The Atlantic

A New Nuclear Era Is Coming

We’ve gone from the first decade since the advent of the atomic age to <em>not</em> yield a new nuclear-weapons state to the brink of war between the U.S. and Iran.
Source: Camera Press / Pasan / RBO / Redux

Iranian missile attacks on U.S. forces in Iraq. Deadly chaos in Iran. A sudden halt of the fight against the Islamic State. Utter confusion over whether U.S. troops will remain in Iraq, and even whether the United States still respects the laws of war. The fallout from the Trump administration’s killing of Qassem Soleimani has been swift and serious.

But one potential knock-on effect may not come into clear view for some time: the emergence of Iran as the next nuclear-weapons state, at the very moment when the world appears on the cusp of a more perilous nuclear age. It’s possible that the Reaper drone hovering over Baghdad’s airport last week destroyed not only an infamous Iranian general, but also the last hope of curbing Iran’s nuclear ambitions.

Before he’d even said “good morning” during to the nation yesterday, Donald Trump vowed that Iran would “never be allowed to have a nuclear weapon” as long

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