Paolo Farinella was deeply committed to arms control and disarmament from the early 1980s until his death in 2000. He published over 30 articles on topics including anti-satellite weapons, the ABM treaty, and conventional arms control in Europe. Farinella was particularly opposed to Reagan's Strategic Defense Initiative and advocated for lower tensions and a more stable conventional balance in Europe. He was also a passionate defender of Mordechai Vanunu's human rights after Vanunu revealed details of Israel's secret nuclear program. Farinella aimed to raise awareness of these issues through clear, compelling writing and relentless argumentation.
The outbreak of World War 2 in 1939 resulted in immense loss of life and changed the world forever. It began as a widespread global conflict between the Allied powers and the Axis powers. In the first year, Germany invaded Poland which caused Britain and France to declare war on Germany, while the Soviet Union also invaded Poland from the east. By the end of 1939, Germany occupied most of Western Europe, while Britain and its allies were left standing alone against the Axis.
Józef Rotblat was a Polish physicist born in 1908 in Warsaw who co-created the first atomic bomb but later renounced weapons of mass destruction and founded the Pugwash movement to eliminate such weapons. He and the Pugwash movement won the 1995 Nobel Peace Prize for their efforts to limit nuclear weapons and eliminate them long-term. Rotblat died in 2005 in London at the age of 96.
This document provides an introduction to the German Army that fought in World War 2 from 1939-1945. It describes the army as one of three armed services under a unified command structure led by the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht. It highlights the army's pride in being "the German people under arms" and its view of itself as primus inter pares, or first among equals, among the services, though it was forced to accept being just one partner. It also notes how the Waffen-SS grew into a rival as another partner through the war. The introduction sets up an overview of the army's organization and flexibility in transferring units between services.
UnitedHealth Group reported record second quarter results for 2004, with revenues of $8.7 billion (up 23% year-over-year), earnings from operations of $945 million (up 33% year-over-year), and earnings per share of $0.93 (up 31% year-over-year). Every business segment experienced growth in revenues, earnings, and operating margins compared to the prior year quarter. The company also saw increases in medical costs payable and cash flows from operations. For the full year, UnitedHealth expects earnings per share of $3.79 to $3.82, excluding gains from an upcoming acquisition, and anticipates the acquisition will add approximately $0.04 per share per quarter
The outbreak of World War 2 in 1939 resulted in immense loss of life and changed the world forever. It began as a widespread global conflict between the Allied powers and the Axis powers. In the first year, Germany invaded Poland which caused Britain and France to declare war on Germany, while the Soviet Union also invaded Poland from the east. By the end of 1939, Germany occupied most of Western Europe, while Britain and its allies were left standing alone against the Axis.
Józef Rotblat was a Polish physicist born in 1908 in Warsaw who co-created the first atomic bomb but later renounced weapons of mass destruction and founded the Pugwash movement to eliminate such weapons. He and the Pugwash movement won the 1995 Nobel Peace Prize for their efforts to limit nuclear weapons and eliminate them long-term. Rotblat died in 2005 in London at the age of 96.
This document provides an introduction to the German Army that fought in World War 2 from 1939-1945. It describes the army as one of three armed services under a unified command structure led by the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht. It highlights the army's pride in being "the German people under arms" and its view of itself as primus inter pares, or first among equals, among the services, though it was forced to accept being just one partner. It also notes how the Waffen-SS grew into a rival as another partner through the war. The introduction sets up an overview of the army's organization and flexibility in transferring units between services.
UnitedHealth Group reported record second quarter results for 2004, with revenues of $8.7 billion (up 23% year-over-year), earnings from operations of $945 million (up 33% year-over-year), and earnings per share of $0.93 (up 31% year-over-year). Every business segment experienced growth in revenues, earnings, and operating margins compared to the prior year quarter. The company also saw increases in medical costs payable and cash flows from operations. For the full year, UnitedHealth expects earnings per share of $3.79 to $3.82, excluding gains from an upcoming acquisition, and anticipates the acquisition will add approximately $0.04 per share per quarter
This document discusses the history of the Italian association ISODARCO and its role in organizing residential courses on arms control and international conflict management over the past 50 years. Key points:
- ISODARCO was founded in 1972 by Italian scientists led by Edoardo Amaldi and Carlo Schaerf to provide education on scientific and technical issues related to disarmament and international security.
- The first courses were held in 1966 and focused on effects of nuclear weapons, arms control strategies, and prospects for disarmament. They brought together experts from various countries and backgrounds.
- ISODARCO courses continue to bring together academics, policymakers, and practitioners to discuss challenges and solutions regarding arms control from inter
Unidentified flying objects in classical antiquity giss publications ...Clifford Stone
This document analyzes reports from classical antiquity that describe phenomena resembling modern UFO sightings. The author categorizes the ancient reports into distant encounters and close encounters, similar to Hynek's classification of modern UFOs. In the distant encounters category, many reports describe "flying armaments" like shields, weapons, and fleets in the sky. Some of these could potentially be explained as meteors or auroras, but others like the sky army reported over Judea are less easily explained. The document aims to filter conventional explanations from reports resembling truly unidentified phenomena.
This document is the preface to Volume 4 of Chemistry and Technology of Explosives by Tadeus Urbanski. It provides background on the scope and contents of the volume, acknowledges those who contributed information and assistance, and thanks the various organizations that granted permission to reuse content. The preface expresses the author's dedication to peaceful applications of explosives and avoidance of military topics. It aims to comprehensively but critically cover available literature on the subject as of the late 1980s/early 1990s.
An Uncertain Armageddon The Manhattan Project and the Birth of the Atomic Bo...Sandra Valenzuela
This summary provides an overview of the key points from the document:
1) In August 1945, Emperor Hirohito of Japan announced Japan's surrender after the US dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, acknowledging the devastating power of this new weapon.
