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The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 1993: Vol 49 Index PDF

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Preview The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists 1993: Vol 49 Index

INDEX | Authors Cohen, Avner, “Did Nukes Nudge the Holloway, David, “Soviet Scientists Speak r PLO?,” Dec., 11-13; “A Sacred Matter,” Out,” May, 18-19 Abbotts, John, review of Winkler, Life June, 39-41 Hoodbhoy, Pervez, “Myth-Building: The Under a Cloud, Dec., 50-51 Colby, Gale, “Fabricating Guilt,” Oct., 12-13 ‘Islamic’ Bomb,” June, 42-49 Albright, David, “Engineer for Hire,” Dec., Cortright, David, “Sanctions: Do They Ide, Hiroshi, “They Weren't ‘Tests’,” July/ 28-36; “Iraq: Supplier-spotting,” Jan. Work?,” Nov., 14-15 Aug., 54 Feb., 8-9; “Non-Proliferation Treaty: Davis, Jennifer, “Squeezing Apartheid,” Imai, Ryukichi, “A Fine Point of Nuclear North Korea Drops Out,” May, 9-11; “A Nov., 16-19 Theology,” June, 34; “Asian Ambitions, Proliferation Primer,” June, 14-23; “Slow Driscoll, James, “Hawks in Sheep’s Cloth- Rising Tensions,” June, 33-36 But Steady,” July/Aug., 5-6; “South Africa: | ing,” May, 47 Isaacs, John, “ACDA On The Line,” June, 6 The ANC and the Atom Bomb,” April, Dumas, Lloyd, “Organizing the Chaos,” | “The Base-Closure Waltz,” May, 5-6; “A 3% ¥ “South Africa Comes Clean,” May, Nov., 46-49 sillion-dollar Bonanza,” July/Aug., 3-5; 39 -5; “South Africa: A Curious Conver- Eland, Ivan, “Think Small,” Nov., 36—40 3ottoms Up,” Nov., 12-13; “A Bouquet for sion,” June, 8-11 Elliott, Kimberly Ann, “A Look at the 3ush,” March, 10, 46; “The Clinton Military Andreyey, Nikolai, “From ‘Nyet’ to ‘Don’t Record,” Nov., 32-35 3udget,” May, 7-8; “‘Conversion’ From Know’,” Jan./Feb., 21-2! Epstein, William, “CTB: Ty o Paths, One the Unconverted,” July/Aug., ae “House Arbatov, Alexei G., “START II, Red Ink, and Goal,” Oct., 3-5 OK’s Russian Aid,” Sept., 3-4; “It’s a Boris Yeltsin,” April, 16-21 Evstafiev, Dmitri, Saying Da, Saying National Security Policy, Stupid,” Sept., Ardaev, Vladimir, “AWOL,” Oct., 36; “ 3ridg- Nyet,” Nov., 28-31 “The Paper Chase,” Jan./Feb., 3-4; ing East and West,” Oct., 24-29 “Don’t Feld, Bernard, “Cold Warriors Take Over,” “Peacekeeping: Just Put It On Our Tab,” Blame Moscow,” Oct., 52 May, 14 Oct., 7-9; “Pentagon Clings to Costly Arkin, William M., “British Nuclear Forces Freeman, Karen, “The ‘Man-break’ Tests,” Lifestyle,” April, 3-5; “Star Wars Reverts 1993,” Sept., 57; “Chinese Nuclear Forces March, 40; “The VA’s Sorry, the Army’s to Maiden Name,” July/Aug., 8; “Strength- 1993,” Nov., 57; “Control Over the U.S. Silent,” March, 39-43 ening the World Policeman,’ De »¢., 14-15; Nuclear Stockpile, 1947-1959,” March, 48; Garwin, Richard L.,‘ ‘ Atoms Do Not Age,” “Three Outrages,” June, 6-7; “ Treading “Defensor Vindex Redux,” July/Aug., 56; Oct., 10-11 Water,” June, 3-5 “Disarming, Disarmingly,” Jan./ ‘Feb., 56; | Gascoyne, Stephen, “Slipcovering a Super- Johansson, Sarah, “ Spatial Relations,” Nov., “Estimated Nuclear Stockpiles 1945-1993,” fund Site,” Sept., 33-37; “SQI—The Burn- 344 Dec., 57; “Estimated Russian (CIS) Nucle- ing Issue,” Sept., 34-35 Jones, Michael, “Star Wars: STARS No Star ar Stockpile (July 1993),” ae 57; Gevorkian, Natalia, “The KGB: ‘They Still on Kauai,” April, 11-13 “Flying Free—Nuclear-free, That Is,” Need Us’,” Jan./Feb., 36-38 Khariton, Yuli B., “The Khariton Version,” Oct., 55; “For Sale-ski,” Jan. Feb., 56; Gofman, John W., “Beware the Data Did- May, 20-31 “French Nuclear Forces 1993,” Oct., 56; | dlers,” May, 40 “The Rules of Re- Kianitsa, Victor, “Test Anxiety,” Oct., 37-39 “meFnrto,m” tJhuel yA/lAiucge.,- in-26W;o nd“eGrullaf nd WarD:e parTth-e || sReeasrecahr,c”h ,”M ayM,a y,4 2; 43 “Violating the Rules of | KiWseelaylotvh,, ” SeJ -an—./F e“bN.o, thi12n-g1 3;i n “COoumrm onMa,n Nion Desert Glows—With Propaganda,” May, | Gold, David, review of Markusen and Yud Missouri,” March, 3. —38; “Ukraine: Stuck 11-12, 46; “Have I Got a Deal For You,” kin, Dismantling the Cold War Economy, With the Goods,” — 30-33; “The