The New Yorker February 1, 1993, p. 47 Because the International Atomic Energy Agency is ineffectual, Saddam Hussein will continue to outwit U.N. inspectors. Last week, as the United States…
Analysis
The Wisconsin Project’s reports track WMD programs and the companies supplying them. In op-eds and articles, we argue for strict enforcement of strategic trade controls to inhibit proliferation.
Knocking on the Clubhouse Door
The New York Times The Week in Review January 10, 1993 The international market in missile and nuclear arms technology has been thriving in the 1990’s. The Wisconsin Project on…
The Pentagon and the Bomb
Structuring the Department of Defense to Combat Nuclear Arms Proliferation What U.N. inspection teams discovered in the aftermath of the gulf war–that a massive, secret nuclear weapon program had brought…
How Western greed created Hussein’s Iraq
A Review of THE DEATH LOBBY How the West Armed Iraq. By Kenneth Timmerman. Houghton Mifflin. 443 pp. Illustrated. $21.95. Saddam Hussein may have done the world a favor. By invading…
Testimony: U.S. Exports to Iraq
Testimony of Gary Milhollin Professor, University of Wisconsin Law School and Director, Wisconsin Project on Nuclear Arms Control Before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs October 27,…
Winking at Proliferation
The Washington Post August 16, 1992, p. C2 Why Are U.S. Firms Still Able to Aid the Mideast Missile Race? The Bush administration this summer has missed a major opportunity…
Missiles too Dangerous to Name
On June 16, 1992 the U.S. Department of Commerce published its long-awaited list of missile projects in the Third World. The list was supposed to plant a red flag on…
Nuclear Needles in an Iraqi Haystack: Lies and Bugging Are Keeping Them Hidden
The Washington Post June 28, 1992, p. C4 With little fanfare, the United Nations has dramatically increased its effort in Iraq to detect stockpiles and production sites of weapons of…
North Korea’s Bomb
The New York Times June 4, 1992, p. A23 The North Koreans are on the verge of making the bomb, and seven international inspectors are in Pyongyang this week belatedly…
Pursuing the Bomb in North Korea
North Korea has produced enough nuclear weapon material for six to eight atomic bombs. This is the conclusion of U.S. intelligence, which has watched a small reactor operate for four…