W.J. Hennigan: A nuclear strike is more likely now that at any point since the Cold War

As tensions with Russia heighten, the U.S., Europe and Ukraine brace for potential nuclear threats, setting up a stark reminder of Cold War-era fears.

W.J. Hennigan writes for The New York Times.


In short:

  • U.S. intelligence flagged a 50-50 chance of Russia using nuclear weapons if Ukraine breached its Crimea defenses, prompting preparations including radiation detectors and medical training against radiation exposure.
  • A "Tiger Team" developed a nuclear response playbook for the Biden administration, reflecting increased concerns of a nuclear strike's likelihood in modern conflicts.
  • Russia's explicit warnings and the strategic deployment of tactical nuclear weapons underscore the grim reality of nuclear risks today.

Key quote:

"...most of the world has barely registered the threat. Perhaps it’s because an entire generation came of age in a post-Cold War world, when the possibility of nuclear war was thought to be firmly behind us. It is time to remind ourselves of the consequences in order to avoid them."

— W.J. Hennigan, New York Times opinion writer

Why this matters:

Today's nuclear threat is much broader than the Russia-Ukraine war, Hennigan notes, and involves a new generation of weapons with unpredictable results. The renewed possibility of nuclear conflict between major powers injects urgency into global efforts for diplomacy and nuclear non-proliferation, directly impacting global security and the broader aim of preventing catastrophic health and environmental consequences.

Peter Dykstra: From the Cold War to today, from nuclear weapons to nuclear power, Ukraine’s been there.

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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