View June, 56; “Known Nuclear Tests World- May, 45-46 From Kiev,” Nov., wide, 1945 to December 31, 1992,” April, Goldanskii, Vitalii, “Russia’s * Red-Brown’ Konovalov, Alexz mso r, Saying Da, Saying 49; “More Warheads Check Out,” Sept., 56; Hawks,” June, 24-27; “Scientists Except- Nye t,” Nov., 28-31 “Naval Base Goes Into Dry Dock,” Sept., ed,” Oct., 54 Krepon, Michael, review of Bunn, Arms 56; “Now Is That Clear?,” July/Aug., 56; Goldfarb, Jeffrey, review of Tismaneanu, Control by Committee, Nov., 51-52 “NPT—Onward and Upward,” July/Aug., Reinve nting Politics, March, 44 Leskov, Sergei, “Dividing the Glory of the 56; “Nuclear. Junkies: igo, Lovable Little Govan, Emilia, review of Shulman, The Fathers,” May, 37-39; “A Lively Interest Bombs,” July/Aug., 22-27; “Nuclear Pur- Threat At Home, Jan./Feb., 49-50 in Science History?,” May, 28; “Notes suits,” May, 48-49; “Pantex Takes It Gray, Peter, review of Gerber, On The Home From a Dying Spaceport,” Oct., 40-43; Apart,” March, 48; “Powering Down Quiet- Front, April, 45-46 “Nuclear Dumping: Lies and Incompe- ly,” June, 56; “Royal Commandos in the Gupta, Vipin, “Sleuthing From Home,” Dec., tence,” June, 13, 55; “The View From Spotlight,” Oct., 55; “Russia’s Pantexes,” 41-47 Moscow,” Nov., 8-10 Jan./Feb., 56; “Russian (CIS) Strategic Cutiontov, set 1, “Aleksandr Rutskoi, Vice- Lockwood, Dunbar, “Arms Control: On Clin- Nuclear Forces, End of 1992,” March, 49; King?,” Jan./Feb., 30; “Gennadi Burbu- ton’s Calender,” Jan./Feb., 6-8; “Dribbling Russian/Soviet Weapons Secrets Re- lis—The First to Fa ll,” Jan./ Feb., 29; “In | Aid to Russia,” July/Aug., 39-42; “Parcel- vealed,” April, 48; “Still Going,” Nov., 56; With the Volsky Plan?,” Jan./Feb., 35; “Out ing Out Nunn-Lugar,” July/Aug., 40-41 “Through (With) the L ooking Glass,” July/ With the Gaidar Plan?,” Jan. Feb., 34; Lopez, George, “Sanctions: Do They Work?,” Aug., 56; “Uranium Glut,” Jan./Feb., 56; “Suppressing a Rising Press,” Jan. Feb., Nov., 14-15 “U.S. Nuclear Weapons Stockpile (June 39441 Lowen, Rebecca, review of Lanouette with 1993),” June, 57; “U.S. Strategic Nuclear Hallin, Daniel, review of Wolton, Wa: r Ga: me “ | Silard, Genius in the Shadows, June, 51-52 Forces, End of 1992,” Jan./Feb., 57; “U.S. Taylor, War and the Media; Kellner, The Mabe, William, “Proliferation: Retrofit Rus- Weapons Secrets Revealed,” Mare h,4 8 Persian Gulf TV War; and Fialka, Hotel sian Research Reactors,” April, 9-11 Azhgikhina, Nadezhda, “High Culture Meets Warriors, Sept., 52-54 Marples, David, “Chernobyl’s Lengthening Trash TV,” Jan./Feb., 42-46 Halverson, Thomas, “The Danger Seale.” Shadow,” Sept.. 38-43; “No Exaggerated Babcock, Glenys A., “Chernobyl: Percep Jil A 7; “Ticking Time B« bs: Kast ‘hernoby] Claims from Belarus and tions of Peril,” June, 11-12 Bloe Reactors,” July/Aug., 43- Ukraine,” April. 47 Bell, John, review of De Landa, War in the Harnilton, John Maxwell, review of ‘ iausen, McCally, Mike, review of Feshbach and Friend Age of Intelligent Machines, June, 54 Nonproliferation and the National Inter- ly, Ecocide in the USSR, Jan./Feb., 47-48 3erger, Mikhail, “The Economy: Disinte- est, Nov., 50-51 McNab, Philip, “Sleuthing From Home,” grating,” Jan./Feb., 22-35 Handler, Joshua, “Nuclear Navy: No Sleep in Dec., 44-47 Breyman, Steve, review of Shah, Sonia, ed., the Deep for Russian Subs,” April, 7-9 Mearsheimer, John J., review of Shapley, Between Fear & Hope, June, 52-53 Hartung, William D., “Welcome To the U.S. Promise and Power, July/Aug., 49-51 Bukharin, Oleg, “Soft Landing for Bomb Arms Superstore,” Sept., 20-26 Mendelsohn, Jack, “Huddling With the Hon- Uranium,” Sept., 44-49 Hayes, Peter, “ What North Korea Wants,” chos in Havana,” Sept., 15-19; “The World Cahn, Anne H., “Team - The Trillion-Dollar Dec., 8-10 According to Raul,” Sept., 16 Experiment,” April, 22-23, 27-31 Henderson, Simon, “We Can Do It Our- Moore, Mike, “Apocalypse Then,” April, 2; Christiansen, Drew, “Unintended Conse- selves’,” Sept., 2 “Beyond the Yurt,” Oct., 2; “Eating Grass,” quences,” Nov., 41-45 Hibbs, Mark, “Iraq: Supplier-spotting,” June, 2; “Felony