Up in arms The new generation trying to ban the bomb
The Guardian Weekly|November 18, 2022
As nuclear dangers gather momentum three decades after the cold war, a disarmament movement is rising to meet them, with a new generation of activists.
Julian Borger
Up in arms The new generation trying to ban the bomb

In the late 50s and early 60s, and then again in the early 80s, when the US and the Soviet Union were pointing their missiles at each other in Europe, there were mass street protests against governments making plans for global annihilation.

The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) was born in the UK and staged large-scale marches to the heart of the British nuclear weapons establishment at Aldermaston. More than four decades ago, a million Americans converged on New York's Central Park to call a halt to the arms race and a nuclear freeze. At the end of 1982, more than 30,000 women formed a human chain around the Greenham Common air force base in Berkshire as an act of resistance to the deployment of US cruise missiles there. In October 1983, CND staged the biggest march through London the city had ever seen.

With Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine and his repeated threats that he would use nuclear weapons if his regime felt in peril, the danger is every bit as real as it was during the Cuban missile crisis or the missile standoff in Europe. This time, there have not been any mass protests but there has been a popular response that has found other channels to express itself.

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The Guardian Weekly

The Saudi football World Cup is an act of violence and disdain

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The Guardian Weekly

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The Guardian Weekly

TV

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The Guardian Weekly

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The Guardian Weekly

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The Guardian Weekly

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The Guardian Weekly

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The Guardian Weekly

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The Guardian Weekly

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