Forwarded from 🌐 EMF 📡 5G ⚠️ DANGER 💾📙 DATABASE 🛡
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VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Now you can imagine what will happen to the💉🧬vaccinated
(graphene oxide)
When they boost 🎚 up
The 📡 #5G ⚡️system💥
‼️😳🚨😳🚨😳‼️
PART2
⚪️Find here🛡protecting devices:
https://dq271.isrefer.com/go/FAMILY/AUL2570/
FOLLOW: t.me/EMFPROTECT
(graphene oxide)
When they boost 🎚 up
The 📡 #5G ⚡️system💥
‼️😳🚨😳🚨😳‼️
PART2
⚪️Find here🛡protecting devices:
https://dq271.isrefer.com/go/FAMILY/AUL2570/
FOLLOW: t.me/EMFPROTECT
Forwarded from 🌐 EMF 📡 5G ⚠️ DANGER 💾📙 DATABASE 🛡
🚨The National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) has published a new study warning about the dangers of 5G technology, including how it directly contributes to the symptoms commonly associated with the Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19)‼️
#5G #EMF #COVIDis5G
LINK:
https://www.naturalnews.com/2021-12-12-5g-significant-factor-higher-covid-cases-deaths.html
⚪️PROTECT🛡AGAINST EMF/5G RADIATION WITH AULTERRA NEUTRALIZER:
https://dq271.isrefer.com/go/FAMILY/AUL2570/
ℹ️For the complete 5G/EMF Database follow:
T.ME/EMFPROTECT
#5G #EMF #COVIDis5G
LINK:
https://www.naturalnews.com/2021-12-12-5g-significant-factor-higher-covid-cases-deaths.html
⚪️PROTECT🛡AGAINST EMF/5G RADIATION WITH AULTERRA NEUTRALIZER:
https://dq271.isrefer.com/go/FAMILY/AUL2570/
ℹ️For the complete 5G/EMF Database follow:
T.ME/EMFPROTECT
NaturalNews.com
Study: 5G exposure a “significant factor” in higher covid cases, deaths – NaturalNews.com
The National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) has published a new study warning about the dangers of 5G technology, including how it directly contributes to the symptoms commonly associated with the Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19). For the study,…
Forwarded from 🌐 EMF 📡 5G ⚠️ DANGER 💾📙 DATABASE 🛡
🚨❌🔞!!!WARNING DISTURBING VIDEOS!!!🔞❌🚨
These videos are circulating for a few days in Telegram, it is claimed that these are targeted 5G attacks directed at certain people.
📛There are claims that the targets brains📡⚡️🧠💨 was microwaved from inside out🙀‼️‼️‼️
Decide for yourself!
⚪️NEUTRALIZE YOUR ELECTRICAL ENVIRONMENT WITH AULTERRA TO
🛡PROTECT:
https://dq271.isrefer.com/go/store/AUL2570/
FOLLOW: T.ME/EMFPROTECT
These videos are circulating for a few days in Telegram, it is claimed that these are targeted 5G attacks directed at certain people.
📛There are claims that the targets brains📡⚡️🧠💨 was microwaved from inside out🙀‼️‼️‼️
Decide for yourself!
⚪️NEUTRALIZE YOUR ELECTRICAL ENVIRONMENT WITH AULTERRA TO
🛡PROTECT:
https://dq271.isrefer.com/go/store/AUL2570/
FOLLOW: T.ME/EMFPROTECT
Forwarded from Vault Constitutional Awakening
Forwarded from AWAKE 101 | The Awake Coach (Great Awake Coach)
graphene-oxide-is-toxic-to-human-blood.pdf
251.3 KB
from Jeff Rense's website...
A well-researched PDF informing people about The Jabs & Graphene Oxide (GO).
Lots of links to studies, videos, etc.
Very helpful for explaining a great deal of the questions around the "vaccine", and the possible future implications of it on our health.
Hope this helps.
GreatAwakeCoach
A well-researched PDF informing people about The Jabs & Graphene Oxide (GO).
Lots of links to studies, videos, etc.
Very helpful for explaining a great deal of the questions around the "vaccine", and the possible future implications of it on our health.
Hope this helps.