Murder,” July/Aug., 2; Chugaev, Sergei, “Khasbulatov & Co.” Jan./Feb., 8-9; “South Africa: The ANC “First, Puzzlement; Then Action,” March, Jan./Feb., 26-31 and the Atom Bo mb,” April, 32-37 24-29; “Messy, But Useful,” Nov., 2; “New December 1993 53 INDEX Imperatives,” March, 2; “Reasons of Testing,” Oct., 5; “But Who Will Run the crats with Orchestra,” Jan./Feb., 14-20; State,” May, 2; review of Romm, The Once New Generation?,” Jan./Feb., 5; “Defense “Finding Its Own Way,” Oct., 16-23; “The and Future Superpower, April, 44—45; re- Work Means Jobs—For Mexicans,” Nov., | Guns of October,” Dec., 16-20; “Political view of Rotblat, et al., A Nuclear-We apon 5; “Drip, Drip, Drip,” Oct., 5; “FEMA, the Parties,” Oct., 31 Free World, Dec., 48-49; “Too Much Man-made Disaster,” July/Aug., 7-8; “For | Zamora Collina, Tom, “Ban Holds; Labs SYFS,” Sept., 2; “Trust Me,” Dec., 2 sritish Eyes Only?,” April, 5-6; “Hail t« Lose,” Sept., 12-13; “China Bucks Ban Morrison, Philip, “Ending Overkill,” March, the Military Plenipotentiary,” March, 3—4; | With Bang,” Dec. 33 -4; “Nuclear Junkies: 12-23 “Holy Smokes, Batman!,” March, 5; Testing, Testing, 1, 2 » O3o— Forever,” July Moss, Norman, “Britain: THORP Flap,” “Kapitsa on Beria,” May, 27; “Keeping ‘It’ | Aug., 28-32 March, 8-9; “Spies: ‘Sonya’ Explains,” | Down on the Farm,” May, 8; “Making Hay July/Aug., 9-11 Bashing Gays,” May, 6-7; “Moving Tar- Mukherjee, Sadhan, “India and the NPT,” gets,” Sept., 7; “Plugging the Nuclear Books Jan. Feb., 54-55 Pipeline,” Nov., 4-5; “Preserving Losers’ Miiller, Harald, “Europe’s Leaky Borders,” History,” June, 5-6; “Radiation and Bunn, ( reorge, Arms Control by Committee, June, 27-29 Health: PSR Pinpoints Problems,” Jan. reviewed by Michael Krepon, Nov., 51 52 Myers, Nancy, “Rediscovering Russia,” Feb., 10, 50; “Run, SPOT, Run,” Sept., 4-5; Cassidy, David, Unce rtainty: The Life and Jan./Feb., 2 “Tearing the Wings Off Flies,” March, 6; Science of Werner Heisenbe rg, reviewed Myers, Norman, review of Smil, China’ review of Albright, et al., World Inventory by William Sweet, Sept., 50-52 Environmental Crisis, Dec., 51-52 of Plutonium and Highly Enriched Ura Clausen, Peter, Nonprolife ration and the Nelson, Daniel N., “Ancient Enmity, Modern nium 1992, July/Aug., 52; “The Wages of National Interest, reviewed by John Max- Guns,” Dec., 21-27 Sin? About $4.1 Million,” Jan./Feb., 5; well Hamilton, Nov., 50-51 Nelson, Eric, “Hanford: Startup Is Cleanup, “What a Blast,” Dec., 5; “Y’all Come Down Albright, David, et al., World Inve ntory of Energy Says,” Dec., 6-7 to the Missile Shoot,” Dec., 4 Plutonium and Highly Enriched Urani- Norris, Robert, “British Nuclear Forces Sagdeev, Roald, “Russian Scientists Save um 1992, reviewed by Linda Rothstein, 1993,” Sept., 57; “Chinese Nuclear Forces American Secrets,” May, 32-36 July/Aug., 52 1993,” Nov., 57: “Control Over the U.S. Samoilenko, Alexandr, “Political Parties,” De Landa, Manuel, War in the Age of Intelli- Nuclear Stockpile, 1947-1959,” March, 48; Oct., 31 ge nt Machines, reviewed by John Bell, “Defensor Vindex Redux,” July/Aug., 56; Shapley, Deborah, “Clintonizing Science Pol- June, 54 “Disarming, Disarmingly,” Jan./Feb., 56; icy,” Dec., 38-44 Dyson, Freeman, From Eros to Gaia, book- “Estimated Nuclear Stockpiles 1945- Sharp, Jane, “Europe’s Nuclear Dominos,” note, June, 54-55 1993,” Dec., ot, “Estimated Russian (CIS) June, 29-33; “The West’s Moral Failure,” Feshbach, Murray, and Alfred Friendly, Jr., Nuclear Stockpile (July 1993),” July/Aug., March, 11, 47 Ecocide in the USSR, reviewed by Mike 57; “Flying Free—Nuclear-free, That Is,” Smirnov, Yuri, “The Khariton Version,” May, McCally, Jan/Feb., 47-48 Oct., 55; “For Sale-ski,” Jan./Feb., 56; 20-31 Fialka, John, Hotel Warriors, reviewed by “French Nuclear Forces 1993,” Oct., 56; | Smithson, Amy E., “Basic Provisions,” April, Daniel Hallin, Sept., 52-54 “Have I Got a Deal For You,” June, 56; 42-43; “Chemical Destruction: The Work ( rallagher, ( ‘arole, d Ame rican Ground Ze ro, “Known Nuclear Tests Worldwide, 1945 to 3egins,” April, 38-43; “Chemical Weapons: reviewed by Iris Poliski, June, 