Bennett Ramberg argues that current efforts to prevent nuclear proliferation in North Korea, Iraq, and Iran could risk dismantling the legal framework that nonproliferation rests on -- the 1968 Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.
Defense analysts examine the U.S. claim that terrorist groups -- aided by 'rogue nations' like Iraq, Iran, and North Korea -- are actively seeking weapons of mass destruction.
While George Bush names Iraq, Iran and North Korea as an axis of evil, Saddam Hussein's huge chemical and biological weapons arsenal emerges as the biggest threat to world peace.
Michael Dobbs examines the political motives and international developments that led the intelligence community to reverse its position in 1999 and conclude that there was "a long-range missile threat to the United States before 2010."
Now, as U.S. officials scramble to find the source of the anthrax spores turning up in American cities, some experts are wondering if a foreign nation could have supplied the deadly material, either on purpose or inadvertently, to whoever is putting it in the mail. While such a possibility is remote, they say, it would be a truly frightening development, suggesting a lack of security in a foreign weapons program, if not outright complicity.
General Ralph E. Eberhart, the U.S. military's space chief, said he is worried about China, North Korea, Iran, and Iraq's growing capability to conduct computer warfare against U.S. military networks.