2) From 1942-1946, the top secret Manhattan Project was undertaken by the US, UK, and Canada to develop an atomic bomb before Nazi Germany could. The project was led by General Leslie Groves and J. Robert Oppenheimer.
3) In 1939, Hungarian physicists Leó Szilárd and Eugene Wigner convinced Albert Einstein to write a letter to President Roosevelt warning that Nazi Germany may be pursuing nuclear weapons and that
Scientists D A V I D H . FRISCH and the Decision to Bomb.docxbagotjesusa
Scientists D A V I D H . FRISCH
and the Decision to Bomb Japan
What did scientists do and
what could we have done about
the decision to drop the atomic
bomb on Hiroshima without hav-
ing an almost harmless demon-
stration first? What can we learn
that will help in applications of
future technical developments?
Such historical adventurism
and didacticism should really
come from one who was close t o
the leadership of the Office of
Scientific Research and Develop-
ment of one of the Manhattan
District laboratories; I was only
a graduate student a t Los Ala-
mos. Although my special ex-
periences were quite limited, Los
Alamos was a rather intimate
community, so I hope t o have
in reasonable perspective the feel-
ings of many who were there. But
that is a small part of the larger
picture, for which I am relying
mainly on published histories.
Several people kindly talked
about these matters with me, but
they will not mind not being
thanked by name for help in rak-
ing over these old coals. I have
not gone back to the original ma-
terial or re-interviewed the sur-
viving principals.
There is no way t o test the ap-
pealing idea that “history will
show” that a more lasting peace
was made on account of Hiroshi-
ma. A different decision about
the first use of the bomb might
well have been a worse one in the
long run. But if 1945 could
somehow have happened with
even a few of the many scientists
in the Manhattan District Proj-
ect having had 25 years more pre-
vious experience of governmental
decision-making, I believe we
would have wanted - and been
able - to have had one demon-
stration of the bomb without
large loss of Japanese lives. Per-
haps a demonstration would have
I ‘ . . . Yet I believe that, ac-
companied by clear informa-
tion, it alone-without another
A-bomb-would have brought
the war to an end in a few
days.” David H. Frisch, a
graduate student at 1 0 s Ala-
mos during the development
of the atomic bomb, is profes-
sor of physics at the Massa-
chusetts Institute of Technol-
ogy.
been followed by too short a
pause before a very destructive
bombing to allow the Japanese
government time to absorb the
facts, as Hiroshima seems to me
to have been followed too closely
by Nagasaki. But that is another
question, not so dependent on
the particular experiences and
perceptions of the scientists in
the Project.
Even in January 1945, it was
not clear whether Germany or
Japan would be defeated first,
and up t o about the beginning of
April of 1945 there was the possi-
bility, though increasingly re-
mote, that Germany would get
nuclear bombs. Thus detailed
planning about the first use of
nuclear weapons against Japan
lacked definiteness until about
April. By the beginning of June
the decision not to give a demon-
stration w a s thoroughly en-
trained.
J a p a n had no offensive
strength left by June. This meant
that the time scale of militar.
World War 1 saw the emergence of new technologies that changed the nature of warfare. Trench warfare led to new adaptations by soldiers exhausted from living in trenches for weeks. German u-boats effectively sank British supply ships, threatening their navy. Meanwhile, Germany had more advanced aircraft and pilots, making their air force superior to Russia's. Overall, new machines of war like machine guns, submarines, and airplanes caused massive casualties and shaped the outcome of battles and the war.
Bibliography Of Research Paper Professional WritinDonna Butler
This document discusses the use of body scanners in airport security. It notes that body scanners were introduced after 9/11 to improve security screening. The document discusses the debate around privacy concerns with body scanners and the potential costs of implementing them widely. It also mentions a study that found body scanners could detect non-metallic threats but had limitations, and discusses the health effects debate around radiation exposure from scanners.
⇉The Red Scare in the 1920s Essay Example | GraduateWay. The key features of the Red Scare - GCSE History - Marked by Teachers.com. Red Scare Facts, Worksheets, The Probe, Across Borders & Summary. The Second Red Scare Essay Example | Topics and Well Written Essays .... the red scare article | Mc Carthyism | Social Movements. The Red Scare Essay. PPT - The Red Scare PowerPoint Presentation, free download - ID:6440548. Red Scare in US and Canada Research Paper Example | Topics and Well .... The Second Red Scare | Teaching Resources. The Red Scare observation lesson | Teaching Resources. This is an activity that requires students to research the events of .... Pin by stacie krabill on Banann | Things to sell, Red scare, Accusations. The red scare. PPT - Exploring American History Unit X – Post War America PowerPoint .... Lesson 8 - Second Red Scare - USA - Edexcel - A Level | Teaching Resources. Joseph mccarthy red scare essay about myself. Red scare 1950s dbq essay - nexingatewaycom. The Red Scare. "I Have Hear in My Hand" Herblock 1954 | Populist propaganda | Essay .... Essay on the red scare. Is This Tomorrow? A Red Scare Comic Book from 1947 - Flashbak. 13 best The Red Scare images on Pinterest | Red scare, Sample resume ....
Declaration of Independence Essay | Essay on Declaration of .... Rewrting the Declaration of Independence - Free Essay Example .... 10 Amazing Personal Declaration Of Independence Ideas 2024. please how do i create this declaration page on latex, the major .... Example Of Declaration In Research Paper - certify letter. Reasons for Writing Declaration. An Analysis of the Declaration of Independence and Its Use: [Essay ....
Quality Health Care Management Paper You are a quality analyst i.docxamrit47
Quality Health Care Management Paper
You are a quality analyst in a health information management (HIM) department appointed to lead a project team. Your team must assess the problem with the documentation of the patient’s discharge disposition status in the health record and present your findings in a meeting to the department.
