Nuclear security
It is two and a half minutes to midnight
Over the course of 2016, the global security
landscape darkened as the international
community failed to come effectively to grips
with humanity’s most pressing existential threats,
nuclear weapons and climate change.
The United States and Russia—which together
possess more than 90 percent of the world’s
nuclear weapons—remained at odds in a variety
of theaters, from Syria to Ukraine to the borders
of NATO; both countries
continued wide-ranging
modernizations of their nuclear
forces, and serious arms control
negotiations were nowhere to
be seen. North Korea conducted
its fourth and fifth underground
nuclear tests and gave every
indication it would continue
to develop nuclear weapons delivery capabilities.
Threats of nuclear warfare hung in the background
as Pakistan and India faced each other warily
across the Line of Control in Kashmir after
militants attacked two Indian army bases.
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