedVerification and Arms Control A. Verification Methods, Capabilities, and Requirements 1. Which methods of verification today give high confidence for monitoring treaty compliance, and what agreements can they...
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From:Presidents & Prime Ministers (Vol. 8, Issue 2)China's Director-General of Arms Control, Sha Zukang, believes all countries must cooperate to limit the proliferation of nuclear, biological, and traditional weapons. Nuclear tests in India and Pakistan have...
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From:Science (Vol. 236) Peer-ReviewedTest Ban Compliance: Is Seismology Enough? GEOPHYSICIST Gregory E. van derVink, director of a nuclear test ban verification study being conducted by the congressional Office of Technology Assessment, uses an apt...
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From:Government Computer News (Vol. 17, Issue 18)On-site Inspection Agency monitors net security, traffic with remote probes The motto of the On-site Inspection Agency, which monitors foreign compliance with nuclear weapons treaties, is "Trust and verify." OSIA...
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From:Science (Vol. 234) Peer-ReviewedArms Control: Modest But Neutral Record A quarter-century of arms control negotiationshave produced more rhetoric than substance, according to an exhaustive analysis of the record by a group at Harvard University's...
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From:Daedalus (Vol. 134, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThere has been a widespread change in the thinking on arms control in the last year or so. Much of it is due to the focus of attention on "measures to safeguard against surprise attack" (to use the official...
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From:Issues in Science and Technology (Vol. 14, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe end of the Cold War, which reduced the danger of a nuclear war, has ushered in a period of arms control negotiations between the US and Russia. A series of major treaties and unilateral initiatives have been signed...
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From:Science (Vol. 236) Peer-ReviewedMissile Pact Edges Closer In the late 1970s, the Western alliesexpressed growing alarm at the imminent deployment of three new types of Soviet missiles capable of striking targets virtually anywhere in Western Europe....
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From:Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (Vol. 58, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedON MAY 24, PRESIDENT GEORGE W. Bush signed a spanking new arms control agreement in Russia. The treaty, which he claimed would "liquidate the legacy of the Cold War," mandates the reduction of deployed strategic nuclear...
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From:Science (Vol. 238, Issue 4826) Peer-ReviewedA Low-Threshold Test Ban Is Feasible IN FEBRUARY 1987, THE REAGAN ADMINISTRATION RESTATED its position on nuclear testing as follows (1): "As long as we depend on nuclear weapons for our security, we must insure that...
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From:Science (Vol. 255, Issue 5049) Peer-ReviewedIn the aftermath of the Gulf War, revelations about Iraq's extensive program to develop nuclear weapons challenge the future of the international nuclear nonproliferation regime. Until inspections sanctioned by the U.N....
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From:Science (Vol. 240, Issue 4850) Peer-ReviewedTest Ban Test Back on Track A team of Soviet seismologists arrived in the United States on 6 April to monitor a series of chemical explosions that will be set off near the underground nuclear test site in Nevada. The...
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From:Science (Vol. 248, Issue 4957) Peer-ReviewedGamma-Ray Measurements of a Soviet Cruise-Missile Warhead SEA-LAUNCHED CRUISE MISSILES (SLCMs) POSE SERIOUS problems for nuclear arms control and for the security of the United States, the Soviet Union, and other...
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From:Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (Vol. 56, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedHistorically, Republicans are much more likley to reach arms control agreements. I HAVE NEVER VOTED FOR A Republican in my life. But if I were to vote my professional interests, in November I would cast my ballot for...
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From:Ethics & International Affairs (Vol. 15, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThere is much hand-wringing in the arms control trenches these days over the role and future of arms control in U.S. policy. Liberal supporters of arms control lament what they see as a decade of missed opportunities to...
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From:Science (Vol. 240, Issue 4848) Peer-ReviewedNew Spy Satellites Urged for Verification AFTER holding closed-door hearings over the past 6 months on some of the nation's most secret spy technologies, the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence has concluded that...
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From:Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists (Vol. 49, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedPresident-elect Bill Clinton's arms control agenda is expected to be dominated by two concerns: implementing the START treaties and reducing the Strategic Defense Initiative program. Clinton's pre-election writings shed...