The Guardian view on arms control: essential to prevent the total devastation of nuclear war | Editorial
Briefly

Next November marks 40 years since the US president Ronald Reagan and the Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev declared that a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought.
The moment passed, but its lesson endures: disarmament demands courage and compromise. Arms control brought down the number of nuclear weapons held by the two countries from 60,000 to roughly 11,000 today.
Since George W Bush withdrew the US from the anti-ballistic missile treaty with Moscow in 2002, the risk of a return to an all-out arms race has grown.
Presidential sole authority rightly ensures civilian control over nuclear weapons. But why concentrate such power in just one civilian's hands?
Read at www.theguardian.com
[
|
]