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The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 1991: Vol 47 Index PDF

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INDEX Authors Forsberg, Randall, “Conventional Forces Kapur, Ashok, “But Will It Play in Pan- Treaty Buries Cold War,” Jan./Feb., 32-37; munjom?,” June, 36 Abbotts, John, review of Bedford, Seabrook “End Arms Control, Begin Disarmament,” Kidder, Ray E., “Safety No Barrier to Test Station, March, 42-43 Nov., 29-31 Ban,” April, 32-34 Ackland, Len, “Gulf Macho,”; Jan./Feb., 2; Fotion, Nicholas, “The Gulf War: Cleanly Klare, Michael T., “Fueling the Fire: How We “Traq’s Apocalypse,” May, 2; “New World Fought,” Sept., 24-29 Armed the Middle East,” Jan/Feb., 19-26 What?,” June, 2; “An Unnecessary War,” Franklin, H. Bruce, review of Zinn, Declara- Krass, Allan S., “The People, the Debt, and March, 2; “The War Metaphor,” April, 2 tions of Independence, Sept., 43-44 Mikhail,” Nov., 12-17 Adelman, Kenneth L., “Just a Sideshow,” Freeman, Karen, “The Unfought Chemical Krepon, Michael, “An Odor of the Old,” June, Nov., 19-21 War,” Dec., 30-39 37; “Don't Parrot Old Arguments on Missile Ahearne, John, review of Jasanoff, The Fifth Gallagher, Michael C., “Hong Kong Fears Chi- Defense,” Jan./Feb., 12-13 Branch, March, 44-45 nese Chernobyl,” Oct., 9-11, 46 Kristensen, Hans, “Nuclear Weapons Headed Albright, David, “Hyping the Iraqi Bomb,” Garthoff, Raymond L., “Case of the Wander- for the Trash,” Dec., 14-19 March, 26-28; “Iraq and the Bomb: Were ing Radar,” July/Aug., 7-9 Ksanfomality, Leonid V., “Survival before Sci- They Even Close?,” March, 16-25; “Iraq’s Gibson, Daniel, “Can Alchemy Solve the ence,” Dec., 20-24 Nuclear Hide-And-Seek,” Sept., 14-23; Nuclear Waste Problem?,” July/Aug., 12-17 La Feber, Walter, review of Young, The Viet- “Traq: News the Front Page Missed,” Oct., Gleick, Peter H., “Environment and Security: nam Wars, Dec., 40-41 7-9; “Retire Rocky F ats,” Dec., 12-13; The Clear Connections,” April, 17-21 Laurin, Fredrik, “Scandinavia’s Underwater “South Africa Flirts with the NPT,” Gold, David, “Military R&D a Poor Scapegoat Time Bomb,” March, 10-15 Jan./Feb., 27-31; “What’s North Korea Up for Flagging Economy,” Jan./Feb., 38-43 Leavitt, Rob, “Conventional Forces Treaty To, Anyway?” Dec., 10-11 Goldman, Joe, “Argentina, Brazil Open to Buries Cold War,” Jan./Feb., 32-37 Arbatov, Alexei G., “We Could Have Done Inspections,” May, 8-10; “Armed Capital- Lebow, Richard Ned, review of Beschloss, Better,” Nov., 36—40, 47 ism,” May, 5-6 The Crisis Years, Dec., 41-42; review of Arkin, William M., “Nuclear Blues,” June, 5-7; Gray, Peter, “Retire Rocky Flats,” Dec., 12-13 Burlazki, Chruschtschow; Khrushchev, “Nuclear Notebook,” Jan./Feb., 47-48; Grier, Peter, “Poking and Prying for Peace,” Khrushchev on Khrushchev; and Khrushchev, March, 48-49; April, 48-49; May, 48-49; Dec., 25-29 Khrushchev Remembers, May, 43-45 June, 48-49; July/Aug., 47-48; Sept., 48-49; Hallin, Daniel, “TV’s Clean Little War,” May, Lee, Jennifer Scheck, “Red Star Answers Oct., 48-49; Nov., 4849; Dec., 49; “Nuclear 16-19 Bulletin,” April, 5-6; “Renegade Russians Weapons Headed for the Trash,” Dec., 14-19 Hamilton, John Maxwell, “Will Pollution Kill Grab for Military Control,” Jan./Feb., 15-17 Arnett, Eric H., “Gulf War: Awestruck Press the Revolution?,” June, 12-18 Lewis, George, “SLCMs—Ignored, Then Does Tomahawk PR,” April, 7-8 Hamilton, Tom, review of Dibblin, Day of Two Stored,” Nov., 26-28 Boyar, Robert E., review of Jasper, Nuclea Suns, March, 45 Lilly-Weber, Steve, “Conventional Forces Politics, May, 45-46 Handler, Joshua, “Soviet Union: The Greening Treaty Buries Cold War,” Jan./Feb., 32-37 Boyer, Paul, review of Whitfield, The Culture of Petropavlovsk,” Oct., 11, 46 Lockwood, Dunbar, “Missile-aneous Issues of the Cold War, June, 