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RUSSIAN MISSILES (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   169520


78 days of war that cannot be forgotten or forgiven / Gojkovic, Igor ; Kurakin, M   Journal Article
Igor Gojkovic, M. Kurakin Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract IT WAS WEDNESDAY, March 24, 1999. At eight o'clock in the evening, the first NATO shells fell on military and civilian facilities in Belgrade, Pristina, and Nis. The NATO operation against Yugoslavia, officially codenamed "Allied Force," had begun. Meanwhile, the U.S. Armed Forces' involvement in the NATO operation was codenamed "Noble Anvil," commonly called "Merciful Angel" in Serbia.
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2
ID:   115341


Russian violations of its arms control obligations / Schneider, Mark B   Journal Article
Schneider, Mark B Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract The Soviet Union and its successor state the Russian Federation have consistently violated their arms control obligations since the beginning of modern arms control in 1972. The violations have involved all major nuclear arms control treaties, including those that limit strategic and theater nuclear arms and constrain nuclear testing. This pattern of behavior is certain to continue. As a result, the nuclear warheads on the Russian missiles apparently will have been tested in contravention of a declared nuclear test moratorium and Russia's legal obligations concerning the CTBT. There is almost never any consequence for these violations. These violations have clear military significance, and they should have an impact upon our views of arms control. Regrettably, they do not. The evidence is more often suppressed than provided to the American people and we continue to ignore it in our arms control policy.
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