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Nuclear
catastrophes may be of different types. A rough taxonomy lists, in a rough
order of decreasing impact: (1) a major nuclear war involving a large number
(hundredths, thousands) of nuclear explosions; (2) a military conflict in
which few (say, a one-digit number of) nuclear explosions take place, mainly
against civilian targets (cities); (3) the military (so-called “surgical”)
employment of few nuclear explosions against specific targets, such as
deeply-buried bunkers housing key installations, trying to minimize
“collateral damage” to civilians; (4) the destruction of a city by a nuclear
explosion produced by a terrorist commando; (5) the deliberate radioactive
contamination on a significant scale of an inhabited area (so-called “dirty
nuclear bomb” or, more properly, “radioactive dispersion device”); (6) the
accidental explosion of a nuclear weapon, or other accidents involving
nuclear weapons; (7) a serious accident in a civilian nuclear installation,
typically in an electricity-producing nuclear reactor. Terse mention of the
risk of nuclear-weapon proliferation, a topic that should never be forgotten
given its impact on the future of our civilization inasmuch as it largely
influences the likelihood that some of the catastrophes listed above shall
eventually happen; and with the opposite prospect of progress towards the
achievement of a nuclear-weapon free world.
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