Cities in the vicinity of the ground zero turn into rubble, turning into burning dust and a maze of potatoes. The collapsed infrastructure blocks the city's roads and no one can enter or leave the radioactive abyss. One third of the world's trees burn and all the green lawns burn. (Satori). Please kill most of the natural people in the process. Water bodies are emitted by explosive sparks. Earth's water is no longer a hydration source for all living things.
Weapons Competition The idea of weapons that could cause global destruction was born during the Second World War; with this information, the United States and the Soviet Union entered into nuclear weapons competition and developed the first atomic bomb . In order to complete these weapons of mass destruction, both countries need to test their products in search of flaws in the general blueprint of weapons. Looking at the success of the atomic bomb, the United States began to develop a more destructive bomb, a hydrogen bomb. It is believed to have 1,000 times the strength of the atomic bomb.
August 29, 1949, the Soviet Union exploded the first atomic bomb at the semi-paratinsk test site in Kazakhstan. The case ended US monopoly on nuclear weapons and promoted the Cold War. In the 1950s, arms race competition became the focus of the Cold War. The United States tested the first hydrogen (or thermonuclear) bomb in 1952 and defeated the "super bomb" made by Russians. When the US Secretary of State John Foster Dulles announced this policy called "collective retaliation" in January 1954, the political situation of the Cold War became clearer - any major Soviet attack would be massive nuclear Due to the reaction "mass retaliation", the most important byproduct of the Cold War - intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) has emerged
The history that we have been talking about the two world wars where the global conflict called the Cold War is characterized by diplomatic tension and nuclear weapons competition between 1946 and 1989. The United States effectively (or reduces) the standards of modern war by deploying two atomic bombs, Hiroshima and Nagasaki. And they are classified as weapons of mass destruction today. This brutal stagnation made Japan surrender, spurring USSR's arms race competition, and let the observer infer what will happen to the worst in the next world war. The pattern of progress of technology that emerged in the First World War is an informal definition centered on the Third World War, following its sequel and postwar thinking.