GreatAwakeCoach
Forwarded from Digital Soldier 9 (@BotMan Adminator)
Telegram
𝑄 𝑁𝑒𝑤𝑠 𝑂𝑓𝑓𝑖𝑐𝑖𝑎𝑙
https://news.1rj.ru/str/disclosurehub/3250
🟨CNN REPORT from 1985 on #EMF ELFs and DEWs
(Direct Energy Weapons).
⚠️Fastforward 36 years and imagine what they can do today with #5G at their disposal...
📛See also👉 THIS 👈on that subject‼️
⚪️FIND HERE EMF🛡NEUTRALIZING…
🟨CNN REPORT from 1985 on #EMF ELFs and DEWs
(Direct Energy Weapons).
⚠️Fastforward 36 years and imagine what they can do today with #5G at their disposal...
📛See also👉 THIS 👈on that subject‼️
⚪️FIND HERE EMF🛡NEUTRALIZING…
Forwarded from TRANSVEST7770 (Tlc7770)
Telegram
Faking Space
Forwarded from 🔥🔥Hopium Slayer & Frens🔥🔥 (🔥Escanor🔥)
Cyprus is said to have discovered a Covid variant ‘Deltacron’ that combines omicron and delta
Let me take a wild guess, took omicron’s high transmission and Delta’s “lethality” ?
Of course..
https://insiderpaper.com/new-covid-variant-deltacron-cyprus-report/
Let me take a wild guess, took omicron’s high transmission and Delta’s “lethality” ?
Of course..
https://insiderpaper.com/new-covid-variant-deltacron-cyprus-report/
Insider Paper
Cyprus is said to have discovered a Covid variant 'Deltacron' that combines omicron and delta
Deltacron, a new variant, has been discovered in Cyprus. Deltacron has a genetic background similar to the Delta variant, but with ten Omicron mutations.
Forwarded from 3D to 5D Consciousness
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
The Police has been ordered to shut down all vaccine centres in UK.
Victory is here! Please share far and wide.
https://news.1rj.ru/str/News_3Dto5D
Victory is here! Please share far and wide.
https://news.1rj.ru/str/News_3Dto5D
Forwarded from 🔥🔥Hopium Slayer & Frens🔥🔥 (🔥Escanor🔥)
Reminder👇🏻
One World Church.
https://believersportal.com/one-world-religion-headquarters-to-open-2022/
https://www.timesofisrael.com/uae-reveals-progress-on-interfaith-complex-to-house-synagogue-mosque-church/
One World Church.
https://believersportal.com/one-world-religion-headquarters-to-open-2022/
https://www.timesofisrael.com/uae-reveals-progress-on-interfaith-complex-to-house-synagogue-mosque-church/
Believers Portal
One World Religion Headquarters To Open 2022 - Believers Portal
THE CATHOLIC-MUSLIM INTERFAITH COUNCIL CREATED BY POPE FRANCIS ANNOUNCES NEW CHRISLAM HEADQUARTERS OPENING IN 2022 THAT COMBINES A MOSQUE AND CHURCH ACCORDING TO SIGNED COVENANT. The announcement of the Abrahamic Family House, on the Saadiyat Island in Abu…
Forwarded from 🔥🔥Hopium Slayer & Frens🔥🔥 (🔥Escanor🔥)
Elite Gender Inversion Documentary.
Disclaimer: Dudes voice is CRAAAAAZY annoying, nasaly Shapiro meets Napoleon Dynamite or wtv😂🤦🏻♂️
https://youtu.be/DjbOZRMIgz0
Disclaimer: Dudes voice is CRAAAAAZY annoying, nasaly Shapiro meets Napoleon Dynamite or wtv😂🤦🏻♂️
https://youtu.be/DjbOZRMIgz0
YouTube
Elite Gender Inversion: The Documentary (Jon Humanity)
Elite Gender Inversion: The Documentary
If you would like to mirror this video to your channel, please do not edit anything but the thank you at the end, otherwise I request that it be kept the same.
If you would like to know more about the Elite Gender…
If you would like to mirror this video to your channel, please do not edit anything but the thank you at the end, otherwise I request that it be kept the same.
If you would like to know more about the Elite Gender…
#The world now lives in an age of biological innovation. Many countries and corporations are making enormous investments in biological science, biotechnology, and combinational science and technology (in which biology combines with other fields), recognizing that they have immense opportunities to establish and grow bio-economies. Innovative biological research and development efforts simultaneously increase and decrease biological risk. The field is moving quickly.
