The New York Times says the anti-proliferation group New Wisconsin Project
on Nuclear Arms Control is criticizing the Bush Administration approach in an upcoming report.
Since joining the Union of Concerned Scientists in 2002, he has focused on promoting and conducting dialog between Chinese and American experts
on nuclear arms control and space security.
Besides his congressional fellowship, he has been an adviser to Congress and President Bill Clinton
on nuclear arms control and treaty verification and a reviewer for the Council on Foreign Affairs to improve how scientific information is used to formulate international policy.
But Gary Milhollin, director of the Wisconsin Project
on Nuclear Arms Control in Washington DC, says confidence in export restrictions is misplaced.
Not exact matches
This situation need not be static, and the moment the
nuclear powers reach agreement
on arms control or disarmament the UN can assume new functions that might be the functions of an incipient world government.)
In the specific case of Germany, they are still bound by the Treaty
on the Final Settlement with Respect to Germany Some examples of the limitations set:
Armed Forces of no more than 370,000 personnel - of whom at most 345,000 were to be in the Army and Air Force No manufacture, possession or
control of NBC weapons Full application of the
Nuclear Non -...
2016: Kurt Godfried — Dr. Gottfried, a recognized leader in the scientific community
on missile defense and
nuclear terrorism who was among the founders of the Union of Concerned Scientists, was honored for his long and distinguished career as a «civic scientist,» through his advocacy for
arms control, human rights, and integrity in the use of science in public policy making.
Whenever he leaves the United States, whether to do research or
on vacation, Zia Mian, a
nuclear arms control expert at Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School (Princeton, N.J.) has to depart from an airport or port designated by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
He detailed how the crisis propelled the United States and the Soviet Union into a limited ban
on nuclear testing and then to a series of
arms control agreements in ensuing years.
«If the United States, the strongest nation in the world, concludes that it can not protect its vital interests without relying
on new
nuclear weapons for new military missions, it would be a clear signal to other nations that
nuclear weapons are valuable, if not necessary, for their security purposes, too,» Sidney Drell,
arms control expert and physicist at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center said at the American Physical Society Conference in Denver this past March.
His work focuses
on nuclear energy,
nuclear nonproliferation,
nuclear security, and
nuclear arms control.
She has served as the co-chairman for the U.S. Secretary of Energy's
Nuclear Energy Advisory Council, and she was also appointed to the National Academy of Sciences Standing Committee
on International Security and
Arms Control, where she served eight years.