本糟老頭,當年上山下鄉,蹉跎多少青春年華。直到考上大學,才有機會學點ABC。可惜年齡不饒人,多般努力,成效寥寥。在萬維普通老海黃中,本糟老頭的英文狀況應該是很有代表性的。英文不行,能有機會通過中文媒體了解美國也不錯。
現斗膽獻個丑。
Trump's call for US nuclear supremacy raises questions
By Nicole Gaouette
Updated 8:51 AM ET, Sun February 26, 2017
Washington (CNN)
President Donald Trump would like the US to be "at the top of the pack" when it comes to having nuclear weapons.
The statement, in an interview with Reuters Thursday, left non-proliferation experts puzzled and concerned.
The President said the US has "fallen behind on nuclear weapons capacity" and that, while he would like to see the lethal weapons abolished, as long as they exist "we're never going to fall behind on nuclear power." And he added that an agreement with Russia to limit nuclear arms is "a one-sided deal."
But experts describe America's nuclear program as strong and dominant, and worry about the implications of his comments.
"I know of no senior American military officer who says 'I would like to trade American nuclear forces with anybody else,'" said Steven Pifer, director of arms control and nonproliferation at the Brookings Institution, who said he and other experts are "just not sure where Trump's getting his information."
Here are some of the questions raised by his comments.
Does the US have nuclear supremacy already?
Experts -- and critics -- say no country can match the US for the strength, size or modernity of its nuclear weaponry.