BASIC’s latest publication in conjunction with its Emerging Voices Network offers a compelling insight…
Analysis
After the Israel-Iran war, Diplomacy is the Only Way Forward
Iranian and Israeli peace activists argue that dialogue is the most effective way of reducing…
The Odessa Files: Ukrainian City is Bombed but not Beaten Despite Russian Attacks
Senior Policy Fellow and Non-Proliferation and Disarmament Programme Manager Dr Manuel Herrera recently travelled to…
Meet Helena Harding: Chair of BASIC’s Board of Trustees
Tell us about your career before BASIC “I’ve had a multifaceted career, starting in the…
The Blame Game Must End if the Nagasaki Nightmare is Not to be Repeated
As the number of survivors from the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings declines, it has become a challenge to remind future generations of the horrors of nuclear war. Professor Kazuko Hikawa from Nagasaki University argues that one way this can be done is by urging countries to refrain from the blame game.
Fear Built the Nuclear Bomb – Only Trust Can Ensure it is Never Used Again
In an article that first appeared in The Conservation, BASIC’s Non-Resident Senior Fellow Nicholas Wheeler says that the threat of nuclear conflict remains persistent as the world remembers the devastation wrought by the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings.
Urgent Action Required to Sustain Another 80 Years of Nuclear Non-Use
In the first of a series of articles to mark the 80th anniversary of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Manpreet Sethi, from the Centre for Air Power Studies in Delhi assesses what needs to be done to secure another 80 years of nuclear non-use.
Two Rivals. One Crisis. A War Of Narratives
BASIC’s Non-Resident Fellow Dr Rabia Akhtar argues that while the recent Pahalgam crisis between India and Pakistan may have ended in a ceasefire, there is little room for comfort. The crisis has exposed a dangerous undercurrent that threatens the fragile strategic stability of South Asia.