Jon Wolfsthal
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Jon Wolfsthal
Jon Wolfsthal is an American writer, academic, and former government advisor. The author of Deadly Arsenals: Tracking Weapons of Mass Destruction, described by the office of U.S. vice president Joe Biden as "a globally recognized expert on nuclear security and nonproliferation", he is currently the deputy director of the James C. Martin Center for nonproliferation Studies at the Monterey Institute of International Studies...
apparently beginning brazil commitment country perceived reevaluate wanting
Brazil is beginning to be perceived as a country apparently wanting to reevaluate its commitment to nonproliferation, and this is a big part of the problem.
anxiety cold drives fraction interest nuclear people policy simply weapons worry
People in the U.S. who think of and worry about Russia's nuclear weapons are a fraction of what they were during the Cold War, ... That interest or anxiety is simply not something that drives U.S. policy any more.
depending means thousands
This is something that could kill thousands upon thousands of people, depending on the means of distribution.
capability compared concern either hand last literally material postal produce quickly several shut system tons vast
The concern is they either have on hand -- or could quickly re-create the capability to produce -- vast amounts of anthrax, tons of material, compared with the several grams of material that literally shut down the U.S. postal system last year,
agreement buck crosses fear forbidden join message nervous people sends stick system
The fear is that this sends the message that if you buck the system and stick it out long enough, you can join the club. There are a lot of nervous people when it comes to this agreement because it crosses what had been a forbidden line.
allies ends five global moment north nuclear plutonium reaching region regional sitting six threatened troops worth
If the five or six bombs' worth of plutonium they are sitting on ends up going into nuclear weapons, then I think we are really reaching a watershed moment where the U.S., its troops in the region and its allies are threatened by a nuclear North Korea, with, I think, very significant regional and global consequences.
expand freedom future india question tension weapons
The question is how much freedom will India have in the future to expand its weapons stockpile. This is realistically where the tension comes from.