Nuclear 'Doomsday Clock' ticks closest to
midnight in 64 years
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[January 27, 2017]
By John Clarke
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Atomic scientists
reset their symbolic "Doomsday Clock" to its closest time to midnight in
64 years on Thursday, saying the world was closer to catastrophe due to
threats such as nuclear weapons, climate change and Donald Trump's
election as U.S. president.
The timepiece, devised by the Chicago-based Bulletin of the Atomic
Scientists and displayed on its website, is widely viewed as an
indicator of the world's vulnerability to disaster.
Its hands were moved to two minutes and 30 seconds to midnight, from
three minutes.
"The Doomsday Clock is closer to midnight than it's ever been in the
lifetime of almost everyone in this room," Lawrence Krauss, the
bulletin's chair, told a news conference in Washington.
The clock was last set this close to midnight in 1953, marking the start
of the nuclear arms race between the United States and the Soviet Union.
Thursday's reset was the first since 2015.
Krauss, a theoretical physicist, said Trump and Russian counterpart
Vladimir Putin carried a large share of the blame for the heightened
threat.
The bulletin cited nuclear volatility, especially as the United States
and Russia seek to modernize their atomic arsenals and remain at odds in
war-torn countries such as Syria and Ukraine.
Trump has suggested South Korea and Japan could acquire nuclear weapons
to compete with North Korea, which has conducted nuclear tests. Trump
has also raised doubts about the future of a multilateral nuclear pact
with Iran.
Chinese aid to Pakistan in the nuclear weapons field, as well as the
expansion of India and Pakistan's nuclear arsenals, were also worrisome,
the bulletin said in a statement.
The climate change outlook was somewhat less dismal, "but only
somewhat."
While nations had taken actions to combat climate change, the bulletin
noted, there appeared to be little appetite for additional cuts to
carbon dioxide emissions.
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Lawrence Krauss (L), chairman of the "Bulletin of the Atomic
Scientists" Board of Sponsors, and board member Thomas Pickering
(R), a former U.S. Under Secretary of State as well as US Ambassador
to the United Nations, Russia and other countries, unveil that the
board has moved the minute hand of their "Doomsday Clock" by 30
seconds to a more ominous 2-1/2 minutes from midnight during a news
conference at the National Press Club in Washington, U.S. January
26, 2017. REUTERS/Jim Bourg
It said the Trump administration nominees raise the possibility the
government will be "openly hostile to progress toward even the most
modest efforts to avert catastrophic climate disruption."
The world also faces cyber threats, the bulletin said. U.S.
intelligence agencies' conclusion that Russia intervened in the
presidential election to help Trump raised the possibility of
similar attacks on other democracies, it said.
The bulletin was founded by scientists who helped develop the United
States' first atomic weapons. Its Science and Security Board decides
on the clock's hands in consultation with its Board of Sponsors,
which includes Nobel laureates.
(Reporting by John Clarke; Writing by Ian Simpson; Editing by Daniel
Wallis and Jonathan Oatis)
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