Sign in Welcome! Log into your account your username your password Forgot your password? Get help Create an account Create an account Welcome! Register for an account your email your username A password will be e-mailed to you. Password recovery Recover your password your email A password will be e-mailed to you. 80 Years after Hiroshima, Nagasaki Atomic Bombings: Any Lesson? 2672 August 21, 2025 FacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsApp Published in The Guardian (Nigeria) on 13 August 2025 by Femi D. Ojumu (link to originallink to original) Translated from Arabic by . Edited by . Back To Origin This post appeared on the front page as a direct link to the original article with the above link . Tags:HiroshimaJapanNuclear WarUnited NationsWorld War II Hot this week Block titleFeaturedAll time popularMore Spain: Trump’s Corruption June 12, 2026. Published in El PaÃsAbsolute power has revealed his true nature. 0 Mexico: Migration Regions June 14, 2026. Published in La JornadaU.S. coasts and the border form a region with a very high presence of Mexicans and Latinos ... documented or undocumented. 0 Japan: 2nd Japan-US Forum: Don’t Create Alibis June 11, 2026. Published in Ryukyu Shimpo 0 Australia: Benjamin Netanyahu Looks To Be Pushing Donald Trump to His Limits June 11, 2026. Published in ABC News Australia 0 Ghana: The Blind Blame Trillionaire Musk, Skipping Capitalism? June 15, 2026. Published in GhanaWebMusk is very similar to Trump, they know what the people want to hear, but I doubt their sincerity. 0 Topics Ghana: The Blind Blame Trillionaire Musk, Skipping Capitalism? June 15, 2026. Published in GhanaWebMusk is very similar to Trump, they know what the people want to hear, but I doubt their sincerity. 0 Saudi Arabia: The End of New START and the Third Nuclear Age June 15, 2026. Published in Asharq Al-AwsatIs humanity marching backward, or is it falling down into the nuclear abyss? 0 Mexico: Migration Regions June 14, 2026. Published in La JornadaU.S. coasts and the border form a region with a very high presence of Mexicans and Latinos ... documented or undocumented. 0 Italy: US 2028: Tech Bros vs. Theo Bros* June 13, 2026. Published in Corriere della SeraIdeals of heroism stand in contrast to the archetype of modern man, portrayed as conformist and spiritless. 0 India: The New West Asian Order: Trump’s Frankenstein Monster June 12, 2026. Published in FirstpostPresident Trump’s messy handling of the Iran conflict has helped birth an axis that brings nuclear capability, serious money, and growing international clout together. 0 Saudi Arabia: Trump and Tehran’s Foolish Dream June 12, 2026. Published in Asharq Al-AwsatTehran’s illusion is that by waiting until [U.S.] mid-term elections, which they think Trump will lose, they could claim victory. 0 Egypt: Iran – the Japan of the Middle East? June 12, 2026. Published in Ahram OnlineMajor wars do not always create permanent enemies. Sometimes they create the conditions for entirely new political arrangements. 0 Switzerland: Switzerland Urgently Needs a Trade Agreement with the US, as It Is an Easy Target for Trump June 12, 2026. Published in NZZNaturally, when it comes to Trump, whether or not he would hold to an agreement is unknown. 0 Related Articles Egypt: Iran – the Japan of the Middle East? June 12, 2026. Published in Ahram OnlineMajor wars do not always create permanent enemies. Sometimes they create the conditions for entirely new political arrangements. South Africa: UN Security Council’s Veto Powers Bite the US Back May 10, 2026. Published in Sunday IndependentThe [U.S.] should know by now that it cannot bomb Iran back to the negotiating table. Ghana: What an Unfair World: The ‘Disunited’ United Nations Exposed by Ongoing Wars April 1, 2026. Published in GhanaWebThe hypocrisy of global powers is glaring. Egypt: The 48-Hour Ultimatum Testing the World Order March 24, 2026. Published in Al-Ahram GateThe deadline, instead of imposing decisiveness, may lead to prolonging tension and raising it to more complex levels. South Africa: Trump’s Aggressive Rhetoric on Cuba Threatens International Relations March 19, 2026. Published in Cape TimesThe world cannot afford a leadership that treats international relations as a game of personal honor or conquest. Previous articleThe Uncertain Fallout of the Putin-Trump Summit MeetingNext articleStorm Commentary: The Impact on Taiwan of Trump’s New Global Trade Norms LEAVE A REPLY Cancel replyLog in to leave a comment