40-41 Hartung, William D., “The Boom at the Arms Settled at Last,” Sept., 12-13, 46; “‘Modern- Clausen, Peter, “Star Warriors Try Again,” 3azaar,” Oct., 14-20 ization’ Means Cuts and Slowdowns,” June, June, 9-10, 42 Hibbs, Mark, “Hyping the Iraqi Bomb,” 8-9, 47 Cochran, Thomas B., “A First Look at the March, 26-28; “Iraq and the Bomb: Were Lopez, George, “The Gulf War: Not So Clean,” Soviet Bomb Complex,” May, 25-31 They Even Close?,” March, 17-25; “Iraq’s Sept., 30-35 Cohen, Avner, “Iraq and the Rules of the Nuclear Hide-and-Seek,” Sept., 14-23; Marples, David, review of Medvedev, The Nuclear Game,” July/Aug., 10-11, 43 “Traq: News the Front Page Missed,” Oct., Truth about Chernoby!, June, 38-39 D’Agostino, Brian, “Time for an Old 7-9; “What’s North Korea Up To, Anyway?” Marsh, Gerald, “The Ups and Downs of Down- Blueprint,” Nov., 31-33 Dec., 10-11 loading,” Nov., 21-23 Danielsson, Bengt, “French Slam ‘Open Door’ Holloway, David, review of Sakharov, Mem- Medler, Alex, “Paying the Bill,” Oct., 38 on Greenpeace,” March, 6-7 oirs; and Moscow and Beyond, July/Aug., Mendelsohn, Jack, “Rhetoric v. Reality,” June, Darchiyev, Alexander N., review of Kagarlit- 37-38 34-35; “Senate Will Grouse, Then Ratify,” sky, Farewell Perestroika, March, 41-42 Hyman, Sidney, review of Clifford, Cownsel to Jan./Feb., 8-10 Dean, Jonathan, “Coalitions for Regional the President, Oct., 40-41 Mendlovitz, Saul, review of Moynihan, On the Crises,” June, 33-34 Isaacs, John, “China Still Favored,” Sept., 7; Law of Nations, Nov., 42-43 Deudney, Daniel, “Environment and Security: “Closing the Arms Bazaar,” May, 4-5; Meselson, Matthew, “The Myth of Chemical Muddled Thinking,” April, 22-28 “Congress in a Funk,” April, 4-5; “Congress Superweapons,” April, 12-15 Dou Hui, “Order through Peaceful Coexis- Seizes Bush’s Weapons Initiative,” Nov., Milhollin, Gary, “Tug of War over High-Tech tence,” June, 24-25 3-5; “Death to the Avenger,” March, 5; Exports,” March, 7-8 Dower, John W., “Japan and the U.S. Samurai “Divided Debate on a Foregone Conclu- Miller, Marvin, “Iraq and the Rules of the Spirit,” June, 28-30 ‘ sion,” March, 3-5; “Divvying up the Disar- Nuclear Game,” July/Aug., 10-11, 43 Drell, Sidney D., “Verification Triumphs,” mament Spoils,” Dec., 4-5; “Double Duty Moore, Mike, “A Distant Drum,” Dec., 2; Nov., 28-29 for High-Tech Gulf Weapons,” April, 3-4; “How George Bush Won His Spurs,” Oct., Durrant, Damian, “Nuclear Weapons Headed “First Shots in the Counterrevolution,” 26-33; “Iraq, Continued,” Sept., 2; “A Jour- for the Trash,” Dec., 14-19 May, 34; “Northrop Bungles B-2 PR Pack- nal of Hope,” July/Aug., 2; “A Time for Prod- Dugger, Ronnie, review of Blumenthal, Pledg- age,” June, 3; “The Remilitarization of Sam ding,” Nov., 2; “Timely Matters,” Oct., 2 ing Allegiance, July/Aug., 40-41 Nunn,” Oct., 3-4; “Round and Round on Moss, Norman, review of Raviv and Melman, Engel, Margaret, review of Day, Crossing the Arms Sales,” June, 3-4; “SDI Coming Down Every Spy a Prince; and Toscano, Triple Line, Oct., 44-45 to Earth?,” Sept., 5-7; “Shifting Tide Cross, Jan./Feb., 44 Epstein, William, “Test Ban: January Meeting Reshapes 1992 Agenda,” Dec. 5-6; “Snatch- Norris, Robert S., “A First Look at the Soviet Keeps Hope Alive,” April, 10-11 ing Defeat from the Jaws of Victory,” Bomb Complex,” May, 25-36; “Nuclear Erikson, Kai, “Radiation’s Lingering Dread,” July/Aug., 3-4; “START, CFE Shoo-ins,” Notebook,” Jan./Feb., 47-48; March, 48-49; March, 34-39 Nov., 5-6; “We Love Them, We Love Them April, 48-49; May, 48-49; June, 48-49; Fahmy, Mohamed Nabil, “Obey the U.N. Not,” July/Aug., 9, 43; “What a Difference a July/Aug., 47-48; Sept., 48-49; Oct., 48-49; Charter,” June, 30-31 Year Makes,” Jan./Feb., 10-11, 45 Nov., 48-49; Dec., 49 Farinella, Paolo, “Justice for Vanunu,” Johnson, Leonard V., “Time for Common Office of