CRISPR-Cas9, the revolutionary genetic engineering tool that scientists in the United States and Sweden discovered in 2012, is cheap and ubiquitous today, spurring investments in genetic testing and adult stem cell technologies. Countries and non-state actors are exploring ways to create super-soldiers, personalize medicine, increase human performance, improve human gene therapy, and synthesize biology. Innovations such as synthetic biology have created new areas of discovery, outpacing current public health, safety, and security measures.
The world is failing to recognize the multifaceted nature of the biological threat. Advances in biological science and technology can harm us as well as help us. Leaders must recognize that COVID-19 is not the last biological threat we will have to face in our lifetimes—or, perhaps, even this year.
Disruptive technology in the age of disinformation
The new US administration has done much to reestablish the role of scientists in informing public policy, and even more to minimize deliberate confusion and chaos emanating from the White House. Thoughtful deliberation—merely a promise in January 2021—appears to be realized more often today. On the other hand, disinformation fomented outside the executive branch—including from some members of Congress and many state leaders—appears to have taken root in alarming and dangerous ways.
Large fractions of Congress and the public continue to deny that Joe Biden legitimately won the presidential election, and their views on these matters appear to be hardening rather than moderating. Similar trends regarding COVID-related disinformation are apparent around the world, crippling the ability of public health authorities and medical science to achieve higher vaccination rates. Mask-wearing and social distancing are similarly discouraged by disinformation. While we know more now about the role of social media campaigns in taking advantage of vulnerabilities in human psychology and cognition to spread disinformation and societal disunity, the behavior of social media companies has changed hardly at all. Political attacks on institutions that provide societal continuity and store hard-won knowledge about how best to deal with problems continue apace.

An anti-vaccine-mandate rally in Austria. (Ivan Radic / Flickr, CC-BY)
In cyber conflict, cyberattackers have grown more audacious. The SolarWinds hack, an attack on Microsoft Exchange that affected millions around the world, and a ransomware attack on Colonial Pipeline (resolved only with the payment of $4.4 million to get the system up and running again) all demonstrate the far-reaching ramifications of cyber-vulnerabilities.
The good news in cyber includes a Biden executive order and other federal government initiatives on cybersecurity that seem to have significant force and momentum behind them and have gone farther than previous orders and initiatives. The expert cybersecurity team the new administration has assembled has the ear of the president. In addition, against all odds, both the UN Open-Ended Working Group and the Group of Government Experts have reached some rough consensus on cyber norms of behavior. (The first group involves representatives from most of the world’s nations; the latter includes the biggest players in cyber.) It remains to be seen whether these norms actually affect the behavior of national actors in cyberspace, but it is better to have these norms in place (or in the process of being formed and agreed to) than not to have them at all.
https://thebulletin.org/turn-back-the-clock-challenge/
CRISPR-Cas9, the revolutionary genetic engineering tool that scientists in the United States and Sweden discovered in 2012, is cheap and ubiquitous today, spurring investments in genetic testing and adult stem cell technologies. Countries and non-state actors are exploring ways to create super-soldiers, personalize medicine, increase human performance, improve human gene therapy, and synthesize biology. Innovations such as synthetic biology have created new areas of discovery, outpacing current public health, safety, and security measures.
The world is failing to recognize the multifaceted nature of the biological threat. Advances in biological science and technology can harm us as well as help us. Leaders must recognize that COVID-19 is not the last biological threat we will have to face in our lifetimes—or, perhaps, even this year.
Disruptive technology in the age of disinformation
The new US administration has done much to reestablish the role of scientists in informing public policy, and even more to minimize deliberate confusion and chaos emanating from the White House. Thoughtful deliberation—merely a promise in January 2021—appears to be realized more often today. On the other hand, disinformation fomented outside the executive branch—including from some members of Congress and many state leaders—appears to have taken root in alarming and dangerous ways.
Large fractions of Congress and the public continue to deny that Joe Biden legitimately won the presidential election, and their views on these matters appear to be hardening rather than moderating. Similar trends regarding COVID-related disinformation are apparent around the world, crippling the ability of public health authorities and medical science to achieve higher vaccination rates. Mask-wearing and social distancing are similarly discouraged by disinformation. While we know more now about the role of social media campaigns in taking advantage of vulnerabilities in human psychology and cognition to spread disinformation and societal disunity, the behavior of social media companies has changed hardly at all. Political attacks on institutions that provide societal continuity and store hard-won knowledge about how best to deal with problems continue apace.