An increasing number of errors have been reported, and frustration among the coders has risen. These coders claim that conflicting information is often present in the record, requiring them to spend an inordinate amount of time trying to obtain verification. Coding productivity has been affected. Explain how you would assess the problem, strategies that you may develop to resolve the problem, and a way to study the effectiveness of your strategies. Give examples of tools you would use to present your findings in the meeting.
Your research paper should be 3 to 4 pages long (excluding the cover page and reference page), supported by the readings from Week 4 and at least two additional scholarly sources (not Wikipedia etc.) Please adhere the writing rubric and let me know if you have any questions. This paper should be in proper APA format, which includes a title page, reference page, and APA-formatted references.
PART 2
Memo
By mid-week post a brief memo directed toward the project sponsor that provides a synopsis of the problem and a tentative plan of action. This should be a page or less. Your fellow students will provide peer-feedback.
Denying Thucydides's
"^r:::t
make it less real' Recognizing
it does not mean just "t"ptitg
whatever happens'
'We owe it to future
generations to face o"t of h"to'y's most brutal
tendencies head on and
,h.r, do everything we can to defy the odds'
INTRODUCTION
I have written my work, not as an essay to win the applause of the
moment, but as a possession for all time.
-Thurydides,
History of the Peloponnesian War
Here we are on top of the world. We have arrived at this peak to
stay there forever. There is, of course, this thing called history.
But history is something unpleasant that happens to other people.
-Arnold
Toynbee, recalling the 1897 diamond
jubilee celebration of Qeen Victoria
Like other practicing historians, I am often asked what the "les-
sons of history" are. I answer that the only lesson I have learnt
from studying the past is that there are no permanent winners and
losers.
-Ramachandra
Guha
A h, if we only knew." That was the best the German chancellor
l. \ could offer. Even when a colleague pressed Theobald von Beth-
mann Hollweg, he could not explain how his choices, and those of
other European statesmen, had led to the most devastating war the
world had seen to that point. By the time the slaughter of the Great
War finally ended in 1918, the key players had lost all they fought for:
the Austro-Hungarian Empire dissolved, the German kaiser ousted, the
Russian tsar overthrown, France bled for a generation, and England
shorn of its treas ...
Historical Dictionary of International IntelligenceВасиль Петренко
The historical dictionaries present essential information on a broad range
of subjects, including American and world history, art, business, cities,
countries, cultures, customs, film, global conflicts, international relations,
literature, music, philosophy, religion, sports, and theater. Written by experts,
all contain highly informative introductory essays on the topic and detailed
chronologies that, in some cases, cover vast historical time periods but still
manage to heavily feature more recent events.
Brief A–Z entries describe the main people, events, politics, social issues,
institutions, and policies that make the topic unique, and entries are crossreferenced for ease of browsing. Extensive bibliographies are divided into
several general subject areas, providing excellent access points for students,
researchers, and anyone wanting to know more. Additionally, maps, photographs, and appendixes of supplemental information aid high school and
college students doing term papers or introductory research projects. In short,
the historical dictionaries are the perfect starting point for anyone looking to research in these fields.
The document provides an overview of the development of intelligence sharing between Britain and the United States during World War 2. It discusses how Britain was initially reluctant to share intelligence from broken German codes (known as ULTRA) due to past experiences. While the US had some success breaking Japanese codes (MAGIC), Britain's breaking of the German Enigma code gave it a major advantage. The document outlines agreements like the BRUSA Agreement that eventually formalized greater intelligence cooperation between the two countries during the war.
CIA - Central Intelligence Agency (US)
KGB - Komitet Gosudarstvennoi Bezopasnosti (Soviet Union security service)
MI5 - British Security Service
MI6 - British Secret Intelligence Service
NSA - National Security Agency (US)
GRU - Glavnoye Razvedyvatel’noe Upravlenie (Russian military intelligence service)
An Historian S Perspective On Technology And The Cold WarJessica Navarro
This document summarizes perspectives from historians, scientists, and policymakers on the role of science and technology in the Cold War. It discusses how the strategic and technological demands of the US-Soviet confrontation led to the creation of national laboratories in the US. It analyzes differing views on which Cold War technologies most influenced events, noting debates around nuclear weapons, missiles, satellites, and other innovations. The document emphasizes how the Cold War profoundly impacted relationships between the military, government, science, and industry.
1. 9/11 was a tragic event that killed nearly 3,000 people, but it did not signify the start of a "clash of civilizations" or usher in an era of hyper-terrorism as some initially thought.
2. While al Qaeda has continued isolated attacks, they were largely defeated by international cooperation against terrorism and failed to repeat another 9/11. Osama bin Laden's death during the Arab Spring further marked their decline.
3. The US overreaction to 9/11 through actions like the Iraq war had unintended consequences and cost the US financially, morally, and diplomatically while distracting from priorities like Afghanistan. 9/11 accelerated history but its impact was more
This document discusses different types of historical sources that can be used to understand the past. It defines fossils and artifacts as sources that provide clues about early humans since they left little technology behind. Primary sources are accounts created by witnesses, while secondary sources are created later by non-witnesses. Photographs can provide visual historical information but must be properly contextualized to avoid misinterpretation. It profiles several war photographers like Robert Capa who documented major conflicts to convey the human experience and violence of war.
This document discusses the history of the Italian association ISODARCO and its role in organizing residential courses on arms control and international conflict management over the past 50 years. Key points:
- ISODARCO was founded in 1972 by Italian scientists led by Edoardo Amaldi and Carlo Schaerf to provide education on scientific and technical issues related to disarmament and international security.
- The first courses were held in 1966 and focused on effects of nuclear weapons, arms control strategies, and prospects for disarmament. They brought together experts from various countries and backgrounds.