Technology Assessment, “The Con- Jan./Feb., 14 Security,” June, 28 tamination Factory,” Oct., 34-39 Fenstermacher, Dan L., “Arms Race: The Jones, Michael, “Hawaii Wants No Star Wars Panel on Nuclear Weapons Safety, “How Safe Next Generation,” March, 29-33 STARS,” Jan/Feb., 3-4 is Safe?,” April, 35-40 Fieldhouse, Richard, “China’s Mixed Signals Journé, Venance, “Justice for Vanunu,” Pearson, Ruth, “United Nations: Beyond the on Nuclear Weapons,” May, 37-42 Jan./Feb., 14 ‘Chartered’ Path,” Dec., 8-10 Fisher, Cathleen S., “Build Confidence, Not Kaplan, Cynthia S., review of Zaslavskaya, Perkovich, George, review of Kaldor, The Weapons,” June, 11, 42 The Second Socialist Revolution, April, 42 Imaginary War, Oct., 41-43; “Put Nuclear December 1991 45 INDEX Weapons on the Agenda,” June, 21-23 Wolfenstein, Lincoln, “End Nuclear Addic- Jan./Feb., 44 Pitman, George R., review of MacKenzie, tion,” May, 13-15 Rienner, Lynne, The Western Alliance after Inventing Accuracy, Oct., 43-44 Wood, Bernard, “A Thin Fabric,” June, 31-32 INF, reviewed by Mark Sommer, Jan/Feb., Plesch, Daniel T., “NATO: Same Tune, Fewer Wright, Susan, “Biowar Treaty in Danger,” 44-45 Violins,” Nov., 9-10 Sept., 36-40 Roff, Sue Rabbitt, Overreaching in Paradise, Polanyi, J. C., “Collective Will or Law of the Wurst, Jim, “U.N. Command of Gulf Action reviewed by Jennifer Scarlott, April, 44-45 Jungle,” June, 23-24 Unlikely,” Jan/Feb., 4-5; “U.N. Commission Rusk, Dean, as told to Richard Rusk and Polner, Murray, review of Wilcox, Uncommon Sifts through Rubble,” Sept., 10-12 Daniel S. Papp, As J Saw It, reviewed by Martyrs, Sept., 42-43 Young, Marilyn B., “Ruthless Intervention,” Deborah Shapley, July/Aug., 38-40 Postol, Theodore, “SLCMs—lIgnored, Then June, 32-33 Sagan, Carl, and Richard Turco, A Path Stored,” Nov., 26-28 Zagalsky, Leonid V., review of Borovik, The Where No Man Thought, reviewed by Alan Powell, John, review of Pacey, Technology in Hidden War, Nov., 41-42; “Soviet Journal- Robock, March, 43-44 World Civilization, June, 39 ists: We Can Talk but the Lines Are Busy,” Sakharov, Andrei, Memoirs, and Moscow and Raffel, James, “Time for an Old Blueprint,” July/Aug., 26-30 Beyond, reviewed by David Holloway, Nov., 31-33 Zamora, Tom, “Retire Rocky Flats,” Dec., July/Aug., 37-38 Rauf, Tariq, review of Johnson, Sleepwalking 12-13; “South Africa Flirts with the NPT,” Schaeffer, Robert, Warpaths, reviewed by through History, Sept., 45-46 Jan/Feb., 27-31 Stephen van Evera, April, 42-44 Risse-Kappen, Thomas, “From Europe, a Ray Spector, Leonard S., and Jacqueline R. Smith, of Hope,” June, 26-27 Nuclear Ambitions, book note, June, 42 Robock, Alan, review of Sagan and Turco, A Toscano, Louis, Triple Cross, reviewed by Path Where No Man Thought, March, 43-44 Books Norman Moss, Jan./Feb., 44 Roederer, Juan G., “Let a Thousand Sakharovs Westing, Arthur H., ed., Environmental Haz- Bloom,” July/Aug., 18-21 Bedford, Henry F., Seabrook Station, ards of War, book note, April, 46 Romm, Joseph, “Needed—A No-Regrets reviewed by John Abbotts, March, 42-43 Whitfield, Stephen J., The Culture oft he Cold Energy Policy,” July/Aug., 31-36 Beschloss, Michael R., The Crisis Years, War, reviewed by Paul Boyer, June, 40-41 Rothstein, Linda, “Arms Reductions: Cut, but reviewed by Richard Ned Lebow, Dec., Wilcox, Fred A., Uncommon Martyrs, Carefully,” Nov., 11, 46; “Waro fW ords over 41-42 reviewed by Murray Polner, Sept., 42-43 Women Warriors,” Dec., 6-7 Blumenthal, Sidney, Pledging Allegiance, Woodward, Bob, The Conumanders, reviewed Sanders, Ben, “North Korea, South Africa reviewed by Ronnie Dugger, July/Aug., by Deborah Shapley, Sept., 41-42 Ready to Tell All?,” Sept., 8-10 40-41 Wright, Susan, ed., Preventing a Biological Scarlott, Jennifer, review of Roff, Overreach- Borovik, Artyom, The Hidden War, reviewed Arms Race, book note, June, 41-42 ing