GLOBUS II radar in Vardo

The European missile defense folly

BY George N. Lewis and Theodore A. Postol

The proposed European missile defense system is technologically deficient and its deployment disingenuous.

Artist's rendering of proposed FutureGen plant

The upside to FutureGen's demise

By Kurt Zenz House

Redistributing the government's multibillion-dollar investment in a single clean-coal demonstration plant to smaller, private projects would benefit the carbon-capture-and-storage industry.

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Kazakhstan's nuclear ambitions

By Togzhan Kassenova

With the world's second largest uranium reserves, Kazakhstan wants to become the planet's largest uranium supplier by 2010.

Gas mask

The expanding range of biowarfare threats

By Alan Pearson, Jonathan B. Tucker, Pal Aas, and Ralf Trapp

The development of biochemical weapons based on body substances would broaden the scope of the biowarfare threat beyond microbial pathogens and toxins. Our experts assess the impact of these new lethal and incapacitating agents.

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Columnists

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Features

  • The IAEA's dilemma with Syria's Al Kibar nuclear site

    By Fiona Simpson

    The International Atomic Energy Agency wanted U.S. and Israeli intelligence about Syria's secret nuclear site sooner. But what would it have done with that information?

  • The upside to FutureGen's demise

    By Kurt Zenz House

    Redistributing the government's multibillion-dollar investment in a single clean-coal demonstration plant to smaller, private projects would benefit the carbon-capture-and-storage industry.

  • Kazakhstan's nuclear ambitions

    By Togzhan Kassenova

    With the world's second largest uranium reserves, Kazakhstan wants to become the planet's largest uranium supplier by 2010.

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Roundtables

  • The expanding range of biowarfare threats

    UPDATED: 16 May 2008

    The development of biochemical weapons based on body substances would broaden the scope of the biowarfare threat beyond microbial pathogens and toxins. Our experts assess the impact of these new lethal and incapacitating agents.

  • The future of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission

    UPDATED: 15 May 2008

    Nuclear power is offered as a solution to U.S. reliance on fossil fuels and impending climate change. But can the existing federal regulatory structure handle the demands of a revitalized industry? Our four discussants explore the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's future.

  • Has the time come for geoengineering?

    UPDATED: 13 May 2008

    In theory, scientists understand how to manipulate Earth's climate systems enough to cause cooling, therefore blunting the effects of global warming. Is it time then to fast-track a geoengineering research agenda to refine such techniques?

  • The uncertainty in climate modeling

    COMPLETED: 22 April 2008

    How do climate scientists make their global weather forecasts, and why don't they always agree? Our experts explain the theory and practice of climate modeling and discuss how climate predictions should be interpreted and used.

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Reports

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Doomsday Clock

It is 5 Minutes to Midnight

The Doomsday Clock

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Current Print Edition

  • Climate change and security

    By Jurgen Scheffran

    Global warming is affecting the competition for resources and changing international security priorities.

  • An interview with Spencer R. Weart

    By Bulletin Staff

    The physicist and historian of science examines images of catastrophe inspired by nuclear weapons and climate change.

  • The cost of secrecy

    By Patrice McDermott

    Reforming U.S. classification procedures would improve security--and save money.

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