- ISODARCO courses continue to bring together academics, policymakers, and practitioners to discuss challenges and solutions regarding arms control from inter
Unidentified flying objects in classical antiquity giss publications ...Clifford Stone
This document analyzes reports from classical antiquity that describe phenomena resembling modern UFO sightings. The author categorizes the ancient reports into distant encounters and close encounters, similar to Hynek's classification of modern UFOs. In the distant encounters category, many reports describe "flying armaments" like shields, weapons, and fleets in the sky. Some of these could potentially be explained as meteors or auroras, but others like the sky army reported over Judea are less easily explained. The document aims to filter conventional explanations from reports resembling truly unidentified phenomena.
This document is the preface to Volume 4 of Chemistry and Technology of Explosives by Tadeus Urbanski. It provides background on the scope and contents of the volume, acknowledges those who contributed information and assistance, and thanks the various organizations that granted permission to reuse content. The preface expresses the author's dedication to peaceful applications of explosives and avoidance of military topics. It aims to comprehensively but critically cover available literature on the subject as of the late 1980s/early 1990s.
An Uncertain Armageddon The Manhattan Project and the Birth of the Atomic Bo...Sandra Valenzuela
This summary provides an overview of the key points from the document:
1) In August 1945, Emperor Hirohito of Japan announced Japan's surrender after the US dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, acknowledging the devastating power of this new weapon.
2) From 1942-1946, the top secret Manhattan Project was undertaken by the US, UK, and Canada to develop an atomic bomb before Nazi Germany could. The project was led by General Leslie Groves and J. Robert Oppenheimer.
3) In 1939, Hungarian physicists Leó Szilárd and Eugene Wigner convinced Albert Einstein to write a letter to President Roosevelt warning that Nazi Germany may be pursuing nuclear weapons and that
Scientists D A V I D H . FRISCH and the Decision to Bomb.docxbagotjesusa
Scientists D A V I D H . FRISCH
and the Decision to Bomb Japan
What did scientists do and
what could we have done about
the decision to drop the atomic
bomb on Hiroshima without hav-
ing an almost harmless demon-
stration first? What can we learn
that will help in applications of
future technical developments?
Such historical adventurism
and didacticism should really
come from one who was close t o
the leadership of the Office of
Scientific Research and Develop-
ment of one of the Manhattan
District laboratories; I was only
a graduate student a t Los Ala-
mos. Although my special ex-
periences were quite limited, Los
Alamos was a rather intimate
community, so I hope t o have
in reasonable perspective the feel-
ings of many who were there. But
that is a small part of the larger
picture, for which I am relying
mainly on published histories.
Several people kindly talked
about these matters with me, but
they will not mind not being
thanked by name for help in rak-
ing over these old coals. I have
not gone back to the original ma-
terial or re-interviewed the sur-
viving principals.
There is no way t o test the ap-
pealing idea that “history will
show” that a more lasting peace
was made on account of Hiroshi-
ma. A different decision about
the first use of the bomb might
well have been a worse one in the
long run. But if 1945 could
somehow have happened with
even a few of the many scientists
in the Manhattan District Proj-
ect having had 25 years more pre-
vious experience of governmental
decision-making, I believe we
would have wanted - and been
able - to have had one demon-
stration of the bomb without
large loss of Japanese lives. Per-
haps a demonstration would have
I ‘ . . . Yet I believe that, ac-
companied by clear informa-
tion, it alone-without another
A-bomb-would have brought
the war to an end in a few
days.” David H. Frisch, a
graduate student at 1 0 s Ala-
mos during the development
of the atomic bomb, is profes-
sor of physics at the Massa-
chusetts Institute of Technol-
ogy.
been followed by too short a
pause before a very destructive
bombing to allow the Japanese
government time to absorb the
facts, as Hiroshima seems to me
to have been followed too closely
by Nagasaki. But that is another
question, not so dependent on
the particular experiences and
perceptions of the scientists in
the Project.
Even in January 1945, it was
not clear whether Germany or
Japan would be defeated first,
and up t o about the beginning of
April of 1945 there was the possi-
bility, though increasingly re-
mote, that Germany would get
nuclear bombs. Thus detailed
planning about the first use of
nuclear weapons against Japan
lacked definiteness until about
April. By the beginning of June
the decision not to give a demon-
stration w a s thoroughly en-
trained.
J a p a n had no offensive
strength left by June. This meant
that the time scale of militar.
World War 1 saw the emergence of new technologies that changed the nature of warfare. Trench warfare led to new adaptations by soldiers exhausted from living in trenches for weeks. German u-boats effectively sank British supply ships, threatening their navy. Meanwhile, Germany had more advanced aircraft and pilots, making their air force superior to Russia's. Overall, new machines of war like machine guns, submarines, and airplanes caused massive casualties and shaped the outcome of battles and the war.
Bibliography Of Research Paper Professional WritinDonna Butler
This document discusses the use of body scanners in airport security. It notes that body scanners were introduced after 9/11 to improve security screening. The document discusses the debate around privacy concerns with body scanners and the potential costs of implementing them widely. It also mentions a study that found body scanners could detect non-metallic threats but had limitations, and discusses the health effects debate around radiation exposure from scanners.
⇉The Red Scare in the 1920s Essay Example | GraduateWay. The key features of the Red Scare - GCSE History - Marked by Teachers.com. Red Scare Facts, Worksheets, The Probe, Across Borders & Summary. The Second Red Scare Essay Example | Topics and Well Written Essays .... the red scare article | Mc Carthyism | Social Movements. The Red Scare Essay. PPT - The Red Scare PowerPoint Presentation, free download - ID:6440548. Red Scare in US and Canada Research Paper Example | Topics and Well .... The Second Red Scare | Teaching Resources. The Red Scare observation lesson | Teaching Resources. This is an activity that requires students to research the events of .... Pin by stacie krabill on Banann | Things to sell, Red scare, Accusations. The red scare. PPT - Exploring American History Unit X – Post War America PowerPoint .... Lesson 8 - Second Red Scare - USA - Edexcel - A Level | Teaching Resources. Joseph mccarthy red scare essay about myself. Red scare 1950s dbq essay - nexingatewaycom. The Red Scare. "I Have Hear in My Hand" Herblock 1954 | Populist propaganda | Essay .... Essay on the red scare. Is This Tomorrow? A Red Scare Comic Book from 1947 - Flashbak. 13 best The Red Scare images on Pinterest | Red scare, Sample resume ....
