More on GPS Detection of Nuke Tests
August 24, 2011 1 min. read

In a June 9th blog post, I wrote about the work of researchers at The Ohio State University to use the global positioning system (GPS) to detect covert nuclear tests. Pretty cool stuff. Well, the researchers, Jihye Park, Dorota Grejner-Brzezinska and adviser Ralph Von Frese have written about their work in a piece for the […]

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Audacity and Lunacy in Iran
August 24, 2011 3 min. read

It’s not a good sign when you can no longer differentiate between lunacy or rationality in Iranian foreign policy. The real question, though, is who is to blame. Thus is the case when we examine two foreign policy developments in Iran, both dealing with purported espionage. In the first, we saw that an Iranian court convicted Shane […]

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Rixos Hotel in Tripoli Prison to Dozens of Journalists
August 23, 2011 1 min. read

About 30 journalists are being held captive in the Rixos Hotel in Libya’s capital of Tripoli. According to Twitter feeds of journalists inside the hotel, notably CNN’s Matthew Chance and AP’s Dario Lopez-Mills. Sky News’ Mark Stone describes where the Rixos is situated and why so many foreign correspondents are trapped there: Sky News  

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The Laser Haze: More Non-Pro Worries about Laser Enrichment
August 23, 2011 2 min. read

Readers of my blog will know that I have written several times about proliferation concerns related to using lasers to enrich uranium. Its my hobbyhorse because I think it is the very kind of crucible test which will indicate if we are serious about nonproliferation or not. The Cliff Notes version is that such a […]

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More on CTBT: Page Van Der Linden Interviews Linton Brooks and Daryl Kimball
August 23, 2011 2 min. read
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Now that the Administration has begun to re-fulminate over the possibility of getting the CTBT ratified, Arms Control Wonk contributor Page Van Der Linden has begun posting a multi-part series on the subject. Her aim, in her words, is to present “the treaty from the points of view of people who were around the last […]

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Germany’s Train Operator Opts for Renewables
August 23, 2011 2 min. read

Deutsche Bahn, Germany’s national train operator, currently gets about 20% of its power from wind, hydro and solar generation. It has just announced its intention to raise that to 28% in 2014 and to be carbon free by 2050. Nuclear had been the favored source of electricity in the train operators plans, but the decision […]

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See the Signs, Report It, and Save a Child’s Life
August 22, 2011 6 min. read

Each year, more than 3 million child abuse reports (reports often contain the abuse of more than one child) are made in the United States alone. Furthermore, it is estimated that in 2009, 3.3 million child abuse reports and allegations were made, involving an estimated 6 million children (Child Help). Nonetheless, the reports of such […]

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U.S. Famine Aid Continues
August 22, 2011 2 min. read

As the civil war in Libya dominates news headlines this week, the State Department reminds us that U.S. efforts to fight famine in the Horn of Africa continue even as the media focus has shifted away. How is the U.S. responding to the famine crisis? Secretary Clinton explained the U.S. response in remarks to the […]

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UNHCR Appeals for Safety for Third-Country Nationals in Libya
August 22, 2011 2 min. read

On Monday, August 22, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Antonio Guterres, appealed for the safety of refugees in Libya. He appealed for all parties involved in the conflict to ensure that the thousands of refugees currently trapped in Tripoli and other areas are “properly protected from harm,” according to a press release from the […]

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Libya – Necessary Milestones
August 21, 2011 2 min. read

The advance of Libyan rebels into Tripoli, as arduous as it was, is only the beginning. The real test for Libyan independence will be in the steps it takes to secure the state. Foremost will be steps to incorporate all Libyans into not only a political future, but also an economic one. As the minutes […]

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Listening To A Dead Hawk
August 20, 2011 3 min. read

 “The only thing we learn from history is that we learn nothing from history.”  Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel One hundred years hence, when historians study the factors that led to the economic decline of the United States, it is likely that they will mark the first week of August, 2011 as a crisp break in […]

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South Africa: Stop Human Rights Violations that Result in Maternal Deaths
August 20, 2011 7 min. read

Just in time for National Women’s Day in South Africa, Human Rights Watch published a report last week on failing maternal care in the country.  South Africa has seen its maternal mortality ratio quadruple in the last ten years.  The report focuses on the Eastern Cape, one of the least developed provinces in the country, […]

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