50-51 December 31, 1992,” April, 49; “More War- Conventional Wait,” Sept., 10-11; “The Gerber, Michele Stenehjem, On The Home heads Check Out,” Sept., 56; “Naval Base | Preparatory Commission,” April, 40 Front, reviewed by Peter Gray, April, Goes Into Dry Dock,” Sept., 56; “Now is | Strekal, Oleg, “Westward Ho!,” Nov., 10-11 4546 That Clear?,” July/Aug., 56; “NPT—On- Subrahmanyam, K., “An Equal-Opportunity Keliner, Douglas, The Persian Gulf TV War, ward and Upward,” July/Aug., 56; “Nucle NPT,” June, 37-39 reviewed by Daniel Hallin, Sept., 52-54 ar Pursuits,” May, 48-49; “Pantex Takes It Sweet, William, review of Cassidy, Uncer- Lanouette, William, with Bela Silard, Genius Apart,” March, 48; “Powering Down Quiet- tainty; and Powers, Heisenbe rg’s War, in the Shadows, reviewed by Rebecca ly,” June, 56; “Royal Commandos in the Sept., 50-52 Lowen, June, 51-52 Spotlight,” Oct., 55; “Russia’s Pantexes,” Tarasenko, Maxim, “Military Space: Twinkle, Markusen, Ann, and Joel Yudkin, Disman- Jan./Feb., 56; “Russian (CIS) Strategic Twinkle Little Topaz,” July/Aug., 11-13 tling the Cold War Economy, reviewed by Nuclear Forces, End of 1992,” March, 49; Tsipis, Kosta, “Ending Overkill,” March, David Gold, May, 45-46 Russian/Soviet Weapons Secrets Re- 12-23; “Remembering Bernie,” May, 17 Menges, Constantine C., The Futwre of Ger- vealed,” April, 48; “Still Going,” Nov., 56; Jstiugov, Mikhail, “Big Oil Moves In,” Oct., many and the Atlantic Alliance, reviewed “Through (With) the Looking Glass,” July 44-47; “An Embarrassment of Weapons,” by Thomas Risse-Kappen, Jan/Feb., 48-49 Aug., 56; “Uranium Glut,” Jan./Feb., 56; Oct., 48-50; “Gold and Diamonds,” Oct., 51; Powers, Thomas, Heisenberg’s War, reviewed “U.S. Nuclear Weapons Stockpile (June “Imaginary Billions,” Oct., 50; “A “Tem- by William Sweet, Sept., 50-52 1993),” June, 57; “U.S. Strategic Nuclear porarily Nuclear State’,” Oct., 33-36 Romm, Joseph J., The Once and Future Forces, End of 1992,” Jan./Feb., 57; “U.S. | von Hippel, Frank, “Censorship: Russian Superpower, reviewed by Mike Moore, Weapons Secrets Revealed,” March, 48 Whistleblower Faces Jail,” March, 7-8; April, 44—45 Oznobistchev, Sergei, “Saying Da, Saying “Nuclear Junkies: Testing, Testing, 1, 29, | Rotblat, Joseph, et al., eds., A Nuclear Nyet,” Nov., 28-31 3—Forever,” July/Aug., 28-32 We apon-F re € World, review ed by Mike Poliski, Lris, review of Gallagher, American Wattenberg, Albert, “Remembering Bernie,” Moore, Dec., 48-49 Ground Zero, June, 50-51 May, 14-15 Shah, Sonia, ed., Between Fear & Hope, re- Popova, Lydia, “Russia’s Nuclear Elite on Webb, Gregory, “CFE Update,” Dec., 24 viewed by Steve Breyman, June, 52-53 Rampage,” April, 14-15, 47 Weisskopf, Victor, “Giving Heisenberg His Shapley, Deborah, Promise and Powe r, re- Powers, Gerard, “Unintended Conse Due,” Nov., 23 viewed by John J. Mearsheimer, July/Aug., quences,’ * Nov., 41-45 Werleigh, Claudette, “Haiti and the Half- 49-51 Prados, John, “The New Man at Langley,” | hearted,” Nov., 20-23 Shulman, Seth, The Threat At Home, re- July/Aug., 35; “Team B: The Trillion Dollar Wiesner, Jerome, “Ending Overkill,” March, viewed by Emilia Govan, Jan./Feb., 49-50 Experiment,” April, 22-23, 27-31; “Wool- 12-23 Smil, Vaclav. China’s Environmental Crisis, sey and the CIA,” July/Aug., 33-38 Wolfsthal, Jon Brook, “Missiles: The Israeli reviewed by Norman Myers, Dec., 51-52 Puzanov, Oleg, “Looking Forward to the Initiative,” Sept., 8-9 Taylor, Philip, War and the Media, reviewed Past,” Oct.., 47; “Quiet Tensions,” Oct., 30-32 Woodward, Susan, “Yugoslavia: Divide and by Daniel Hallin, Sept., 52-54 Risse-Kappen, Thomas, review of Menges, Fail,” Nov., 24-27 Tismaneanu, Vladimir, Reinventing Politics, The Future of Gey many and the Atlantic Wurst, Jim, “Clearing Mines,” July/Aug., 20; | reviewed by Jeffrey Goldfarb, March, 44 ,Jan./Feb., 48-49 “Exposintgh e Land Mine Business,” July Winkler, Allan M., Life U der a Cloud, re- Rotblat, Joseph, “Remembering sernie,” | Aug., 19; “The Land Mine Family,” July viewed by John Abbotts, Dec., 50-51 May, 15-17 Aug., 20; “Ten Million Tragedies, One Step Wolton, Dominique, War Game: L’informa- Rothstein, Linda, “Amerika For Sale,” at a Time,” July/Aug., 14-21 tion et la guerre, reviewed by Daniel March, 5; “Arms as Alms,” Oct., 6; “Budget Zagalsky, Leonid V., “Concerto for Demo- Hallin, Sept., 52-54 54 The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists INDEX Subjects Defense Department: see Military budget May, 7-8; contractors want conversion Defense conversion: or arms sales abroad?, funds from, July/Aug., 6-7; cutbacks in, ACDA: see Arms Control and Disarmament Sept., 20-26; arms sales to police, Sept., 7; March, 2; gets extra billion, July/Aug., 3-5; Agency contractor-style, July/Aug., 6-7; slow in Les Aspin’s, June, 3-5; not cut by Colin Afghanistan: land mines in, July/Aug., 14-21 Kazakhstan, Oct., 48-50 Powell, April, 3-5; scaling back, March, Ali Bhutto, Zulfikar: June, 2 Depleted uranium: danger of, July/Aug., 54 12-23; three outrages of, June, 6-7 Alpha space station: Nov., 3-4 Disarmament: see Arms control; Nucle wr dis- Military coup: scenario for, March, 3~ Antisatellite weapons: new interest in, Sept., armament Minatom: pressing for more nuclear power, 4-5 Eastern Europe: dangerous nuclear power April, 14-15, 47 Arms control: ACDA saved, June, 6; bouquet plants in, July/Aug., 43-48 Mini-nukes: July/Aug., 22-27 for Bush, March, 10, 46; chemical treaty Education: of nuclear engineers, Jan./Feb., 5 Mirzayanov, Vil: March, 7-8; Oct., 12-13 work —s April, 38-43; on Clinton’s cal- Environment: nuclear contamination in Rus- Missiles: visit to site of, March, 34-88 endar, Jan./Feb., 6-8 sia, March, 24-29 National security policy: of Clinton adminis- Arms Control and Disarmament Agency: Europe: and nuclear proliferation, June, tration, Sept., 5- congressional support for, Sept., o5-- 7 ft) 27-33 Naval reactors: abandoned Russian, April, saved, June, 6 Export controls: Europe’s leaking borders, 7-9 Arms exports: burgeoning U.5., Sept., 20-26; June, 27-29 Naval Weapons Evaluation Facility: Sept., 56 eed of weapons from Warsaw Pact, Dec., Federal Energy Management Agency: North Korea: and Israel, Sept., 8-9; and 21-27; land mines as extras in, July/Aug., July Aug., 7i ca nuclear proliferation, June, 33-36; July 14- 21: Russian missiles, Jan./Feb., 56 Feld, Bernard T.: in memoriam, April, Aug., 55; nuclear strategy, Dec., 8-10; with- Aspin, Les: Nov., 12-13; defense budget of, May, 14-17 draws from NPT, May, 9-11 June, 3-5 France: accident at research reactor in, Oct., Nuclear disarmament: blending down war- Author guidelines: Jan./Feb., 51 5; nuclear forces, 1993, Oct., 56 head uranium, Sept., 44-49; Russian, Jan./ 3aikonur: dying spaceport, Oct., 40-43 Fuchs, Klaus: July/Aug., 9-11 Feb., 56; Russian plans after, April, 16-21; Ballistic missile defense: grounded, July Gaidar, Yegor: Jan./Feb., 34 South Africa says it destroyed bombs, May, Aug., 8 Gays in the military: May, 4 oonrvcw ; uranium storage after, Jan./Feb., 56; Belarus: and Chernobyl, Sept., 38443 Germany: privatization in East, March, 5; | U.S. aid to Russia for, July/Aug., 29-42; 3eria, Lavrenti: May, 27 removing socialist statues, June, 5-6; sup- | warhead dismantlement, Sept., 56 Black Sea fleet: Ukraine’s view of, Nov., pliers to Iraq, Dec., 28-36 | Nuclear engineering: fewer schools of, Jan. 3osnia: and Western moral failure, March, Gulf War: see Persian Gulf War Feb., 5 11,47 H-bomb: Soviets had first, May, 20-31 Nuclear navy: U.S. retiring nuclear-powered 3ritain: Commachios guard nuclear weap- Haiti: effect of sanctions on, Nov., 20-23 ships, June, 56 ons, Oct., 55; nuclear forces 1993, Sept., 57 Hanford: startup is cleanup?, Dec., 6-7; tank Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty: and India, ponders plutonium processing, March, 8-9; farm at, May,8 Jan./Feb., 54-55; and India, Pakistan, and selling Greenham Common, June, 56 India: and the NPT,,. Jan./Feb., 54-55; June, Israel, June, 37-39; more signatories for, 3urbulis, Gennadi: Jan./Feb., 29 37-39 | July/Aug., 56; North Korea drops out, May, 3ush, George: arms control record, March, International Program on the Health Effects |} 9-11 10, 46; interventions by, May, 47 of the Chernobyl Accident: conflict of | Nuclear Notebook tables: British nuclear ‘ambodia: land mines in, July/Aug., 14-21 interest of, May, 40-44 forces 1993, Sept., 57; Chinese nuclear ‘entral Intelligence Agency: new leader at, Iraq: effect on export restrictions, Nov., 4-5; forces 1993, Nov., 57; French nuclear forces July Aug. 33-38; and Team B report, nuclear suppliers to, Jan./Feb., 8-9; 1993, Oct., 56; known nuclear tests world- April, 22-31 weapons procurement by, Dec., 28-36 wide, April, 49; nuclear pursuits, May, yentr’ ifuge- secrets transferred, Dec., 28-36 Islamic bomb: myth of, June, 42-49 48-49; Russian stockpile 1993, July/Aug., thelyabinsk: March, 24-29 Israel: bomb program, Oct., 54; cooperation 97; Russian strategic nuclear forces 1992, ‘hemical weapons: destruction of, July with South Africa, July/Aug., 5-6; and March, 49; total nuclear forces 1945-1993, Aug., 55; April, 38-43; Russian secret, Oct., North Korea, Sept., 8-9; and the NPT, Dec., 57; U.S. nuclear weapons stockpile, 12-13; and Russian whistleblower, March, June, 37-39; nuclear position of, Oct., June 1993, June, 57; U.S. strategic nuclear (-3; tests during Worid War II, March, 53-54; and nuclear weapons, June, 39-41; forces, 1992, Jan./Feb.,5 7 39-43; treaty slowed by U.S.-Russian peace with PLO, Dec., 11-13 Nuclear power: accident in France, Oct., 5; agreement, Sept., 10-11 | Japan: and nuclear proliferation, June, 3 3-36 Russian plans for, April, 14-15, 47; turning ‘hernobyl: deteriorating conditions near, Kauai: wants no Star Wars launches, April, weapon uranium into reactor fuel, Sept., Sept., 38-43; health effects, April, 47; Nov., 11-13 44-49; North Korea wants, Dec., 8-10; in 53-54; Russian perceptions of, June, 11-12 Kazakhstan: Oct., 2; army, Oct., 36; big oil East Bloc, July/Aug., 43-48 ‘hina: nuclear forces, 1993, Nov., 5 7; nuclear | moves in, Oct , 4447; and defense conver- Nuclear proliferation: in Asia, June, 33-36; test detected, Dec., 44-47 | sion, Oct., 48-50; economic policy of, Oct., and de facto states, June, 37-39; domino ‘IA: see Central one g my Agency 47; ethnic relations in, Oct., 30-32; finding effect in Europe?, June, 29-33; embargo on ‘linton, Bill: jobs with, Jan./Feb., 3-4; mili- own way, Oct., 16-23; nuclear legacy in, components, Nov., 4-5; and Europe’s leaky tary budget, May, 7-8; arms control views, Oct + 01-09; as nuclear state, Oct., 33-36; borders, June, 27-29; Lraq’s suppliers, Jan. Jan./Feb., 6-8, science policy, Dec. 38-43 pragmatism of, Oct., 24-29; precious met- Feb., 8-9; and Israel, June, 39-41; Israel ‘old War: 1980 renewal of, May, 14; revital- als in, Oct., 51; reluctance to borrow, Oct., and Middle East peace, wre 53-54; Israel ized by Team B report, April, 22-31 50; Soviet meg gh= Oct., 40-43; trou- and North Korea, Sept., 8-9; and North ‘ommercial satellites: limitations of, Dec., bles are its own, Oct., Korea, Dec., 8-19; and Pakistan, June, 38-44 KGB: protecting U.S. secrets, May, 2-36; 42-49; Pakistan bomb program, Sept., ‘commonwealth of a States: as still active in Russia, Jan./Feb., 36-38 27-32; a primer, June, 14— 23; and Russian soap bubble in history, Jan./Feb., 12-13 Khan, Abdul Qader: Sept., 27-32 research reactors, April, 9-11; and Russian ‘omprehensive test ban: see Nuclear test Khariton, Yuli: May, 2; 18-19 scientists, bombs, June, 24- South ban Khasbulatov, Ruslan: Jan./Feb., 26-31 Africa pos weapon uranium on block, oe gives Pentagon extra $1 billion, Land mines: July/Aug., 2; 14-21 April q 32— 37; South Africa’s bombs, May, July/Aug., 3-5; reluctant to pay for peace- Lederman, Leon: Sept., 7 »; July/Aug., 5-6; South Africa’s bomb keeping, Det. 7-9; votes aid to Russia, Looking Glass: grounded, July/Aug., 56 program conversion, June, 8-11 Sept., 3-4 Marine Corps: out of nuclear business, Oct., 55 Nuclear reactors: from Russian subs, April, ‘onventional Forces in Europe Treaty: and Middle East: Israel, PLO sign accord, Dec., 7-9, in space, July/Aug., 11-13 weapons sales, Dec., 21-27; update on, 11-13 Nuclear test ban: administration suppcrt of, Dec., 24 Migration: through Ukraine, Nov., 10-11 Sept., 5-7; Congress meant it, July/Aug., ‘uba: national security needs of, Sept., Military: proper uses for, March, : 28-32; moratorium holds, Sept., 12-13; 15-19; U.S. policy toward, Sept., 2 Military budget: and base closures, May, 5-6; more important than tests, Oct., 10-11; two CWC: see Chemical weapons Bottom Up Review, Nov., 12-13; Clinton’s, paths, one goal, Oct., 3-5 December 1993 55 INDEX Nuclear testing: budget for, Oct., 5; by China, Parliament, Dec., 16-20; blending down Star Wars: down to earth, July/Aug., 8; Dec. 3-4; 44-47; don’t count Hiroshima, weapon uranium, Sept., 44-49; bomb pro- launches in Hawaii, April, 11-13 Nagasaki, July/Aug., 54; labs still want, gram, May, 20-31; can’t afford to decom- START II: Russian view of, April, 16-21 July/Aug., 28-32; moratorium from 1958 to mission naval reactors, April, 7-9; Stealth bomber: assigned to Whiteman, 1961, April, 5-6; no U.S. for now, Sept., censorship in, Jan./Feb., 39-41; claim on July/Aug., 56; wing test, March, 6 12-13; not needed, Oct., 10-11; and Soviet Black Sea fleet, Nov., 8-10; cooperation in Stemmler, Bruno: Dec., 28-36 bomb program, May, 20-31; worldwide, space, Nov., 3-4; culture in, Jan./Feb., Superfund: Rocky Mountain Arsenal site, 1945-1992, April, 49 42-46; dangerous nuclear power plants in, Sept., 33-37 Nuclear warheads: dismantling of, Sept., 56 July/Aug., 43-48; disarmament under Tamm, Igor: May, 28 Nuclear waste: depleted uranium and Per- START II, April, 16-21; disintegrating Team B: trillion dollar experiment, April, sian Gulf War, May, 11-12, 46; dumped in economy of, Jan./Feb., 32-35; estimated 22-31 sea, June, 13, 55; at Hanford, May, 8; Dec., nuclear stockpile, 1993, July/Aug., 5 7: for- | Topaz: angers astronomers, July/Aug., 11-13 6-7 eign policy of, Jan./Feb., 21-25; gets U.S. |T oxic waste dump: at Rocky Mountain arse- Nuclear weapons: British, Sept., 57; British aid, Sept., 3-4; KGB moves to save U.S. | nal, Sept., 33-37 ~ guarde »d by Commachios, Oct., 55; Cidense, secrets, May, 32-36; KGB still active, Jkraine: claim on Black Sea fleet, Nov., 6-10; 1993, Nov., 57; control of, March, 48; disas- Jan. 7“ b., 36-38; as new country, Jan./ effects of Chernoby! on, April, 47; Sept., sembly at Pantex, March, 48; French, 1993, Feb., 2; nuclear disarmament, Jan./Feb., 38-43; refugees stream through, Nov., 10- Oct., 56; Lraq’s component suppliers, Jan./ 56; nue + A dumping at sea by, June, 13,5 5; 11; stuck with Soviet weapons, March, 30-33 Feb., bal 9: mini-nukes, July/Aug., 22-27; nuclear power in, April, 14-15, 47; and Jnited Nations: and nuclear test ban, Oct., new not needed, Oct., 10-11; Russia’s nucle- nuclear proliferation, June, 24-27; nuclear 3-5; peacekeeping, Oct., 7-9; Dec., 14-15 ar stockpile 1993, July/Aug., 57; Russian warhead facilities in, Jan./Feb., 56; nuclear Jranium: shells from copated, effect of, production plants for, Jan./Feb., 56; Rus- weapons complex, March, 24-29; parlia- May, 11-12, 46; South African weapon- sian strategic forces 1992, March, 49; Soviet ment of, Jan./Feb., 26-31; political parties, grade for sale, April, 32-37; storage of bomb program, May, 32-36; Soviet develop- Jan./Feb., 35; research reactors, April, excess, Jan./Feb., 56 ment of, May, 20-31; Soviet secrets 9-11; scientists in, Oct., 54; sells missiles, ).8. foreign policy: and arms sales, Sept., revealed, April, 48; total built, 1945-1993, Jan./Feb., 56; slowing chemical weapons 20-26; toward Cuba, Sept., 15-19 Dec., 57; Ukraine should get something for, destruction, Sept., 10-11; Soviet nuclear J.S. military forces: scaling back, March, March, 30-33; U.S. Marines give up, Oct., bomb program, May, 18-31, 37-39; Soviet 12-23 55; U.S. stockpile June ey June, 57; U.S. weapons secrets revealed, April, 48; space- ).S. Navy: increased submarine patrol rate, strategic forces 1992, Jan./Feb., 57; what port dying, Oct., 40-43; strategic forces Nov., 56; retiring submarines, June, 56 part in Israel-PLO accord?, Dec., 11-13; 1992, March, 49; uncertain future of, J.S. nuclear weapons: control of, March, 48 what’s needed