Declaration of Independence Essay | Essay on Declaration of .... Rewrting the Declaration of Independence - Free Essay Example .... 10 Amazing Personal Declaration Of Independence Ideas 2024. please how do i create this declaration page on latex, the major .... Example Of Declaration In Research Paper - certify letter. Reasons for Writing Declaration. An Analysis of the Declaration of Independence and Its Use: [Essay ....
Quality Health Care Management Paper You are a quality analyst i.docxamrit47
Quality Health Care Management Paper
You are a quality analyst in a health information management (HIM) department appointed to lead a project team. Your team must assess the problem with the documentation of the patient’s discharge disposition status in the health record and present your findings in a meeting to the department.
An increasing number of errors have been reported, and frustration among the coders has risen. These coders claim that conflicting information is often present in the record, requiring them to spend an inordinate amount of time trying to obtain verification. Coding productivity has been affected. Explain how you would assess the problem, strategies that you may develop to resolve the problem, and a way to study the effectiveness of your strategies. Give examples of tools you would use to present your findings in the meeting.
Your research paper should be 3 to 4 pages long (excluding the cover page and reference page), supported by the readings from Week 4 and at least two additional scholarly sources (not Wikipedia etc.) Please adhere the writing rubric and let me know if you have any questions. This paper should be in proper APA format, which includes a title page, reference page, and APA-formatted references.
PART 2
Memo
By mid-week post a brief memo directed toward the project sponsor that provides a synopsis of the problem and a tentative plan of action. This should be a page or less. Your fellow students will provide peer-feedback.
Denying Thucydides's
"^r:::t
make it less real' Recognizing
it does not mean just "t"ptitg
whatever happens'
'We owe it to future
generations to face o"t of h"to'y's most brutal
tendencies head on and
,h.r, do everything we can to defy the odds'
INTRODUCTION
I have written my work, not as an essay to win the applause of the
moment, but as a possession for all time.
-Thurydides,
History of the Peloponnesian War
Here we are on top of the world. We have arrived at this peak to
stay there forever. There is, of course, this thing called history.
But history is something unpleasant that happens to other people.
-Arnold
Toynbee, recalling the 1897 diamond
jubilee celebration of Qeen Victoria
Like other practicing historians, I am often asked what the "les-
sons of history" are. I answer that the only lesson I have learnt
from studying the past is that there are no permanent winners and
losers.
-Ramachandra
Guha
A h, if we only knew." That was the best the German chancellor
l. \ could offer. Even when a colleague pressed Theobald von Beth-
mann Hollweg, he could not explain how his choices, and those of
other European statesmen, had led to the most devastating war the
world had seen to that point. By the time the slaughter of the Great
War finally ended in 1918, the key players had lost all they fought for:
the Austro-Hungarian Empire dissolved, the German kaiser ousted, the
Russian tsar overthrown, France bled for a generation, and England
shorn of its treas ...
Historical Dictionary of International IntelligenceВасиль Петренко
The historical dictionaries present essential information on a broad range
of subjects, including American and world history, art, business, cities,
countries, cultures, customs, film, global conflicts, international relations,
literature, music, philosophy, religion, sports, and theater. Written by experts,
all contain highly informative introductory essays on the topic and detailed
chronologies that, in some cases, cover vast historical time periods but still
manage to heavily feature more recent events.
Brief A–Z entries describe the main people, events, politics, social issues,
institutions, and policies that make the topic unique, and entries are crossreferenced for ease of browsing. Extensive bibliographies are divided into
several general subject areas, providing excellent access points for students,
researchers, and anyone wanting to know more. Additionally, maps, photographs, and appendixes of supplemental information aid high school and
college students doing term papers or introductory research projects. In short,
the historical dictionaries are the perfect starting point for anyone looking to research in these fields.
The document provides an overview of the development of intelligence sharing between Britain and the United States during World War 2. It discusses how Britain was initially reluctant to share intelligence from broken German codes (known as ULTRA) due to past experiences. While the US had some success breaking Japanese codes (MAGIC), Britain's breaking of the German Enigma code gave it a major advantage. The document outlines agreements like the BRUSA Agreement that eventually formalized greater intelligence cooperation between the two countries during the war.
CIA - Central Intelligence Agency (US)
KGB - Komitet Gosudarstvennoi Bezopasnosti (Soviet Union security service)
MI5 - British Security Service
MI6 - British Secret Intelligence Service
NSA - National Security Agency (US)
GRU - Glavnoye Razvedyvatel’noe Upravlenie (Russian military intelligence service)
An Historian S Perspective On Technology And The Cold WarJessica Navarro
This document summarizes perspectives from historians, scientists, and policymakers on the role of science and technology in the Cold War. It discusses how the strategic and technological demands of the US-Soviet confrontation led to the creation of national laboratories in the US. It analyzes differing views on which Cold War technologies most influenced events, noting debates around nuclear weapons, missiles, satellites, and other innovations. The document emphasizes how the Cold War profoundly impacted relationships between the military, government, science, and industry.
1. 9/11 was a tragic event that killed nearly 3,000 people, but it did not signify the start of a "clash of civilizations" or usher in an era of hyper-terrorism as some initially thought.