in Paradise, April, 44-45 by Leonid Zagalsky, Nov., 41-42 Young, Marilyn B., The Vietnam Wars, Shapley, Deborah, review of Woodward, The Burlazki, Fedor, Chruschtschow, reviewed by reviewed by Walter La Feber, Dec., 40-41 Commanders, Sept., 41-42; review of Rusk, Richard Ned Lebow, May, 43-45 Zaslavskaya, Tatyana, The Second Secialist As I Saw It, July/Aug., 38-40 Clifford, Clark, with Richard Holbrooke, Revolution, reviewed by Cynthia S. Kaplan, Sharma, Dhirendra, “India’s Lopsided Sci- Counsel to the President, reviewed by Sid- April, 42 ence,” May, 32-36 ney Hyman, Oct., 40-41 Zinn, Howard, Declarations of Independence, Simpson, John, “NPT Stronger after Iraq,” Day, Samuel H., Crossing the Line, reviewed reviewed by H. Bruce Franklin, Sept., 43-44 Oct., 12-13 by Margaret Engel, Oct., 44—45 Smithson, Amy E., “Chemical Inspectors: On Dibblin, Jane, Day of Two Suns, reviewed by the Outside Looking In?,” Oct., 22-25 Tom Hamilton, March, 45 Sokolsky, Joel J., “A Canadian Surprise?,” Hafemeister, David, ed., Physics and Nuclear Subjects June, 35 Arms Today, book note, J aly/Aug., 42-43 Solo, Pam, “Talking Law, Waging War,” June, Hamerow, Theodore S., From the Finland ABM: see Anti-Rallistic Missile Treaty 25-26 Station, reviewed by Ronald Steel, April, 45 Advanced tactical fighter: cancellation of, Sommer, Mark, review of Rienner, The West- Jacob, Gerald, Site Unseen, reviewed by March, 5 ern Alliance after INF, Jan./F eb., 44-45 Theodore B. Taylor, July/Aug., 41-42 Alaska: new home of F-15E, Jan./Feb., 47 Stambler, Eric, “And the Dirty Little Jasanoff, Sheila, The Fifth Branch, reviewed Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty: START triumph Weapons,” May, 20-24 by John Ahearne, March, 44—45 for, Nov., 18-19 Stanford, George S., review of Jasper, Nucle- Jasper, James M., Nuclear Politics, reviewed Argentina: nuclear agreement with Brazil, ar Politics, May, 45-46 by George S. Stanford and Robert E. Boyar, May, 8-10 Steel, Ronald, review of Hamerow, From the May, 4546 Arms control: abolish ballistic missiles, May, Finland Station, April, 45 Johnson, Haynes, Sleepwalking Through His- 13-15; Blueprint for Peace Race, Nov., Steele, Karen Dorn, “Hanford in Hot Water,” tory, reviewed by Tariq Rauf, Sept., 45-46 31-33; Bush’s unilateral move, Nov., 2; cen- May, 7-8 Kagarlitsky, Boris, Farewell Perestroika, tral to New World Order, June, 21-23, 37; Steinbruner, John, “The Rule of Law,” June, reviewed by Alexander N. Darchiyev, Congress may outdo Bush, Nov., 3-5; NAS 20 March, 41-42 panel cautious on, Nov., 11, 46; 1992 agenda, Subrahmanyam, K., “Some Nations More Kaldor, Mary, The Imaginary War, reviewed Dec., 5-6; nuclear weapons on way out, Dec., Equal than Others,” June, 21 by George Perkovich, Oct., 41-43 14-19; Senate will ratify START, Jan/Feb., Taylor, Theodore B., review of Jacob, Site Khrushchev, Nikita S., Khrushchev Remem- 8-10; START analyzed, Nov., 12-40; START, Unseen, July/Aug., 41-42 bers, reviewed by Richard Ned Lebow, May, CFE shoo-ins, Nov., 5-6; through interna- Teller, Edward, “Nuclear Glasnost,” Nov., 43-45 tional agreements, Nov., 34-35; treaties not 34-35 Khrushchev, Sergei, Khrushchev on much use, Nov., 19-21; U.S. proposes weak- van Evera, Stephen, review of Schaeffer, Khrushchev, reviewed by Richard Ned er chemical controls, Oct., 22-25; unilateral Warpaths, April, 42-44 Lebow, May, 43-45 nuclear initiatives, Dec., 14-19, 49; what a von Hippel, Frank, “Test Ban Debate, Round MacKenzie, Donald, Inventing Accuracy, difference a year makes, Jan./Feb., 10-11, 45 Three: Warhead Safety,” April, 29-31 reviewed by George R. Pitman, Oct., 43-44 Arms manufacture: in South America, May, Walker, Paul F., “And the Dirty Little Medvedev, Grigori, The Truth about Cher- 5-6 Weapons,” May, 20-24 nobyl, reviewed by David Marples, June, Arms sales: buoyed by Persian