to build, June, 14-23; at Jan./Feb., 14-20; view of sanctions, Nov., stockpile, June, 57 Whiteman AFB, March, 34 28-31; whistleblower faces jail in, March, S. strategic forces: subs on greater patrol, Nuclear weapons complex: and ban, Sea nt , 7-8; will try whistleblower, Oct., 12-13; see Nov., 56 12-13; wants mini-nukes?, July/Aug., 22-27 also Soviet Union, former | Verification: by amateurs, Dec., 44-47 Overkill: ending, March, 12-23 Russian navy: nuclear reactors at dockside, Veterans Administration: and chemical Pacific Missile Range: “Star Wars” launches April, 7-9 weapon test victims, March, 39-43 at, April, 11-13 Rutskoi, Aleksandr: Jan./Feb., 30; Dec., 16-20 Volsky, Arkady: Jan/Feb., 35 Pakistan: bomb (ose Sept., 27-32; and Sanctions: do they work?, Nov., 14-15; effect Weapons: components for U.S. built in Mexi- the NPT, June, 37-39; nuclear ambition of, in Yugoslavia, Nov., 24-27; effect on Haiti, co, Nov., 5; giveaways, Oct., 6; world de- June, 2; and maslens weapons, June, 42-49 Nov., 20-23; effect on South Africa, Nov., mand for, Sept., 20-26 Palestine Liberation Organization: peace 16-19; mapertames of, Nov., 36-40; messy Woolsey, R. James: July/Aug., 33-38 with Israel, Dec., 11-13 but useful, Nov., 2; morality of, Nov., 41-45; ieitsin, Boris: April, 16-21; Dec., 2; dis- Pantex: disassembly record, March, 48; war- need new U.N. council for, Nov., 46-49; solves, attacks Parliament, Dec., 16-20; head dismantling at, Sept., 56 Russian view of, Nov., 28-31; success of, and Ruslan Khasbulatov, Jan./Feb., 26-31 Partis il Test Ban Treaty: amendment of, Oct., Nov., 32-35 Yugoslavia: effect of sanctions on, Nov., 5 Science policy: Clinton’s, Dec., 38-43 24-27; war in, Dec., 21-27; and West’s Pessehocping: cost of, Oct., 7-9; need for SDI: see Star Wars moral failure, March, 11, 47 U.N., Dec., 14-15 Secrecy: and 1958-61 nuclear moratorium, Pentagon: and mini-nukes, July/Aug. —2 2-27 April, 5-6; and leak of Team B report, gets extra billion, July/Aug., 3-5; met ay April, 22-23, 27-31; Woolsey believes in, Nov., 12-13 July/Aug., 33-38 Persian Gulf War: depleted uranium use in, Serbia: effof seancctiotns on, Nov., 24-27 May, 11-12, 46 Simpson, John: wins space award, May, 8 Physicians for Social Responsibility: report South Africa: conversion of nuclear program, on radiation and health, Jan./Feb., 10, 50 June, 8-11; effect of sanctions on, Nov., 2 micas Plutonium: finishing plant cleanup, Dec., 6-7; 16-19; nuclear program, July/Aug., 5-6; a a oea ay ton fe ae at a reprocessing plant’s fate undecided May, 3-5; wants to sell bomb-grade urani- March, 8-9 m, April, 32-37 Powell, Colin: budget review by, April, 3-5 Soviet Union, former: blending down weap- Press freedom: in Russia, Jan./Feb., 39-41 on uranium, Sept., 44-49; bomb program, Radiation and health: depleted uranium, May, 20-31; commonwealth as liquidation May, 11-12, 46; July/Aug., 54; effects of committee, Jan./Feb., 12-13; danger of Chernoby l, Sept., 38-43; Nov., 53-54; per- nuclear power plants in, July/Aug., 43-48; ce “9 in Russia, June, 11-12; report by nuclear dumping at sea by, June, 13, 55; PSR, Jan./Feb., 10, 50; watchdog authority replaced by Russia, Jan./Feb., 2; Russia, needed, May, 40-44 Ukraine claim Black Sea fleet, Nov., 6-10; Radioactive waste: see Nuclear waste Soviet nuclear bomb program, May, 18-31, Reagan, Ronald: Evil Empire speech, April,2 37-39; Ukraine gateway to West, Nov., Research and development: government 10-11; Ukraine stuck with nuclear w eap- support of, Dec., 38-43 ons, March, 30-33; weapons secrets re- Research reactors: Russian, April, 9-11 vealed, April, 48; see also Russia — Flats: Rockwell bonus for running, Space: nuclear reactors in, July/Aug., 11-13; Jan. F eb. ~o U.S.-Soviet cooperation in, Nov., 3-4; war Rocky Mountain Arse nal: as dump and wild- in, Sept., 4-5 life refuge, Sept., 3-37 | Spies: Sonya explains, July/Aug., 9-11; and Russia: aid to, . July. Aug., 39-42; attack on the Soviet bomb, May, 18-39 56 The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists ra ee w p e ew

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