2. While al Qaeda has continued isolated attacks, they were largely defeated by international cooperation against terrorism and failed to repeat another 9/11. Osama bin Laden's death during the Arab Spring further marked their decline.
3. The US overreaction to 9/11 through actions like the Iraq war had unintended consequences and cost the US financially, morally, and diplomatically while distracting from priorities like Afghanistan. 9/11 accelerated history but its impact was more
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N11.de andreis -"Paolo's commitment to arms control and disarm"
1. International Workshop on Paolo Farinella (1953-2000)
The Scientist and the Man
Paolo’s Commitment to Arms Control and
Disarmament
Marco De Andreis
Pisa, 14 June 2010
2. The list of Paolo’s publications on disarmament and International security shows
that he was deeply involved in this field between the early eighties and the end of
the nineties, shortly before his death on 25 March, 2000.
With 38 journal articles and chapters in edited books, plus 1 co-authored book –
almost evenly divided between the English and the Italian languages - Paolo was
actually more prolific than several people who had made of arms control their
professional occupation, including this speaker. His profession, though, was
astronomy. Arms control was for him just an unpaid side-kick freely chosen for
reasons of social responsibility. Yes, Paolo cared a lot for this little planet and its
unruly inhabitants, probably more that he was willing to admit.
Having said of the quantity and before touching upon the substance of Paolo’s
production on arms control and disarmament, let me call your attention – and I’m
sure I’m not going to be the only one to do that in the course of this workshop – on
his style. In both languages, Paolo was an extraordinary writer of absolute clarity,
who managed to command the reader’s attention on issues that, as you may
imagine, are not self-evident, nor particularly heartening. The wooden, woolly,
convoluted and ultimately boring prose that plagues the majority of those who
write on international relations – despite the best efforts of armies of editors,
especially in the Anglo-Saxon world – was truly unknown to Paolo.
Most of us who are roughly of the same age as Paolo got involved in arms control
as a consequence of NATO’s decision, on 12 December 1979, to deploy in Europe
a new generation of Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces (INF), Pershing 2 and
Tomahawk cruise missiles, including some of the latter on Italian soil. This NATO
decision was presented as a response to the previous deployment of a new
generation of Soviet INF, the SS-20 ballistic missiles. But with tens of thousands of
nuclear weapons already deployed everywhere on every conceivable delivery
vehicle on each side of the iron curtain, many thought - particularly many scientists
thought - that the arms race was getting out of control, driven as it was by this
blind logic of tit-for-tat.
We didn’t know each other at that time, but while I’m sure that Paolo followed the
INF debate closely, that wasn’t in my opinion what triggered his commitment to
arms control and disarmament. His dear space was, as ever. All his initial
publications, between 1984 and 1988, have to do with security in space, anti-
satellite weapons (ASAT) and the anti-ballistic missile (ABM) treaty insofar as it was
threatened by the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI), launched by the then
President of the United States, Ronald Reagan, on 23 March 1983.
1
3. The popular name under which the SDI went was Star Wars, not only because it
looked then and looks now as pure science fiction, but also because in order to
fulfill its stated mission of being capable of destroying attacking missiles after their
launch, it relied on a stupefying array of orbiting gadgets, such as laser beams and
mirrors, hypervelocity guns and such like.
I am sure that Paolo saw in the SDI the ultimate evil. There it was in just one stroke a
project that threatened to: destroy the balance of terror that through mutual
deterrence guaranteed peace between the Soviet Union and the United States;
militarize and corrupt science and scientists thanks to the billions of dollar
earmarked for this kind of research; militarize his beloved space to an extent that
made child-play of ASAT. The essence of Star Wars really was to potentially turn
outer space into a battlefield – Paolo had yet to call attention on space debris
(Nicola Cufaro will touch in a moment upon that part of Paolo’s research), but
what is a battlefield if not the perfect debris making machine?
Thus Paolo went to war against Star Wars armed by his knowledge of even the
most technically sophisticated issues involved in the debate, by his ability as a
writer, by his genuine love for a good argument, and by his relentless willpower.
His best essays on the SDI in Italian were published in such journals as Sapere,
L’Astronomia, Il Giornale di Astronomia. Co-authoring with Luciano Anselmo and
Bruno Bertotti, Paolo also repeatedly had his contributions appear in the
proceedings of the International School On Disarmament and Research on
Conflict (ISODARCO), normally edited by David Carlton and Carlo Schaerf and
published by MacMillan in London.
ISODARCO, founded in 1966 by Edoardo Amaldi and Schaerf, was and is more or
less a spin-off of the Italian Pugwash Group – I assume this is an audience where I
don’t need to explain what the Pugwash Conferences on Sciences and World
Affairs do. In the early eighties, Paolo attended ISODARCO regularly and, when
invited, Pugwash conferences and workshops – Pugwash works by invitation only.
Paolo was also a very active member of the scientific council of the Unione
Scienziati per il Disarmo (USPID), our rough equivalent here in Italy of the Union of
Concerned Scientists, represented today by its Secretary General, Nicola Cufaro. I
also have the honor of sitting in USPID scientific council.
A good example of what I called Paolo’s relentless willpower as a debater are two
letters on SDI that he sent in 1985 to an Italian journal called Affari Esteri
(translatable, mind you, as Foreign Affairs,), known to be rather close to Italy’s
diplomacy, particularly the most hawkish part of the Italian diplomacy – the journal
and its two editors, Roberto Gaja and Achille Albonetti, had distinguished
2
4. themselves in the previous decade in opposing Italy’s ratification of the nuclear
Non Proliferation Treaty. Only the first of the two letters was published and, being
focused as it was on the scientific merits of the SDI project, got embarrassed and
unconvincing replies from the editors of Affari Esteri.