Gulf War, Oct., Warnke, Paul C., “Success Linked to ABM 38-39 14-20; China’s mixed signals, May, 37-42; Treaty,” Nov., 18-19 Moynihan, Daniel Patrick, On the Law of Congress debates limits on, June, 3-4; to Weinberg, Steve, “Soviet Journalists: Starting Nations, reviewed by Saul Mendlovitz, Middle East, Jan/Feb., 19-26; U.S. legisla- to Dig,” July/Aug., 22-25 Nov., 42-43 tion to discourage, May, 4-5 Weiss, Leonard, “Tighten Up on Nuclear Pacey, Arnold, Technology in World Civiliza- Australia: contamination by British testing, Cheaters,” May, 11-12 tion, reviewed by John Powell, June, 39 Nov., 7; site of chemical tests, De~., 30-39 White, Gerard, “Tug of War over High-Tech Raviv, Dan, and Yossi Melman, Every Spy a Avenger: death to, March, 5 Exports,” March, 7-8 Prince, reviewed by Norman Moss, B-2 Stealth bomber: Northrop bungles PR 46 The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists INDEX package, June, 3 Economy: military R&D poor scapegoat, Media: coverage of Gulf War, March, 26-28; Biological weapens: loopholes in convention Jan./Feb., 38-43 May, 16-19; Oct., 7-9; PSR launches maga- on, Sept., 36-40; what Congress can do, Energy: no-regrets policy needed, July/Aug., zine, July/Aug., 5-6; publishing in Poland, Sept., 38 31-36 Sept., 5; in Soviet Union, July/Aug., 22-30 Brazil: nuclear agreement with Argentina, Energy Department: contaminated facilities, Middle East: arms sales to, Jan./Feb., 19-26; May, 8-10 Oct., 34-39; cost of cleanup at, Oct., 38; gives Oct., 14-20; could adopt confidence-building Britain: death of Lord Penney, May, 48; nucle- research to Health and Human Services, measures, June, 11, 42 ar tests in Australia, Nov., 7; to host fewer April, 6; headaches at nuclear weapons com- Military budget: gets new support from Sam U.S. nuclear air forces, April, 48 plex, Jan/Feb., 47; laboratory oversight crit- Nunn, Oct., 3-4; nuclear weapons in 1992, Bulletin: clock reset, Dec., 2, 3; mission of, icized, Oct., 4-5; new culture, June, 7; OTA April, 48; peace dividend from, Dec., 4-5; July/Aug., 2 report on contamination at facilities, Oct., Pentagon wants increase after Gulf War, Bush, George: disarmament initiatives, Dec., 34-39; update on facility safety, July/Aug., 5; May, 3-4; snatching defeat from jaws of vic- 14-19, 49; hyping an Iraqi bomb, March, warhead orders flat, May, 48; whistleblow- tory, July/Aug., 3-4 26--28; macho on Gulf, Jan./Feb., 2; new ers, Oct., 4 Military R&D: poor scapegoat for flagging chemical ban initiative, July/Aug., 9, 43; Environment: and national security, April, 2, economy, Jan./Feb., 38-43 New World Order proclaimed by, June, 2; 17-28; June, 45; nuclear waste at Hanford, Missile defense: ground based, Jan./Feb., and presidential war-making powers, Oct., May, 7-8; pollution in Eastern Europe, June, 12-13 26-33; proposes watered-down chemical 12-18; recycling in Germany, July/Aug., 5; National laboratories: contractors criticized by inspections, Oct., 22-25 U.S. military exempted, April, 5. See also GAO, Oct., 4-5; new jobs for, Nov., 6-7 ‘alutrons: in Iraqi nuclear program, Sept., Nuclear weapons production NATO: CFE buries Cold War, Jan./Feb., 14-23; Oct., 7-9 Europe: changes hopeful, June, 26-27; NATO’s 32-37; new strategy like old, Nov., 9-10 Canada: Quebec succession part of New World new strategy like old, Nov., 9-10 Navy, U.S.: marine mammal program, Order?, June, 35 France: nuclear testing, March, 6-7 Jan./Feb., 4; nuclear weapons at sea, 1990, CFE: see Conventional Forces in Europe Germany: East’s radiation exposure records, Sept., 49; reducing nuclear-powered fleet, Treaty May, 6; gives Soviet weapons to U.S., May, 48 ‘hemical weapons: dumped in Scandinavia, July/Aug., 4-5; recycling in, July/Aug., 5; Navy, Soviet: dumping at Petropavlovsk, Oct., March, 10-15; dumped near Belgium, May, women’s rights in unified, Jan./Feb., 