So, with the rather recent collapse of the Soviet Union in human history and with it the threat of mutually assured destruction, are we in a better situation today to enjoy a safe future? — Question
So, with the rather recent collapse of the Soviet Union in human history and with it the threat of mutually assured destruction, are we in a better situation today to enjoy a safe future? — Question
I've been fascinated by the Cold War.
I find it incredible that the U.S. and the USSR essentially played a zero sum game and maintain a bluff of potential absolute annihilation with each other over almost 50 years. Brilliant minds like John von Neumann and many other unmentioned names designed a situation that assured the consequences of war too costly to undertake. The amount of, I don't know what to call it, steel nerve required to maintain composure during such tense and volatile times astonishes me. What's even more astonishing is that we purposely stalled progress on ABM technology to maintain the precarious balance of power during that time, which I see as a cause for the anxiety of rogue states acquiring nuclear payload deliverability. It's another topic but had we advanced ABM technology, I don't think we would have seen as large of a threat as we see today with countries like Iran and North Korea developing ICBM deliverable nuclear payloads.
So, with the rather recent collapse of the Soviet Union in human history and with it the threat of mutually assured destruction, are we in a better situation today to enjoy a safe future? — Question
which at the time was more under Russia, I believe — Wosret
which at the time was more under Russia, I believe — Wosret
I think it was Indonesia. — Reformed Nihilist
Are you kidding? The nuclear weapons, instead of being amassed by just a few super powers, are now in many different hands. The great fear of annihilation which we had in the sixties and seventies has just been replaced by complacency, because it hasn't happened. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is a scene in the movie Dr. Strange Love where he talks about how any country (I believe he is referring to one of the more powerful industrialized nations) can build a doomsday weapon ; which in the movie was supposedly a massive nuclear weapon filled with radioactive Cobalt which "supposedly" could render much of the earth unlivable for tens to hundreds of years.
Little did people know that this "doomsday weapon" in the movie was based an ACTUAL weapon being consider by the USSR at the time. It was never built because the primer at the time thought it was too crazy which is kind of funny since he was know for taking off his shoe and beating his desk with it to get attention while at the UN. — dclements
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