Then, one or two years later, around 1986-87, something must have clicked in
Paolo’s conscience as an arms controller because he decided to shift the focus of
his interest back from space and down to earth – actually to the most difficult,
complex and gruesome part of military affairs, that is conventional arms: the
fighter bombers and warships and guns and tanks and infantry and all the stuff of
the non-stellar but rather pedestrian wars that actually have killed human beings in
the hundreds of millions.
Why the change? I can only guess, based on my own experience. You see, back
then, during the cold war, one might get involved in disarmament because he
was terrified by the destructive power of nuclear weapons (my case and quite a
common one). Or because he was frightened by a creeping militarization of
everything, from scientific research to space (Paolo’s case, probably). But as soon
as anybody tried to think hard about how a nuclear war, and stars wars and the
militarization of everything could be avoided, he or she would end up in Germany
– along what NATO called its central front, beyond which the divisions of the Soviet
Union and its Warsaw Pact allies were deployed, where the highest concentration
of firepower ever amassed in human history stood ready to be used in a matter of
minutes.
Armageddon would have started right there, by means of an escalation from
conventional explosives to nuclear arms that, despite claims to the contrary on the
part of some self appointed strategists, no one could really control or - to use the
jargon of the time - “dominate”. Thus, if one
was really serious about avoiding a nuclear war, the first order of priority was to
lower the likelihood of a war in Europe. How? By making the conventional balance
there as stable as possible and the military postures of both alliances as defensive
as possible.
Thus, a new school of military strategy, focused on conventional arms, sprung up in
the early eighties. It was called “defensive defense” and its most active
3
5. representatives were Albrecht von Müller, a German, Anders Boserup, a Dutch,
Robert Neild, a British. Pugwash lent its credibility to these intellectual efforts by
sponsoring several study groups on defensive defense. One such group was held in
Altamura, near Bari, in the Fall of 1987 – Nicola Cufaro organized it, together with
Giuseppe (Beppe) Nardulli, an accomplished physicist and brilliant arms controller,
former secretary general of USPID. Beppe, like Paolo, died prematurely two years
ago and, also like Paolo, was an unforgettable friend of all of us.
Both Paolo and myself were invited in Altamura and it was at this juncture that our
paths crossed for the first time and we became colleagues and friends.
Paolo’s production in this sub-field of arms control and disarmament is, as you may
expect, quite impressive in any respect: style, acumen and depth of research.
Together with Dimitri Batani he wrote a masterly analysis of what was actually
going on NATO’s Central Front, titled “The Conventional balance in Europe: ‘Bean
Count’ or complex assessment?” and published in the 1991 book The Arms Race in
an Era of Negotiations, the proceedings of another ISODARCO.
In 1989, in one of the rare cases in which the Italian military showed some interest
toward the opinions of the Italian scientific community on military affairs, the
Centro Militare di Studi Strategici (CeMISS - Military Center for Strategic Studies)
commissioned to Paolo, Francesco Calogero, Gianluca Devoto and myself a
research report on defensive defense and the role of Italy. The report was
published in 1990 and Paolo wrote most of it. To be frank, I doubt that it had much
of an impact on our top brass.
Fortunately, however, the cold war had just come to an end and with it Paolo,
myself and other colleagues stopped worrying - perhaps not about the bomb itself
(I’m quoting Dr. Strangelove here), but certainly about the conventional balance
in Europe. I’ll come back at the end on what has become in the meantime of it
and of several other objects of Paolo’s attention as an arms controller.
With end of the cold war, Germany was re-united and the Warsaw Pact was
dissolved – which implied that Paolo’s and my own concerns with NATO’s Central
4
6. Front and the conventional balance at Italy’s northeastern border had become
largely obsolete. I can guarantee to you that both of us were ecstatic at the
prospect that this particular interest of ours had suddenly become irrelevant – arms
control and disarmament is, I believe, one of the few human endeavors in which
one may, under certain circumstances, be very, very happy of going out of
business.
Together, we turned our attention on what was called at that time “the peace
dividend”. The idea was simple and straightforward: a world without ideological
confrontation, a world at the “end of history”, simply did not need anymore the
large arsenals that had been accumulated since the end of world war 2. Immense
human and material resources could be put to better uses.
Thus, in 1991-92, Paolo and I tried to apply the peace dividend idea to Italy. We
put together under the auspices of the Centro Studi di Politica Internazionale
(CeSPI) a study group which included also Giuseppe Catalano, Marta Dassù,
Gianluca Devoto, Beppe Nardulli and Rodolfo Ragionieri.
The result was a proposal to profoundly change the Italian armed forces. First, we
suggested the abolition of conscription and the creation of an all volunteer army.
And second we sketched deep cuts in major weapon holdings and manpower for
the three armed forces. As a consequence, Italy’s military budget would have
shrunk of more than one fourth.
Beyond our own traditional milieu – CeSPI, Pugwash, ISODARCO and USPID – our
proposal made us very few friends. The Italian left did not like it because it
traditionally saw with great suspicion professional soldiers and, on top of that,
considered the reductions we envisaged in the higher ranks (commissioned and
non-commissioned officers) as a further threat to overall employment.
The right obviously hated the idea because they simply could not conceive
cutting the size of the armed forces as well as military expenditures. The military
hated it also for all of the above, left and right. Surprisingly, Italy’s top brass were
particularly vocal in rejecting an end to conscription because they claimed that
5
7. they had no other way of recruiting the brightest and the best of the nation’s
youth. And among Italy’s top brass the then chairman of CeMISS, gen. Giuseppe
Cucchi, was one of the most skeptical. I mention this because the information will
come handy at the end of this presentation when, as I promised, we will see what
happened to the various issues that Paolo dealt with.
Even at the risk of not doing full justice to the breadth of Paolo’s commitment on
arms control and disarmament – but please have a look yourself at his truly
impressive list of publications – I now turn to the last issue that he covered with all
his unique combination of knowledge, style, passion and willpower. And this is the
case of Mordechai Vanunu, for whose freedom Paolo fought till the end of his own
life.