An anti-vaccine-mandate rally in Austria. (Ivan Radic / Flickr, CC-BY)
In cyber conflict, cyberattackers have grown more audacious. The SolarWinds hack, an attack on Microsoft Exchange that affected millions around the world, and a ransomware attack on Colonial Pipeline (resolved only with the payment of $4.4 million to get the system up and running again) all demonstrate the far-reaching ramifications of cyber-vulnerabilities.
The good news in cyber includes a Biden executive order and other federal government initiatives on cybersecurity that seem to have significant force and momentum behind them and have gone farther than previous orders and initiatives. The expert cybersecurity team the new administration has assembled has the ear of the president. In addition, against all odds, both the UN Open-Ended Working Group and the Group of Government Experts have reached some rough consensus on cyber norms of behavior. (The first group involves representatives from most of the world’s nations; the latter includes the biggest players in cyber.) It remains to be seen whether these norms actually affect the behavior of national actors in cyberspace, but it is better to have these norms in place (or in the process of being formed and agreed to) than not to have them at all.
https://thebulletin.org/turn-back-the-clock-challenge/
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
#TurnBacktheClock Challenge - Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
Tag us on social media! The Doomsday Clock is a metaphor for how dangerous this moment in human history is – and the urgent need to get involved. We want to hear about the actions that inspire you and how we can work together to save…
QAnon Coder
#The world now lives in an age of biological innovation. Many countries and corporations are making enormous investments in biological science, biotechnology, and combinational science and technology (in which biology combines with other fields), recognizing…
Science and Security Board
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
Editor, John Mecklin
It is 100 seconds to midnight

PDF / print version
Editor’s note: Founded in 1945 by Albert Einstein and University of Chicago scientists who helped develop the first atomic weapons in the Manhattan Project, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists created the Doomsday Clock two years later, using the imagery of apocalypse (midnight) and the contemporary idiom of nuclear explosion (countdown to zero) to convey threats to humanity and the planet. The Doomsday Clock is set every year by the Bulletin’s Science and Security Board in consultation with its Board of Sponsors, which includes 11 Nobel laureates. The Clock has become a universally recognized indicator of the world’s vulnerability to catastrophe from nuclear weapons, climate change, and disruptive technologies in other domains.
To: Leaders and citizens of the world
Re: At doom’s doorstep: It is 100 seconds to midnight
Date: January 20, 2022
Last year’s leadership change in the United States provided hope that what seemed like a global race toward catastrophe might be halted and—with renewed US engagement—even reversed. Indeed, in 2021 the new American administration changed US policies in some ways that made the world safer: agreeing to an extension of the New START arms control agreement and beginning strategic stability talks with Russia; announcing that the United States would seek to return to the Iran nuclear deal; and rejoining the Paris climate accord. Perhaps even more heartening was the return of science and evidence to US policy making in general, especially regarding the COVID-19 pandemic. A more moderate and predictable approach to leadership and the control of one of the two largest nuclear arsenals of the world marked a welcome change from the previous four years.
Still, the change in US leadership alone was not enough to reverse negative international security trends that had been long in developing and continued across the threat horizon in 2021.
US relations with Russia and China remain tense, with all three countries engaged in an array of nuclear modernization and expansion efforts—including China’s apparent large-scale program to increase its deployment of silo-based long-range nuclear missiles; the push by Russia, China, and the United States to develop hypersonic missiles; and the continued testing of anti-satellite weapons by many nations. If not restrained, these efforts could mark the start of a dangerous new nuclear arms race. Other nuclear concerns, including North Korea’s unconstrained nuclear and missile expansion and the (as yet) unsuccessful attempts to revive the Iran nuclear deal contribute to growing dangers. Ukraine remains a potential flashpoint, and Russian troop deployments to the Ukrainian border heighten day-to-day tensions.

For many countries, a huge gap still exists between long-term greenhouse gas-reduction pledges and the near- and medium-term emission-reduction actions needed to achieve those goals. Although the new US administration’s quick return to the Paris Agreement speaks the right words, it has yet to be matched with actionable policies.