6-7 11, 46; nuclear weapons at sea, 1990, Sept., 47; myth of, April, 12-15; new effort to ban, Global Positioning System: Sept., 3-4 49; reducing nuclear-powered fleet, May, 48 July/Aug., 9, 43; World War II tests of, Dec., Gorbachev, Mikhail: response to Bush initia- New World Order: reflections on, June, 19-37 30-39 tives, Dec., 14-19, 49 North Korea: and NPT, Sept., 8-10; plutonium Shemical weapons convention: U.S. proposals GPALs: antimissile program gaining popular- processing plant, Dec., 10-11 for, Oct., 22-25 ity, June, 9-10, 42. See also Missile defense Northrop: bungles B-2 PR package, June, 3 *hernoby!: health effects of, Sept., 4-5 Greenpeace: rebuffed at French test site, Norway: WWII chemicals dumped offshore, ‘hina: most favored nation status, Sept., 7; March, 6-7 March, 10-15 mixed signals on nuclear weapons, May, Gulf War: see Persian Gulf War Nuclear alert: relaxed, June, 48 37-42; nuclear power plant worries Hong H-bomb: controversy continued, Nov., 45-46 Nuclear disarmament: Bush-Gorbachev initia- Kong, Oct., 9-11, 46 Hanford: waste in soil at, May, 7-8. See also tives, Dec., 14-19, 49; Congress may outdo SOCOM: eases export on dual-use technolo- Energy Department; Nuclear weapons Bush, Nov., 3-5; cut, but carefully, Nov., 11, gies, March, 7-8 plants 46; end arms control and begin, Nov., 29-31; Cold War: buried by CFE, Jan./Feb., 32-37; Hawaii: Star Wars tests on Kauai, Jan/Feb., race toward?, Nov., 2 end of threatens world order, June, 31-32 344 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty: North Command-and-control: airborne Sept., 48 Health: dispute over classifying research Korea, South Africa may join, Sept., 8-10; Competitiveness: military R&D not an issue, results, Jan./Feb., 7; Energy Department South Africa flirts with, Jan./Feb., 27-31; Jan./Feb., 38-43 research on, April, 6 stronger after Persian Gulf War, Oct., 12-13; Complex Cleanup: Oct., 34-39 High-tech weapons: double duty for, April, 3-4 and test ban amendment conference, April, Comprehensive test ban: new chance for, Dec., Hong Kong: fears Chinese nuclear power 10-11; tighten up on cheaters, May, 11-12. 5-6; NPT members keep hope alive for, plant, Oct., 9-11, 46 See also Nuclear proliferation April, 10-11; and third generation weapons, India: lopsided science in, May, 32-36 Nuclear Notebook ta!.ies: disarmament race March, 29-33; and warhead safety, April, INF Treaty: final missiles destroyed, June, 48 September-October i91, Dec., 49; nuclear 29-34; June, 44 Insensitive high explosives: in nuclear pursuits, May, 49; nuclear tests worldwide, Computers: army to develop viruses for, Dec., weapons, July/Aug., 47 April, 49; nuclear weapons at sea, 1990, 5; FBI wants lax security for, July/Aug., 4 Iraq: armed by U.S. and others, Jan./Feb., Sept., 49; Soviet nuclear stockpile, 1991, Confidence-building measures: in Middle East, 19-26; close to the bomb?, March, 16-28; July/Aug., 48; Soviet strategic forces, 1990, June, 11, 42 Congressional debate on war with, March, March, 49; U.S. nuclear weapons safety and Conventional Forces in Europe Treaty: buries 3-5; destruction of in Persian Gulf War, May, control features, Oct., 48-49; U.S. stockpile, Cold War, Jan./Feb., 32-37; ratification a 2; nuclear development not deterred by 1991, June, 49; U.S. strategic forces, 1990, shoo-in, Nov., 5-6 NPT, May, 11-12; nuclear program, Sept., Jan./Feb., 48; where Soviet weapons are, Conventional weapons: destructive power of, 14-23; Oct., 7-9; Osirak reactor bombed by Nov., 48-49 May, 20-24; military prefers over nuclear, Israel, Oct., 5; and rules of nuclear game, Nuclear power: accident at Japanese reactor, June, 5-7 July/Aug., 10-11, 43; U.N. commission May, 4; and dread of radiation, March, 34-39; Cruise missiles: awestruck press does Toma- searches for weapons in, Sept., 10-12; explosions