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   NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION : NEXT GENERATION NUCLEAR WEAPONS
News Resources Bibliography
New nukes need more work, panel says -- Ralph Vartabedian  -- Los Angeles Times  -- October 02, 2007

An independent group of nuclear weapons experts said Monday that substantial work remained to be done on a new generation of warheads in order to show, short of underground testing, that the bombs would be reliable.

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Nuclear Attack Now Only Option in Some Cases, U.S. General Says -- Jon Fox  -- Global Security Newswire  -- March 09, 2007

The United States has made little progress in developing a conventional "prompt global strike" capability, leaving the military few options short of a nuclear attack in certain scenarios, according to the head of U.S. Strategic Command.

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U.S. Plan for New Nuclear Weapons Advances -- Walter Pincus  -- Washington Post  -- October 20, 2006

The United States took another step yesterday toward building a new stockpile of up to 2,200 deployed nuclear weapons that would last well into the 21st century, announcing the start of a multiyear process to repair and replace facilities where they would be developed and assembled and where older warheads could be more rapidly dismantled.

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House panel boosts Bush plan to build new nuclear warheads -- James Sterngold  -- San Francisco Chronicle  -- May 20, 2006

A congressional committee took major steps this week toward financing the Bush administration's controversial program to build new generations of nuclear warheads, roughly doubling the budget for the design of the new weapons while reducing the money for maintaining the old stockpile.

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U.S. to Step Up Disassembly of Older Nuclear Warheads -- Walter Pincus  -- Washington Post  -- May 04, 2006

The Bush administration plans to speed up the dismantling of old, retired nuclear warheads in coming years, in part to counter any impression that the United States is starting a new arms race with its work to develop a new generation of more reliable nuclear arms, according to U.S. officials.

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U.S. Prepares to Overhaul Arsenal of Nuclear Warheads -- Walter Pincus  -- Washington Post  -- April 14, 2006

By the end of the year, the government plans to select the design of a new generation of nuclear warheads that would be more dependable and possibly able to be disarmed in the event they fell into terrorist hands, according to the head of the National Nuclear Security Administration.

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U.K. Secretly Works on New Nuclear Warhead -- Staff  -- Global Security Newswire  -- March 13, 2006

The United Kingdom has been secretly operating a program to develop a new nuclear warhead. The effort is akin to the U.S. Reliable Replacement Warhead program, and aims to produce a warhead that could be tested without an actual nuclear detonation.

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U.S. Plans to Modernize Nuclear Arsenal -- Walter Pincus  -- Washington Post  -- March 04, 2006

The Bush administration is developing plans to design and deploy refurbished or replacement warheads for the nuclear stockpile, and by 2030 to modernize the production complex so that, if required, it could produce new generations of weapons with different or modified capabilities.

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DOE Bunker-Buster Study Said Dead, DOD May Continue -- David Ruppe  -- Global Security Newswire  -- November 09, 2005

A senior Bush administration official and the House Appropriations Committee this week declared the Energy Department’s controversial Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator study dead. The study, intended to assess the feasibility of developing a reliable, deeper-penetrating nuclear weapon than currently in the arsenal has been the subject of domestic and international criticism. Proponents say it is needed to threaten hardened and deeply buried targets. Critics say it could cause mass civilian destruction if used, might be deemed a more “usable” weapon, and undermines global nonproliferation efforts.

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Task Force Urges U.S. to Adopt New Nuclear Weapons "Family" -- David Ruppe  -- Global Security Newswire  -- July 15, 2005

The United States should immediately begin efforts to produce a new "family" of nuclear weapons to replace the current U.S. arsenal, according to an Energy Department-commissioned task force report.

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