The global push for nuclear weapons is a tale of dangerous arithmetic, where leaders compete for power, but the only real winners sit behind the scenes. This "mad math" of nuclear competition is driven not just by national security or prestige, but by the invisible hands of the arms industry. #### Who Wants Nukes—and Why? Today, nations like Russia, China, North Korea, and the United States circle in a perpetual contest—each trying to outdo the other in missile capability and destructive power. Political leaders cite threats, deterrence, and strategic dominance, yet the motivations are often murkier: a mix of fear, rivalry, and, in some cases, domestic pressure from powerful lobbies. Some regimes, like North Korea, use nuclear bravado as a megaphone to the world. Others, like Israel, maintain deliberate ambiguity—neither admitting nor denying their nuclear arsenal, skating a fine line in regional geopolitics. #### The Arms Lobby: Profiting from Paranoia Beneath the bluster an...
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