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Agreement Reached on Legislation to Toughen Economic Sanctions Against Iran

IN THIS ISSUE: Economic sanctions against Iran, India quietly gate crashes into submarine-launched ballistic missiles club?, the failures of missile defense, mutual nuclear vulnerability with China, SILEX and proliferation, nuclear 'a stepping stone' to space exploration.

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Published on July 31, 2012

Proliferation News

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In This Issue
Agreement Reached on Legislation to Toughen Economic Sanctions Against Iran
Congressional Quarterly
India Quietly Gate Crashes Into Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missiles Club?
Times of India
The Failures of Missile Defense
National Interest
Draft Report Urges Accepting Mutual Nuclear Vulnerability With China
Inside Defense
SILEX and Proliferation
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
Nuclear 'A Stepping Stone' to Space Exploration
World Nuclear News

Agreement Reached on Legislation to Toughen Economic Sanctions Against Iran

Emily Cadei | Congressional Quarterly

Soltanieh

House and Senate negotiators have reached agreement on a compromise bill intensifying economic sanctions against Iran in hopes of pushing it to end its nuclear program. Though the measure does not include the toughest language some hawks in both parties wanted, Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla., the House Republicans' point person for the negotiations, said it "strengthens current U.S. law by leaps and bounds."

The endorsement of the leadership in both chambers is expected to smooth final passage before Aug. 3, the beginning of the summer recess. The bill is expected to be considered in the House under suspension of the rules, which requires a two-thirds majority, as early as Wednesday.   Full Article

Related Video:
How Much Tighter Must the NPT Be? (Perkovich, Gilinsky, Sokolski, and Fly, Foreign Policy Initiative)



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India Quietly Gate Crashes Into Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missiles Club?
Rajat Pandit | Times of India
India in April yanked open the door of the exclusive ICBM ( intercontinental ballistic missile) club with the first test of Agni-V. Now, if DRDO is to be believed, India has quietly gate-crashed into an even more exclusive club of nuclear-tipped submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs).     Full Article

The Failures of Missile Defense
Philip Coyle | National Interest
Two recent scientific assessments of U.S. missile-defense efforts show that these programs are chasing scientific dead ends, unworkable concepts and a flawed overall architecture. n some cases, the gap between what the Missile Defense Agency (MDA) has been touting and the scientific facts is astonishing.     Full Article

 
 
Related
The Nuclear Chain: U.S.-China, China-India, India-Pakistan (Saalman, Deshun, Xinying, Hui, Jie, and Yunzhi, Carnegie Event)
Draft Report Urges Accepting Mutual Nuclear Vulnerability With China
Christopher J. Castelli | Inside Defense
The United States should declare that mutual nuclear vulnerability with China is a "fact of life" for both countries rather than investing in strategic offensive and defensive capabilities designed to negate China's nuclear forces.     Full Article

SILEX and Proliferation
R. Scott Kemp | Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
In July, the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission held its final hearing to license the world's first facility to enrich uranium on a commercial scale using lasers. For years, experts have warned that laser enrichment, known as SILEX (separation of isotopes by laser excitation), would be particularly good at making highly enriched uranium .     Full Article

Nuclear 'A Stepping Stone' to Space Exploration
World Nuclear News
NASA has reported the successful tests of power conversion and radiator systems for a nuclear power system it hopes to deploy on the Moon by 2020. It is based on a small fission reactor which would heat up and circulate a liquid metal coolant mixture of sodium and potassium.     Full Article

Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.

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