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The Doomsday Clock – grim reminder inches closer and closer to human extinction

The Doomsday clock

The Doomsday Clock hangs on a wall in the University of Chicago where the hour hand sits at 12 o’clock.  The minute hand has only changed nineteen times, inching closer towards midnight, marking the countdown to global catastrophe and human extinction.

The clock has been maintained since 1947 by the members of The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists’ Science and Security Board.  The decision to move the clock or not is led by a group of scientists and intellectuals, including 15 Nobel laureates.. The closer the Clock inches toward midnight, the more vulnerable the scientists believe the world is to global disaster.

Originally, the Clock represented an analogy for the threat of global nuclear war; however, since 2007 it has also reflected climate change, and new developments in the life sciences and technology that could inflict irrevocable harm to humanity.

The most recent officially announced setting —two and a half minutes to midnight— was made in January 2017 due to “The rise of ‘strident nationalism worldwide, United States President Donald Trump’s comments over nuclear weapons, and the disbelief in the scientific consensus over Climate Change by the Trump Administration.”.

Below is the grim history of the time set on the Doomsday Clock.

1947: SEVEN MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

The Clock appears on the cover of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists for the first time.

1949: THREE MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

The Soviet Union denies it, but President Truman tells the American public that the Soviets tested their first nuclear device – officially starting the arms race.

1953: TWO MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

After much debate, the US decides to pursue the hydrogen bomb, a weapon far more powerful than any atomic bomb.

1960: SEVEN MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

For the first time, the US and Soviet Union appear eager to avoid direct confrontation.

1963: 12 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

After a decade of almost non-stop nuclear tests, the US and Soviet Union sign the Partial Test Ban Treaty, which ends all atmospheric nuclear testing.  The event signals awareness among the Soviets and United States that they need to work together to prevent nuclear annihilation.

1968: SEVEN MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

Regional wars are raging.  US involvement in Vietnam intensifies, India and Pakistan battle in 1965, and Israel and its Arab neighbors renew hostilities in 1967.  France and China develop nuclear weapons to assert themselves as global players.

1969: 10 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

Nearly all of the world’s nations come together to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. The deal is simple–the nuclear weapon states vow to help the treaty’s non-nuclear weapon signatories develop nuclear power if they promise to forego producing nuclear weapons.

1972: 12 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

The US and Soviet Union attempt to curb the race for nuclear superiority by signing treaty.

1974: NINE MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

South Asia gets the Bomb, as India tests its first nuclear device.  The US and Soviet Union appear to be modernizing their nuclear forces, not reducing them.

1980: SEVEN MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

The bulletin describes the Soviet Union and US as ‘nucleoholics’ – drunks who insist that a drink being consumed is ‘the last one,’ but who can always find a good excuse for one more.

1981: FOUR MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan hardens the U.S. nuclear posture.  President Jimmy Carter pulls the US from the Olympic Games in Moscow and considers ways in which the US could win a nuclear war.  President Reagan scraps talk of arms control and proposes that the best way to end the Cold War is for the US to win it.

1984: THREE MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

US-Soviet relations reach their iciest point in decades and dialogue between the two superpowers virtually stops.  The US seems to flout the few arms control agreements in place by seeking an expansive, space-based anti-ballistic missile capability, raising worries that a new arms race will begin.

1988: SIX MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

The US and Soviet Union sign the historic Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, the first agreement to actually ban a whole category of nuclear weapons.

1990: 10 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

One Eastern European country after another frees itself from Soviet control.  In late 1989, the Berlin Wall falls, symbolically ending the Cold War.

1991: 17 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

Cold War is officially over and the US and Russia begin making cuts to their nuclear arsenals.

1995: 14 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

Hopes for a large post-Cold War peace and a renouncing of nuclear weapons fade.  It is recognized that there are more than 40,000 nuclear weapons remain worldwide.  Concern that terrorists could exploit poorly secured nuclear facilities in the former Soviet Union.

1998: NINE MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

India and Pakistan stage nuclear weapons tests only three weeks apart.  Russia and the United States ‘continue to serve as poor examples to the rest of the world’.  Together, they still maintain 7,000 warheads ready to fire at each other within 15 minutes.

2002: SEVEN MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

Concerns regarding a nuclear terrorist attack underscore enormous amount of unsecured -and sometimes unaccounted for – weapon-grade nuclear materials.  The US expresses a desire to design new nuclear weapons.

2007: FIVE MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

World described to be at the ‘brink of a second nuclear age’.  The United States and Russia remain ready to stage a nuclear attack within minutes, North Korea conducts a nuclear test, and many in the international community worry that Iran plans to acquire the Bomb.

Climate change also presents a dire challenge to humanity.  Damage to ecosystems is already taking place; flooding, destructive storms, increased drought, and polar ice melt are causing loss of life and property.

2010:SIX MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

Belief that civilization is moving closer to being free of nuclear weapons.  Talks between Washington and Moscow for a follow-on agreement to the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty are nearly complete, and more negotiations for further reductions in the US and Russian nuclear arsenal are already planned.

Dangers posed by climate change are growing, but ‘there are pockets of progress’. Most notably, at Copenhagen, the developing and industrialized countries agree to take responsibility for carbon emissions.

2012: FIVE MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

Difficulty in ridding the world of nuclear weapons and harnessing nuclear power.  Potential for nuclear weapons use in regional conflicts in the Middle East, Northeast Asia, and South Asia described as alarming.

Difficulty dealing with climate disruption from global warming.

 2015: THREE MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

Climate change and new efforts to modernize nuclear weapons stockpiles.  Concern over rising sea levels prompted a radical change in the Doomsday Clock time pushing it two minutes closer to disaster. The last time it was at the 11:57 p.m. mark was in 1984, when tensions escalated between the U.S. and the Soviet Union.

2016: TWO- AND ONE-HALF MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

The rise of strident nationalism worldwide, United States President Donald Trump’s comments over nuclear weapons, the threat of a renewed arms race between the U.S. and Russia, a darkening global security landscape, the disbelief in the scientific consensus over climate change by the Trump Administration, and a growing disregard for scientific expertise.

2018: 2 MINUTES TO MIDNIGHT

Failure of world leaders to deal with looming threats of nuclear war and climate change. In 2019, the Bulletin reaffirmed the “two minutes to midnight” time, citing continuing climate change and Trump administration’s abandonment of U.S. efforts to lead the world toward decarbonization; U.S. withdrawal from the Paris Agreement, the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, and the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty; U.S. and Russian nuclear modernization efforts; information warfare threats and other dangers from “disruptive technologies” such as synthetic biology, artificial intelligence, and cyberwarfare.

2020, 2021, 2022: 100 SECONDS TO MIDNIGHT

Failure of world leaders to deal with the increased threats of nuclear war, such as the end of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF) between the United States and Russia as well as increased tensions between the US and Iran, along with the continued neglect of climate change. Announced in units of seconds, instead of minutes; this is the clock’s closest approach to midnight, exceeding that of 1953 and 2018. The Bulletin concluded by stating that the current issues causing the adjustment are “the most dangerous situation that humanity has ever faced.”

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The Doomsday clock via Altered Dimensions

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The Doomsday clock via Altered Dimensions

 

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