Developed countries improved their responses to the continuing COVID-19 pandemic in 2021, but the worldwide response remained entirely insufficient. Plans for quick global distribution of vaccines essentially collapsed, leaving poorer countries largely unvaccinated and allowing new variants of the SARS-CoV-2 virus to gain an unwelcome foothold. Beyond the pandemic, worrying biosafety and biosecurity lapses made it clear that the international community needs to focus serious attention on management of the global biological research enterprise. Further, the establishment and pursuit of biological weapons programs marked the beginning of a new biological arms race.
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
Editor, John Mecklin
It is 100 seconds to midnight

PDF / print version
Editor’s note: Founded in 1945 by Albert Einstein and University of Chicago scientists who helped develop the first atomic weapons in the Manhattan Project, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists created the Doomsday Clock two years later, using the imagery of apocalypse (midnight) and the contemporary idiom of nuclear explosion (countdown to zero) to convey threats to humanity and the planet. The Doomsday Clock is set every year by the Bulletin’s Science and Security Board in consultation with its Board of Sponsors, which includes 11 Nobel laureates. The Clock has become a universally recognized indicator of the world’s vulnerability to catastrophe from nuclear weapons, climate change, and disruptive technologies in other domains.
To: Leaders and citizens of the world
Re: At doom’s doorstep: It is 100 seconds to midnight
Date: January 20, 2022
Last year’s leadership change in the United States provided hope that what seemed like a global race toward catastrophe might be halted and—with renewed US engagement—even reversed. Indeed, in 2021 the new American administration changed US policies in some ways that made the world safer: agreeing to an extension of the New START arms control agreement and beginning strategic stability talks with Russia; announcing that the United States would seek to return to the Iran nuclear deal; and rejoining the Paris climate accord. Perhaps even more heartening was the return of science and evidence to US policy making in general, especially regarding the COVID-19 pandemic. A more moderate and predictable approach to leadership and the control of one of the two largest nuclear arsenals of the world marked a welcome change from the previous four years.
Still, the change in US leadership alone was not enough to reverse negative international security trends that had been long in developing and continued across the threat horizon in 2021.
US relations with Russia and China remain tense, with all three countries engaged in an array of nuclear modernization and expansion efforts—including China’s apparent large-scale program to increase its deployment of silo-based long-range nuclear missiles; the push by Russia, China, and the United States to develop hypersonic missiles; and the continued testing of anti-satellite weapons by many nations. If not restrained, these efforts could mark the start of a dangerous new nuclear arms race. Other nuclear concerns, including North Korea’s unconstrained nuclear and missile expansion and the (as yet) unsuccessful attempts to revive the Iran nuclear deal contribute to growing dangers. Ukraine remains a potential flashpoint, and Russian troop deployments to the Ukrainian border heighten day-to-day tensions.

For many countries, a huge gap still exists between long-term greenhouse gas-reduction pledges and the near- and medium-term emission-reduction actions needed to achieve those goals. Although the new US administration’s quick return to the Paris Agreement speaks the right words, it has yet to be matched with actionable policies.
Developed countries improved their responses to the continuing COVID-19 pandemic in 2021, but the worldwide response remained entirely insufficient. Plans for quick global distribution of vaccines essentially collapsed, leaving poorer countries largely unvaccinated and allowing new variants of the SARS-CoV-2 virus to gain an unwelcome foothold. Beyond the pandemic, worrying biosafety and biosecurity lapses made it clear that the international community needs to focus serious attention on management of the global biological research enterprise. Further, the establishment and pursuit of biological weapons programs marked the beginning of a new biological arms race.
QAnon Coder
#The world now lives in an age of biological innovation. Many countries and corporations are making enormous investments in biological science, biotechnology, and combinational science and technology (in which biology combines with other fields), recognizing…
And while the new US administration made progress in reestablishing the role of science and evidence in public policy, corruption of the information ecosystem continued apace in 2021. One particularly concerning variety of internet-based disinformation infected America last year: Waves of internet-enabled lies persuaded a significant portion of the US public to believe the utterly false narrative contending that Joe Biden did not win the US presidential election in 2020. Continued efforts to foster this narrative threaten to undermine future US elections, American democracy in general, and, therefore, the United States’ ability to lead global efforts to manage existential risk.