to generate, Nov., 6-7; Hong hawk PR, April, 7-8; fans on warpath, Israel: danger from nuclear retaliation by, Kong fears Chinese Chernobyl, Oct., 9-11, July/Aug., 44; not included in START, Nov., July/Aug., 10-11, 43; owes justice to 46; safety, TV portrayal of, April, 5; Soviet 26-28 Mordechai Vanunu, Jan./Feb., 14 citizens say nyet to, June, 5 Czechoslovakia: will pollution kill the revolu- Japan: accident at Mihama nuclear plant, May, Nuclear proliferation: Brazil, Argentina sign tion?, June, 12-18; women’s rights in, 4; buying U.S. secrets?, Jan./Feb., 7; CLA’s inspection agreement, May, 8-10; China’s Jan./Feb., 6-7 new enemy, Nov., 7; nuclear ship revived, nuclear weapons, May, 37-42; encouraged by Denmark: WWII chemicals dumped offshore, Jan./Feb., 47; views U.S. samurai spirit, relaxed export controls, March, 7-8; North March, 10-15 June, 28-30 Korea, Dec., 10-11. See also Iraq Disarmament: see Arms control; Nuclear dis- Just war theory: and Persian Gulf War, Sept., Nuclear research: Indian emphasis on, May, armament 2, 24-35; Nov., 44 32-36 Downloading: of missiles under START, Nov., Kennedy, John F.: Blueprint for Peace Race, Nuclear stockpile: Soviet, 1991, July/Aug., 48; 21-23 Nov., 31-33 Trident II warheads in short supply, Eastern Europe: political reforms favor men, Krasnoyarsk: how radar ended up in, July/Aug., 47; U.S., June 49 Jan./Feb., 6-7; weapons cuts under CFE, July/Aug., 7-9 Nuclear strategy: NATO has not changed, Jan/F eb., 32-37; will pollution kill the revo- Law: as basis for New World Order, June, 20 Nov., 9-10; obsolete, May, 13-15; Silk Purse lution?, June, 12-18 Lopatin, Viadimir: Jan./Feb., 15-17 abandoned, Sept., 48 December 1991 47 INDEX Nuclear tests: contamination controversy in gressional debate on, March, 3-5; high-tech bomb for, March, 10-15 Australia, Nov., 7; downwinders compensat- weapons in, April, 3-4; and just war theory, Sematech: supplier bought by Japanese com- ed, Jan./Feb., 5-6; French slam door on Sept., 30-35; may strengthen NPT, Oct., pany, Jan/Feb., 7 Greenpeace, March, 6-7; of effects on 12-13; morality of, Sept., 2; more moderate South Africa: and NPT, Jan./Feb., 27-31; weapons, July/Aug., 47; Soviet citizens com- force better in, June, 23-24; New World Sept., 8-10 plain about, Jan./Feb., 47; worldwide, Order poor rationale for, June, 25-26; no con- South Korea: U.S. nuclear weapons in, Sept., 1945-1990, April, 49. See also Comprehen- gressional role once begun, April, 4-5; Pen- 48 sive test ban tagon wants bigger budget after, May, 3-4; Soviet science: cuts in, Dec., 20-24; scientists’ Nuclear waste: at Hanford, May, 7-8; naval ruthless intervention, June, 32-33; television role critical, July/Aug., 18-21 dumping in Soviet Union, Oct., 11, 46; trans- coverage of, May, 16-19; U.N. Commission Soviet Union: bomb complex, May, 25-36; cit- mutation of, July/Aug., 12-17; Oct. 47 documents Lraqi weapons after, Sept., 10-12; izens reject nuclear power, June, 5; cutting Nuclear weapons plants: contamination at, U.S. headed for war in, Jan./Feb., 2; U.S., back on weapons, June, 8-9, 47; journalism Oct., 34-39; Energy Department headaches not U.N. in command of, Jan./Feb., 4-5; in, July/Aug., 22-30; nuclear test raises at, Jan./Feb., 47; first look at Soviet bomb unnecessarily harsh, June, 28; unnecessary, row Jan./Feb., 47; less prepared for complex, May, 25-36; midway through safe- March, 2; use of Global Positioning System START negotiations, Nov., 36-40, 47; may ty assessment, July/Aug., 5; radioactive in, Sept., 3-4; weapons used in, May, 20-24; sell uranium to U.S., Oct., 5-6; military wastes at Hanford, May, 7-8; retire Rocky women in, Dec., 6-7 newspaper criticizes Bulletin, April, 5-6; Flats, Dec., 12-13; safety board must obey Physicians for Social Responsibility: launches nuclear stockpile, 1991, July/Aug., 48; Sunshine