ID | 137973 |
Title Proper | Mappa mundi |
Other Title Information | tehran trigger is the possibility of a nuclear Iran a threat, a distraction, or both? |
Language | ENG |
Author | Rothkopf, David |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Once upon a time, no term evoked modernity like “the Atomic Age.” It contained the promise of harnessing the power of the atom for good and for ill. Unleashing the secrets of the atom was what separated the world’s most advanced and powerful nations from the rest. This Damoclean era was ushered in 70 years ago, on July 16, 1945, with the Trinity nuclear test in New Mexico’s Jornada del Muerto desert. The name translates to “Dead Man’s Journey” — fitting, because the detonation triggered a nuclear arms race that made palpable the dark threat of planetary Armageddon. As is the case with others who grew up in the 1960s, some of my most acute, enduring memories are of a childhood shaped by nuclear fears. I was 6 years old during the Cuban missile crisis and remember going to bed at night unsettled by the air-raid drills we rehearsed at school and by the worry I saw in my parents eyes as they watched the evening news. |
`In' analytical Note | Foreign Policy Vol. , 211; Mar/Apr 2015: p.72-73 |
Journal Source | Foreign Policy 2015-04 |
Key Words | Nuclear Iran ; Tehran Trigger |