New nuclear flashpoints
Over
the last couple of weeks, tensions between the United States and Iran
have flared and subsided, only to be reignited over the weekend as
President Trump issued tweets seeming to threaten Iran's very existence.
And although many experts believe there is broad consensus in Iran that
the benefits of staying in the nuclear deal negotiated in 2015 outweigh
the costs of leaving, comments from the Iranian government this week
led Bulletin columnist Ariane Tabatabai to observe that "we may be facing Iranian violations soon."
Then
there is North Korea, which tested a new "tactical guided weapon" in
mid-April and fired short-range ballistic missiles in early May. "For
the first time," write Duyeon Kim and Melissa Hanham, "Washington,
Pyongyang, and Seoul are reading from the same script and agree on one
thing: these missiles ought not to be called 'missiles.' Instead, they
are being named 'projectiles' and 'rockets.'" But "[A] small missile is a
small missile until it starts a great big nuclear war." Keep coming back to our nuclear risk coverage to get the latest analysis on these and other nuclear risk flashpoints.
Duyeon Kim, Melissa Hanham
Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un need the European Union
Tereza Novotná, Alessandro Ford
What Russia thinks about North Korea’s nuclear weapons
Anastasia Barannikova
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