Act, March, 5; workers restricted, magazine, July/Aug., 5-6 nuclear waste at Petropavlovsk, Oct., 11, June, 7 Poland: publishing in, Sept., 5; will pollution 46; Russians grab for military control, Nuclear weapons production: steps in, March, kill the revolution?, June, 12-18; women’s Jan/Feb., 15-17; scientists most important 16-25. See also Nuclear weapons plants rights in, Jan./Feb., 6-7 resource, July/Aug., 18-21; strategic forces, Nunn, Sam: remilitarization of, Oct., 3-4 Radiation: cancer risk at Oak Ridge, June, 4; 1990, March, 49; survival before science, On-Site Inspection Agency: Dec., 25-% dread of, March, 34-39; exposure of East Dec., 20-24; wandering radar, July/Aug., Paris Air Show: Oct., 14-20 German miners, May, 6; food irradiation, 7-9; wants display satellite back from U.S., Patriot missile: used to justify SDI, April, 3-4 March, 46-47 June, 7; where nuclear weapons are, Nov., Peace dividend: divvying up, Dec., 4-5 Rocky Flats: time to retire, Dec., 12-13. See 48-49. See also Navy, Soviet Peaceful coexistence: basis of New World also Energy Department; Nuclear weapons SRAM-A: safety problems of, March, 48 Order, June, 24-25 plants Stanford University: challenge to classified Penney, William George (Lord): death of, May, Russian republic: wants military control, medical research, Jan./Feb., 7 48 Jan./Feb., 15-17 Star Wars: Congress and, Sept., 5-7; effects of Perez de Cuellar, Javier: Dec., 8-10 Satellites: Global Positioning System, Sept., nuclear blast on, July/Aug., 47; Patriot Persian Gulf War: Americans would favor 3-4; return of Soviet display blocked by breathes new life into, June, 9-10, 42; testing nuclear weapons in, April, 48; awestruck NRC, June, 7 in Hawaii, Jan./Feb., 3-4 press does Tomahawk PR, April, 7-8; con- Scandinavia: chemicals an underwater time Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START): analysis of, Nov., 12-40; last issues settled, Sept., 12-13, 46; Senate will ratify, Jan/Feb., ioSeT ATEMENT OF OWNERSHReIquPir,ed bMy 3A9 NAGUSC EM368E5 NT AND CIRCULATION 8-10 Strategic Defense Initiative: see Star Wars Sweden: WWII chemicals dumped offshore, March, 10-15 Third World: arms sales to, Jan./Feb., 19-26; insecure after Persian Gulf War, June, 36 Tomahawk: see Cruise missiles Transmutation: of nuclear waste, July/Aug., 12-17; Oct., 47 Trident IT: not enough warheads for, July/Aug., 47 U.S. military: exemption from environmental rules, April, 5; force reorganization, June, 48; wants conventional more than nuclear weapons, June, 5-7 U.S. nuclear forces: nuclear stockpile, 1991, Complete Mating Agoress 642 S. Kimbark Avenue, June, 49; reduced in Britain, April, 48; strategic forces, 1990, Jan/Feb., 48. See also Navy, U.S. Jnited Nations: Charter model for New Comptete Madng Aduress World Order, June, 30-31; disarmament efforts in Iraq, Sept., 10-12; election of new secretary-general, Dec., 8-10; not in com- mand in Gulf, Jan./Feb., 4-5 Uranium: Soviets may supply U.S. power companies with, Oct., 5-6 Uranium miners: compensated, Jan./Feb., 5-6; exposed to radiation in Germany, May, 6 Vanunu, Mordechai: justice for, Jan./Feb., 14 Verification: poking and prying for peace, Dec., 25-29; triumphs in START treaty, Nov., 28-29 War-making powers: presidential v. congres- sional, Oct., 26-33 Warhead safety: and test ban, April, 29-34 Whistleblowers: Energy Department, Oct., 4 639 Women soldiers: combat controversy, Dec., 6-7 m| eC orteibtoyv et haetr e thceo rrsetcatt eamnedn tsc ommpaldeet e by SiNgreaturie kanay T ite Mof aEaito wPrupme ner BusLwneessa tMeineagelr 0” OwM a20 sso Woairfnltged,r ,D eWMcaa.r,r c h3,I0I -:3 19c0 -h1e5m;i ccahle miwceala pownesap odnsu mpteesdt- 48 The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists Loeestsintteceaeail acaineeienatines Bee et! s2==

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