If the Trump administration's increasingly belligerent rhetoric about Venezuela sounds familiar, it's because it is: The ...
China’s first publicly acknowledged missile defense system capable of midcourse interception of long-range missiles, the ...
A new book tracks four decades of failed US policy toward North Korea, making a strong case that solutions existed—and still exist.
A House of Dynamite gets so many details wrong that the lessons viewers take from the film will likely be counterproductive, ...
The Bulletin is proud to welcome Alex Wellerstein as a new Senior Fellow. In this role, he will work with the Bulletin’s editorial team on historical ...
In a region already bristling with all types of nuclear weapons, bestowing latent nuclear-weapon-state status upon South Korea is needlessly destabilizing.
A new tool allows us to visualize how disinformation campaigns originating in places like the halls of the Russian Ministry of Defence can end up circulating on Fox News or in international diplomatic ...
Scott D. Sagan at Stanford University’s Center for International Security and Cooperation (CISAC) and a predoctoral fellow in Political Science. Here, she supports research on nuclear security and ...
Japan's government continues to avoid confronting the difficult reality of nuclear power. But this doesn't mean the myths of inherent safety and absolute necessity of reactors can go on forever.
Since the decimation of two Japanese cities at the end of World War II, the Bulletin has focused on both sides of the nuclear dual-use problem: How to reduce (or even eliminate) the possibility of a ...
For over a century, humanity has rampantly burned fossil fuels to power the machinery of modern life, inexorably releasing gases into the atmosphere that are changing the Earth’s climate.
A virus spillover in the animal trade, a research mishap at a biolab, or the intentional use of a bioweapon—any one of these could have dire consequences for the world. The COVID pandemic killed some ...