Vanunu is a former Israeli nuclear technician who, in 1986, revealed to the British
press the extent of Israel’s nuclear program. He was then abducted – from Italy of
all places, a fact that made Paolo particularly indignant of the deafening silence
that surrounded the Vanunu case in this country – by Mossad, transported to Israel
and sentenced in a trial held behind closed doors to 18 years in prison, 11 of which
he spent in solitary confinement.
Paolo made literally whatever he could possibly do and more to call the attention
on this case and mobilize public opinion. Sapere published many of his appeals
over the years, whereas the English reader can easily retrieve on the website of
The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists an article he published together with the
French Physicist Venance Journé in the issue of January/February 1991.
Paolo’s passionate defense of Vanunu was motivated exclusively by the defense
of the Israeli technician’s human rights – patently violated by the abduction, the
secret trail, the solitary confinement – and by his solidarity with Vanunu’s courage
in acting as a whistleblower of a secret nuclear program.
Let me quote him and Venance on this point.
6
8. “Vanunu’s case – they wrote in the Bulletin – should be considered in light of the
ethics of science and technology. In 1946, Albert Einstein summoned scientists and
others of good conscience to speak up and inform the public, no matter the
magnitude of personal risk. […] Protection for whistleblowers working in critical
areas of arms development and production, when weapons of mass destruction
or systems forbidden by international treaties are involved, would be an important
element in treaty verification and would inspire international confidence”.
On the other hand, Paolo had not the slightest animosity toward the state of Israel,
which he always regarded with respect and sympathy. One of his articles –
published in the April 1991 issue of Sapere – thus ended: “The idea of a nuclear
weapon free zone [in the Middle East], officially supported by Israel […] could be a
first step toward a process of disarmament in the region. Negotiations among all
states in the region should start immediately. Vanunu’s choice could thus end up
being the most foresighted inasmuch as, far from damaging his country’s security,
it would have strengthened it”.
Ten years from Paolo’s absurd and untimely death, let’s now have a quick look at
whatever happened to the problems he so brilliantly contributed to find a solution
to.
ASAT is an issue that largely faded away – even though primarily the U.S. and
Russia still have capabilities and, as Paolo never tired to remind anybody that
would care to listen, pursuing research on ABM implies research on ASAT as well. In
January 2007, China tested its ASAT by destroying and old weather satellite and
making a big, huge mess in terms of space debris.
Star Wars, or rather research on ABM systems, is still alive, even in the Barak Obama
administration, albeit at a reduced level of funding. It still is very, very far for the
fancy original promises made by Ronal Reagan of “rendering nuclear weapons
impotent and obsolete” – a goal Paolo would be ready to share if only were
attainable. The ABM systems that the George W. Bush administration intended to
deploy in Europe, in Poland and in the Czech Republic, were canceled by the
new one now in power.
7
9. The ABM Treaty is no longer in force since the unilateral withdrawal from it by the
U.S. in 2002, under the Administration of George W. Bush. There are no longer legal
constraints now to pursue ballistic missile defense – event though the hardest
constraints, the budgetary and technical ones, are still there. The overall
atmosphere of nuclear arms control and disarmament has certainly moved in a
direction that would have delighted Paolo since Barak Obama came to power.
It’s now official U.S. policy to pursue a nuclear weapon free world.
In Europe there is no longer any conventional balance – or imbalance for that
matter – one can speak of. The countries that used to be Moscow allies are now in
NATO. European armies still have some, limited use, only when sent outside the old
continent on peacekeeping or, unfortunately but also less frequently, on war
fighting missions.
This obvious fact does not yet lead NATO to get rid once and for all of a couple of
hundred of so-called tactical nuclear weapons – these are the remnants of a
much larger arsenal originally intended to “compensate” NATO supposed
conventional inferiority and trigger escalation to Armageddon in case of a Soviet
attack. Thus they are hopelessly obsolete you would think.
But no, oh no! A committee of experts chaired by no less than former secretary of
state Madeleine Albright recently recommended NATO, which is reportedly
debating a new “strategic concept”, to keep these weapons. It is definitively not
the kind of recommendation that Paolo would have welcomed.
Conscription was suspended in Italy (not abolished because that would require a
constitutional amendment) during the center-left government in power from 1996-
2001. For the first three years of that legislature, the Prime Minister was Romano
Prodi. His military advisor was general Giuseppe Cucchi. The law, however, took full
effect on 1 July 2005 under the center-right government of Silvio Berlusconi who
did not have the slightest hesitation in taking credit for the reform.
The number of equipment and manpower for the three armed forces went steeply
down in the meantime and they almost coincide now with what Paolo and Beppe
8
10. and the rest of the study group proposed. Expenditures as a percentage of Italy’s
GDP are already below what we proposed back then.
The Federal Republic of Germany was the last big European state to have kept
conscription but is currently considering switching to a professional army. Karl-
Theodore zu Guttemberg, the defense minister, intends to reduce manpower from
the current 250,000 to 150,000 – the latter figure is exactly the number we came up
with 18 years ago for Italy.
Finally, Mordechai Vanunu was released from prison in 2004 but he’s still subject to
any number of restrictions to his personal freedom, including giving interviews to
foreign journalist or leaving the country.
On May 24 last, exactly three weeks ago, he was arrested once again and sent to
jail to serve a three-month term for violating the restrictions placed on his release.
How messy and unpredictable the world of earthlings is if it takes us so long to
understand what special people like Paolo try to tell us and sometimes we don’t
even get it.
We should really be grateful to Paolo Farinella - this great, great man – for any
minute of his short and precious life in which he diverted his attention from his
beloved celestial objects to care for us.
9