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Stuxnet revisited: From cyber warfare to secret statecraft
The Journal of Strategic StudiesThe Stuxnet attack on Iran’s nuclear program is an outlier in the history of cyber conflict. While espionage and subversion are prevalent, serious cyber-physical damage remains rare.
Jon R. Lindsay
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Nuclear, biological and chemical warfare. Part I: Medical aspects of nuclear warfare.
The Journal of the Association of Physicians of India, 1990Casualties in earlier wars were due much more to diseases than to weapons. Mention has been made in history of the use of biological agents in warfare, to deny the enemy food and water and to cause disease. In the first world war chemical agents were used to cause mass casualties. Nuclear weapons were introduced in the second world war.
A S, Kasthuri +4 more
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Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 1957
(1957). The Nature of Nuclear Warfare. Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists: Vol. 13, No. 5, pp. 162-165.
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(1957). The Nature of Nuclear Warfare. Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists: Vol. 13, No. 5, pp. 162-165.
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Geographies of nuclear warfare: future spaces, zones and technologies
A Research Agenda for Military Geographies, 2019Becky Alexis-Martin
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The American Nuclear Warfare State
2016At the end of World War II, the atomic breakthrough signified for the USA an awesome spectacle of technological prowess and military superiority, confirming unique American status on the international scene. Although world opinion generally viewed the Bomb as an instrument of barbarism, for US leaders it would be embraced as a benevolent source of ...
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