Doomsday clock to move closer to nuclear Armageddon Sat Jan 13, 12:33 
PM ET
 


CHICAGO (AFP) - The world is inching closer to nuclear Armageddon, a 
group of prominent scientists and security experts said. 



The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists has kept a Doomsday clock since 
1947 as a reminder of the dangers of nuclear proliferation.

The clock will be moved forward Wednesday at simultaneous events in 
Washington and London whose speakers will include physicist Stephen 
Hawking, the Chicago-based periodical said in a statement.

The Bulletin warned that the world had entered a "Second Nuclear Age 
marked by grave threats."

It cited the nuclear ambitions of        Iran and        North Korea; 
escalating terrorism; unsecured nuclear materials in Russia and 
elsewhere, the continuing "launch-ready" status of 2,000 of the 
25,000 nuclear weapons held by the United States and Russia, and "new 
pressure from climate change for expanded civilian nuclear power that 
could increase proliferation risks."

First set at seven minutes to midnight -- a phrase that has become 
part of pop culture -- the clock has been moved 17 times in response 
to global events.

The most recent shift was in 2002 when it moved two minutes forward 
because the United States withdrew from the Anti-Ballistic Missile 
Treaty and terrorists were known to be seeking nuclear and biological 
weapons.

It currently stands once again at seven minutes to midnight, the 
closest to danger since the end of the Cold War.

Founded in 1945 by scientists who had helped develop the atomic bomb 
and were deeply concerned about the use of nuclear weapons, the 
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists counts 17 Nobel laureates among its 
boards of directors and sponsors.

Here are the dates and reasons for previous changes:

- 2002: Seven minutes to midnight

The United States rejects a series of arms control treaties and 
announces it will withdraw from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. 
Terrorists seek to acquire and use nuclear and biological weapons.

- 1998: Nine minutes to midnight

India and Pakistan "go public" with nuclear tests. The United States 
and Russia cannot agree on further deep reductions in their nuclear 
stockpiles.

- 1995: Fourteen minutes to midnight

Further arms reductions stall while global military spending 
continues at Cold War levels. Risks of nuclear "leakage" from poorly 
guarded former Soviet facilities increase.

- 1991: Seventeen minutes to midnight

The United States and the Soviet Union sign the long-stalled 
Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START) and announce further 
unilateral cuts in tactical and strategic nuclear weapons. 

- 1990: Ten minutes to midnight 

The Cold War ends as the Iron Curtain falls. 

- 1988: Six minutes to midnight 

The United States and the Soviet Union sign a treaty to eliminate 
intermediate-range nuclear forces; superpower relations improve; more 
nations actively oppose nuclear weapons. 

- 1984: Three minutes to midnight 

The arms race accelerates. 

- 1981: Four minutes to midnight 

Both superpowers develop more weapons for fighting a nuclear war. 
Terrorist actions, repression of human rights, and conflicts 
in        Afghanistan, Poland and South Africa add to world tension. 

- 1980: Seven minutes to midnight 

The deadlock in US-Soviet arms talks continues; nationalistic wars 
and terrorist actions increase; the gulf between rich and poor 
nations grows wider. 

- 1974: Nine minutes to midnight 

SALT talks reach an impasse; India develops a nuclear weapon. 

- 1972: Twelve minutes to midnight 

The United States and the Soviet Union sign the first Strategic Arms 
Limitation Treaty and the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty. 

- 1969: Ten minutes to midnight 

The US Senate ratifies the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. 

- 1968: Seven minutes to midnight 

France and China acquire nuclear weapons; wars rage in the Middle 
East, the Indian subcontinent, and Vietnam; world military spending 
increases while development funds shrink. 

- 1963: Twelve minutes to midnight 

The US and Soviet signing of the Partial Test Ban Treaty "provides 
the first tangible confirmation of what has been the Bulletin's 
conviction in recent years -- that a new cohesive force has entered 
the interplay of forces shaping the fate of mankind." 

- 1960: Seven minutes to midnight 

Growing public understanding that nuclear weapons made war between 
the major powers irrational amid greater international scientific 
cooperation and efforts to aid poor nations. 

- 1953: Two minutes to midnight 

The United States and the Soviet Union test thermonuclear devices 
within nine months of one another. 

- 1949: Three minutes to midnight 

The Soviet Union explodes its first atomic bomb. 

- 1947: Seven minutes to midnight 

The clock first appears on the Bulletin cover as a symbol of nuclear 
danger.


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