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Even though the use of biological weapons was outlawed by the 1925 Geneva Protocol, leading nations around the world have pursued the development and stockpiling of biological weapons throughout the last century.
Iran has been under scrutiny from the international community over its nuclear program. While Iran's intentions are unclear, its failure to declare all nuclear facilities and materials has led to increased concerns.
Warnings about an insurgency developing in Iraq after the regime fell were largely ignored. Tens, and possibly hundreds, of thousands of Iraqi civilian casualties have resulted, producing a backlash against the United States.
The American missile defense program is a comprehensive, multi-layered system of systems. Annual funding has increased from $3 billion during the Clinton administration to over $10 billion today.
If Cold War-era thinking is extinct, why have there been so few changes in the allocation of U.S. defense dollars? With its massive budgetary resources, the Pentagon must do a better job of maximizing its return on investment.
Since entering into force in 1970, the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, commonly known as the NPT, has remained the cornerstone of the international nonproliferation regime.
North Korea has produced enough fissile material for between five and twelve nuclear weapons. Negotiations over its nuclear program have followed a long and difficult road, but recent breakthroughs offer hope for the future.
The attacks of September 11, 2001 demonstrated the reality of terrorism to the American people, but serious efforts are still urgently needed to prevent a nuclear attack from occurring in the United States.
Various important agreements have been negotiated and signed between the United States, Soviet Union (and its successor states), and other parties to reduce global strategic nuclear weapons stockpiles.