Moral hazard and nuclear weapons watch cats. Please look at the cradle. "Look at the cat?" Asked Newt. "When you looked at the cradle? (Vonnegut - 183) On the day the atomic bomb was dropped on August 6, 1945, it was the day that New Foot 's father tried to play a game with him, Felix playing with a cat Cradle This is a game playing with a rope wrapped around with a finger, you should be able to see a shape like a cradle when you do a series of operations. For most people it is a tangled string It looks like.
Despite the dangers of nuclear weapons, the US has "modernized" its nuclear weapons, including "redesigned nuclear warheads, new nuclear bombs, submarines, land missiles, weapons laboratories and manufacturing plants" at a cost of $ 1 trillion "doing. As Hans M. Kristensen, head of Nuclear Information Project of the American Federation of Scientific Associations and other communique creator, states that the US nuclear modernization plan is to ensure its reliability and safety It is open to the public. American warheads of nuclear weapons do not improve their military strength. However, in fact, the program implemented a groundbreaking new technology that greatly enhances the target capability of US ballistic missile weapon guns.
Since the first bomb exploded about 80 years ago, the possibility of the threat of moral and life nuclear weapons has been questioned. Although nuclear weapons seems to be properly owned by the world's superpowers to ensure protection, nuclear weapons are a terrible remnant of the Cold War and may still cause unilateral damage. Some merciful world powers suggested that nuclear weapons should be banned from entering the arsenal of all countries.
The ability to weaken nuclear weapons and nuclear weapons encouraged countries to try to control the proliferation and use of these weapons. Countries possessing these weapons of mass destruction are facing the risk of accidents and are the targets for other countries to pose a threat. Nuclear weapons can harm civilians because of the power of explosion. Many countries have large nuclear weapons. The cost of these weapons is very high and weapons are very expensive.
The Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty (NPT) signed in 1968 was used to limit the risk of spreading nuclear weapons among states. The treaty recognizes five countries as "nuclear-weapon states" and the other three countries do not admit that the treaty is actually the owner of nuclear weapons. All other countries in the world have joined the treaty called "non-nuclear weapon states", but one country (North Korea) withdrew. Some countries - believed to include Iran, and Iraq maintained the ambition to acquire nuclear weapons before Saddam Hussein resigned. In the past, more countries have launched nuclear weapons programs, but they have been persuaded to abandon the nuclear weapons program.