Nuclear War Essays

  • Physical and Environmental Effects of a Nuclear War

    1273 Words  | 3 Pages

    Environmental Effects of a Nuclear War Imagine the heat of millions of degrees, the immediate destruction of thousands of acres, and the deaths of hundreds of thousands of lives. Now imagine all of that times a thousand. There you have a nuclear war, the explosion of a thousand or more nuclear bombs on the earth. That is what is estimated would be a nuclear war. All of that power packed in relatively small(considering the power they unleash) bombs. The results of a nuclear war would be devastating.

  • War and Nuclear Weapons

    794 Words  | 2 Pages

    War. War never changes. Since the dawn of time, man has killed for the sake of their territory and their beliefs. Weapons evolved along side the intelligence of man giving people more ways to kill one another with quicker methods. When a neutron is split from a proton in the nucleus of an atom it causes an atomic blast. Over time these blasts have grown larger and stronger to the point where they could lead to the end of the world. Nuclear Weapons date back to World War II when the world was on the

  • War: Nuclear Power

    1074 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Cold War was a time of great tension all over the world. From 1945 to 1989, the United States was the leader and nuclear power and was competing with the Soviet Union to create huge stockpiles of nuclear weapons. However, even though the Cold War ended, nuclear weapons are still a threat. Countries around the world strive to create nuclear power, and they do not promise to use it for peaceful purposes. Some examples of the struggles caused by nuclear weapons include the bombings of Hiroshima

  • Argumentative Essay: No Surviving A Nuclear War

    1024 Words  | 3 Pages

    Clear, There is No Surviving a Nuclear War” The debate over if humans can survive a nuclear war or not is an interesting topic. The article, “Let’s Be Clear. There is No Surviving a Nuclear War,” is written by James E. Doyle and Ira Helfand. The article was posted on Newsweek.com on August 20, 2015. This article was written to challenge the argument that people can survive a nuclear war. The authors are hoping that the audience will carry out action to prevent nuclear wars all together. An unfamiliar

  • Nuclear Power and the Cold War

    1095 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Cold War is famous not only for its long engagement between the two super powers, the U.S. and the Soviet Union, but also because of the heightened physical tension that nuclear power brought to the global stage. Winning the war at the cost of human annihilation was not abnormal political conversation, and from the 1940s onward, fear of global destruction became a daily concern (Granieri, 2011). The circumstances of the Cold War made it different than previous international conflicts because

  • Nuclear Weapons of the Cold War

    907 Words  | 2 Pages

    the Cold War has begun. The potential of mass destruction could occur at any moment. More efforts for mining and technology went toward constructing nuclear weapons. Missiles, such as, the Tomahawk® Cruise Missile and the Trident Fleet Ballistic Missile were the new wave of nuclear weapons, in the 1980’s, used in the Cold War. Safety restrictions and treaties stopped these weapons of mass destruction from causing an Armageddon to happen. Mining for elements that could be used as a nuclear power were

  • The Threat of Nuclear War Since the Cold War

    1975 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Threat of Nuclear War Since the Cold War I partly agree and disagree with the above statement. Nuclear war was at the height of taking place in the cold war and whilst it has subsided a little since the end it has not yet completely gone. Nuclear threat is different now then it was in the Twentieth Century, to prove my views I will talk about the cold war with reference to nuclear threat and what that means today. At the end of the Second World War, the world was in devastation,

  • Nuclear Iconography in Post-Cold War Culture

    1760 Words  | 4 Pages

    Nuclear Iconography in Post-Cold War Culture I wish in this paper to sketch a project involving nuclear iconography and post-Cold War culture. At the heart of this project is the claim that the current historical moment forms a legitimation crisis for the scientific, military, industrial, governmental, and "cultural" institutions whose interests are configured in the design, manufacture, deployment, and "use" of nuclear weapons. Within this moment, a variety of progressive and regressive movements

  • Nuclear Technology After the World War II

    953 Words  | 2 Pages

    the atomic at the end of World War II, interest in nuclear technology increased exponentially. People soon realized that nuclear technology could be used for electricity, as another alternative to fossil fuels. Today, nuclear power has its place in the world, but there is still a lot of controversy over the use of nuclear energy. Things such as the containment of radiation and few nuclear power plant accidents have given nuclear power a bad image. However, nuclear power is a reliable source of energy

  • The Nuclear Arms Race And The Cold War

    1839 Words  | 4 Pages

    The cold war was named so because between the USA and Russia, there was hardly any direct combat just a pile of tension, hostility, and potential violence. They were heading towards mutually assured destruction; using weapons of mass destruction which were the nuclear bombs and assuring inevitable destruction for both sides if there bombs were to go off and ultimate victory for none at the end. Each set of alliances, the Warsaw Pact and NATO competently created nuclear weapons to threaten the other

