Understanding nuclear weapons and nuclear weapons is a weapons of mass destruction driven by atomic processes. Using nuclear fission and nuclear fusion, they produce huge explosions and dangerous radioactive byproducts. Most are offered by artillery, aircraft, ships or ballistic missiles (ICBM), but some are miniaturized. Tactical nuclear weapons can have 1000th power of TNT and strategic weapons can produce power of several thousand tons. The atomic bomb is a weapon that gains enormous explosive power through the sudden release of nuclear fission or the division of heavy nuclei.
Nuclear weapons competition is an arms race competing for the supremacy of the United States of America, the Soviet Union and their respective allies during the Cold War. During this period, in addition to the nuclear weapons of the US and the Soviet Union, other countries have developed nuclear weapons, but no country has created warheads on the scale of two or more superpowers. Until July 24, 1945, after the first successful experiment of nuclear weapons experiments by Stalin, US President Harry Truman informed the Soviet Union of the official announcement of the Manhattan Project at the Stagin Conference. Despite the military alliance with the war, the United States and the UK did not have enough confidence in the Soviet understanding of the German plan for the German spy: as a alliance the Soviet Union has introduced new technical weapons There is also concern that it will demand and expect.
In 1949 the Soviet Union exploded the first nuclear weapons and ended the US monopoly on nuclear weapons. The United States and the Soviet Union have carried out customary nuclear weapons competition which continued until the Soviet Union collapsed. Andrei Gromyko is the Foreign Minister of the Soviet Union, the Foreign Minister who serves the most in the world. After the defeat of Germany, the United States tried to economically assist the Western European Union through Marshall Plan. The United States has extended the Marshall Plan to the Soviet Union, but under such circumstances the Americans knew that the Soviet Union never accepts free elections never again. As the influence on Eastern Europe is increasing, the Soviet Union tried to solve this problem in Comecon in 1949, but it did basically the same thing.
The "nuclear winter" theory in the mid 1980s played an important role in reducing weapons during that period. However, with the collapse of the Soviet Union and the decline of the nuclear weapons of the United States and Russia, this aspect of the nuclear war has gradually disappeared. This is not good. In the mid 2000s climate scientists like Alan Robock (Rutgers) again researched the nuclear winter theory. This time I used a more complete and detailed climate model than I did 20 years ago. They also tested the potential impact of smaller nuclear exchange.