Center for Citizen Initiatives

Bringing Russian and American citizens together in Peace since 1983.

  • Facebook
  • Home
  • About
    • Vision and Mission
    • Brief History
    • The Power of Impossible Ideas
  • News and Information
    • All Articles
    • Sept 2019 Trip
    • Past Trips
    • CCI News
    • World News and Analysis
  • Videos
    • Sept 2019 Trip
    • Sept 2018 Trip
    • Spring 2017 Trip
    • 2016 Trip – For Russians With Love
    • 2015 Trip
  • Contact
    • Contact CCI
    • Email List
You are here: Home / World News and Analysis / Risk of Nuclear War Today?

Risk of Nuclear War Today?

June 1, 2019

Friends,

The risks of turning our planet into an inferno increases by the day. Meanwhile leading newspapers and channels carry endless squabbles between Democrats and Republicans, 2020 candidates, anything but the “elephant in the room.”

Why are we Americans not reacting with alarm as we did in the 1980s when the first nuclear stand-off rocked our nation? Why is it that our doctors, mayors, business leaders, and religious dignitaries aren’t mobilizing to educate the American public on this devastating issue?

Are we walking toward Doomsday with placid disinterest––too immersed in consuming and petty issues to notice?

Sharon (signature)

Sharon Tennison
Center for Citizen Initiatives


Reuters

Risk of nuclear war now highest since WW2, UN arms research chief says

Tom Miles
May 21, 2019

The risk of nuclear weapons being used is at its highest since World War Two, a senior U.N. security expert said on Tuesday, calling it an “urgent” issue that the world should take more seriously.

Renata Dwan, director of the U.N. Institute for Disarmament Research (UNIDIR), said all states with nuclear weapons have nuclear modernization programs underway and the arms control landscape is changing, partly due to strategic competition between China and the United States.

Traditional arms control arrangements are also being eroded by the emergence of new types of war, with increasing prevalence of armed groups and private sector forces and new technologies that blurred the line between offense and defense, she told reporters in Geneva.

With disarmament talks stalemated for the past two decades, 122 countries have signed a treaty to ban nuclear weapons, partly out of frustration and partly out of a recognition of the risks, she said.

[Continue Reading]

Contact CCI

Contact Us

Join Our Email List

Subscribe

Copyright © 2025 Center for Citizen Initiatives  -  Privacy Policy