  • The Nuclear Inventions During the Cold War

    931 Words  | 2 Pages

    The nuclear inventions during the Cold War made wars suicidal and indestructible for the first time. Initially, the breaking point of the divergence in the nuclear arms race was when President Truman tried to scare Joseph Stalin with the development of the atomic bomb. The attempts to create the atomic bomb succeeded and President Truman took advantage to frighten Stalin at the Potsdam Conference. As a result, Stalin had spies who notified him of the success of the atomic bomb. This pursued Stalin

  • The Impact Of The Nuclear Arms Race On The Cold War

    946 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Nuclear Arms Race broke out in 1945 when World War two ended. It was between the United States and the Soviet Union. It came to an end in 1991 when the Soviet Union broke apart (Swift, 2009, Element of the cold war, para 1). The Nuclear Arms Race was a key factor in the Cold War. It was the first time people thought the world might end (Swift, 2009, Element of the cold war, para 1). The Nuclear Arms Race impacted the Cold War a lot. It impacted the Cold War by getting new technology, it led to

  • Nuclear Arms Race Cold War

    997 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Cold War was an intense economic, political, military, and ideological rivalry between Russia and the United States that took place from the 1940s to the 1990s, as a result of political differences.From chess tournaments to hockey games, Russia and the United States found every possible way to compete against one another without physically fighting. The United States and the USSR originally feuded over Berlin. When the Allies decided that they wanted to make Berlin part of West Germany, and

  • John Wyndham's The Chrysalids Tribulation Vs. Nuclear War

    729 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Chrysalids Tribulation Vs. Nuclear War The people of Waknuk are irrational and are oblivious to the fact that their beliefs are aimless. Waknuk is located in Labrador just outside of the place the old people call the Fringes. What the people of waknuk thought happened to the world was punishment from god, they called this tribulation. Their thoughts on tribulation had no proof, other than a book called The Repentances which they had no idea where it was from, only that it was from the old peoples

  • Unconventional Warfare: Nuclear, Biological War

    1013 Words  | 3 Pages

    Radiological, Nuclear Reconnaissance Evolution Unconventional warfare by means of chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear (CBRN) methods have existed for millennia. Dating as far back as the Hellenistic Age, this means of lethality has been evidenced through textual findings where Alexander the Great and his Army sustained poisoned arrows from Indian rivals. With the evolution that comes with time, the extensive use of chlorine and mustard gas were introduced by Germans during World War I (Landau

  • Nuclear War Movies: Dr. Strangelove and Threads

    1354 Words  | 3 Pages

    have been made that depict the what-ifs of a nuclear war. The two I am going to be discussing are Dr. Strangelove and Threads. Dr. Strangelove is about a paranoid Air Force base commander, orders a squadron of B-52 bombers into the Soviet Union to drop hydrogen bombs on military targets. He is the only one who knows the recall code that could be transmitted to abort the mission. At the pentagon, the U.S. President speaks with the Joint Chiefs in the war room to address the problem. General Turgidson

  • Analysis Of Nagasaki: Life After Nuclear War By Susan Southard

    616 Words  | 2 Pages

    theme of Nagasaki: Life After Nuclear War, is the impact of the war and nuclear weapons on the Japanese civilians, both physically and mentally. Susan Southard's story follows the lives of five hibakusha or atomic bomb affected people: Dō-oh Mineko, Nagano Etsuko, Wada Kōichi, Yoshida Katsuji, and Taniguchi Sumiteru (Southard xix). She uses testimonies, photographs, government documents, and news articles to present an accurate image of the consequences of nuclear war from the little-known side of

  • Hunger and Nuclear War

    866 Words  | 2 Pages

    Hunger, in addition to nuclear war, is complex issue which humanity is mostly concerned about in the world. One might claim that famine is the worst issue as there is no evidence if a nuclear war will occur, while the rate of starvation will rise higher and higher (Seebohm 1984, 3). Statistically, the total number of people suffering from hunger globally equals to approximately 1.02 billion (FAO 2009 quoted in Sui-Lin Nah and Chi-Fai Chau 2010, 544). Annually, famine and malnutrition, as major reasons

  • Dr. Strangelove: A Critical Analysis Of Stanley Kubrick's Nuclear War

    1309 Words  | 3 Pages

    necessary to achieve independence. However, the United States contributed to the French war effort. After the French withdrawal, Vietnam separated into two different states. It was assumed that these two states would make a referendum in order to achieve their reunification or their definitive separation. But this referendum never happened and the Second Indochina War, also known as the Vietnam War, began. In this war, as Robert Nixon said in his Address to the Nation of November 3, 1969, “President Eisenhower

  • Montag as Hero in Fahrenheit 451

    925 Words  | 2 Pages

    Montag as Hero in Fahrenheit 451 Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451 was first published in 1933, and its story entails a futuristic world in the middle of a nuclear war. The totalitarian government of this future forbids its people from reading or taking a part in other acts that involve individual thinking. The law against reading is, presumably, fairly new, and the government is faced with the enormous task of destroying all of its citizens' books. This disposal of books is the profession of