In view of this mixed threat environment—with some positive developments counteracted by worrisome and accelerating negative trends—the members of the Science and Security Board find the world to be no safer than it was last year at this time and therefore decide to set the Doomsday Clock once again at 100 seconds to midnight. This decision does not, by any means, suggest that the international security situation has stabilized. On the contrary, the Clock remains the closest it has ever been to civilization-ending apocalypse because the world remains stuck in an extremely dangerous moment. In 2019 we called it the new abnormal, and it has unfortunately persisted.
Last year, despite laudable efforts by some leaders and the public, negative trends in nuclear and biological weapons, climate change, and a variety of disruptive technologies—all exacerbated by a corrupted information ecosphere that undermines rational decision making—kept the world within a stone’s throw of apocalypse. Global leaders and the public are not moving with anywhere near the speed or unity needed to prevent disaster.
Leaders around the world must immediately commit themselves to renewed cooperation in the many ways and venues available for reducing existential risk. Citizens of the world can and should organize to demand that their leaders do so—and quickly. The doorstep of doom is no place to loiter.
The nuclear tightrope
During 2021, some nuclear risks declined while others rose. Upcoming decisions on nuclear policies could generate either salutary or dangerous modifications of an already uncertain and worrisome security situation.
The February 2021 agreement between the United States and Russia to renew New START for five years is a decidedly positive development. This extension creates a window of opportunity to negotiate a future arms control agreement between the two countries that possess 90 percent of the nuclear weapons on the planet. The United States and Russia also agreed to start two sets of dialogues about how to best maintain “nuclear stability” in the future: the Working Group on Principles and Objectives for Future Arms Control and the Working Group on Capabilities and Actions with Strategic Effects. These groups have met and in early 2022 are expected to report on initial results of the consultations, aimed at shaping future arms control agreements.
Another bright spot was the Biden administration's announcements that it would seek to return to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) with Iran and offer to enter strategic stability talks with China. Although no talks between North Korea and the United States took place in 2021, the North Koreans have not resumed testing of nuclear weapons or long-range intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs). (Tests of shorter-range missiles have continued.) Finally, when the Biden administration began its Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) process, it announced that one specific goal would be to “reduce the role of nuclear weapons” in US national security policy.
Other developments, however, appeared on the negative side of the ledger:
In view of this mixed threat environment—with some positive developments counteracted by worrisome and accelerating negative trends—the members of the Science and Security Board find the world to be no safer than it was last year at this time and therefore decide to set the Doomsday Clock once again at 100 seconds to midnight. This decision does not, by any means, suggest that the international security situation has stabilized. On the contrary, the Clock remains the closest it has ever been to civilization-ending apocalypse because the world remains stuck in an extremely dangerous moment. In 2019 we called it the new abnormal, and it has unfortunately persisted.
Last year, despite laudable efforts by some leaders and the public, negative trends in nuclear and biological weapons, climate change, and a variety of disruptive technologies—all exacerbated by a corrupted information ecosphere that undermines rational decision making—kept the world within a stone’s throw of apocalypse. Global leaders and the public are not moving with anywhere near the speed or unity needed to prevent disaster.
Leaders around the world must immediately commit themselves to renewed cooperation in the many ways and venues available for reducing existential risk. Citizens of the world can and should organize to demand that their leaders do so—and quickly. The doorstep of doom is no place to loiter.
The nuclear tightrope
During 2021, some nuclear risks declined while others rose. Upcoming decisions on nuclear policies could generate either salutary or dangerous modifications of an already uncertain and worrisome security situation.
The February 2021 agreement between the United States and Russia to renew New START for five years is a decidedly positive development. This extension creates a window of opportunity to negotiate a future arms control agreement between the two countries that possess 90 percent of the nuclear weapons on the planet. The United States and Russia also agreed to start two sets of dialogues about how to best maintain “nuclear stability” in the future: the Working Group on Principles and Objectives for Future Arms Control and the Working Group on Capabilities and Actions with Strategic Effects. These groups have met and in early 2022 are expected to report on initial results of the consultations, aimed at shaping future arms control agreements.
Another bright spot was the Biden administration's announcements that it would seek to return to the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) with Iran and offer to enter strategic stability talks with China. Although no talks between North Korea and the United States took place in 2021, the North Koreans have not resumed testing of nuclear weapons or long-range intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs). (Tests of shorter-range missiles have continued.) Finally, when the Biden administration began its Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) process, it announced that one specific goal would be to “reduce the role of nuclear weapons” in US national security policy.
Other developments, however, appeared on the negative side of the ledger:
