Want this question answered?
A person who supplies weapons is an 'arms dealer.' To give someone weapons is to 'arm' them.
Arme means arms in German. Nouns are capitalized in German. If you mean arms as in weapons the word is Waffen.
Mutually Assured Destruction.
An armory is a place where weapons or arms are stored.
Air Force weapons? Or Army weapons? Or Naval Weapons? Or Types of Artillery? Or Types of Small Arms (rifles, pistols, etc.)? Or Tanks? Or Warships?
Amy F Woolf has written: 'Nuclear arms control' -- subject(s): Military policy, Nuclear arms control, Nuclear weapons 'START' -- subject(s): Foreign relations, Nuclear arms control, Strategic Arms Reduction Talks 'Nuclear weapons in the U.S. force structure' -- subject(s): Nuclear weapons, Nuclear disarmament 'Nuclear weapons in Russia' -- subject(s): Nuclear arms control, Nuclear weapons 'START' -- subject(s): Foreign relations, Nuclear arms control, Strategic Arms Reduction Talks 'Nonproliferation & threat reduction assistance' -- subject(s): American Technical assistance, Arms control, Nuclear nonproliferation, Weapons of mass destruction 'Nuclear weapons after the Cold War' -- subject(s): Nuclear weapons, Nuclear disarmament, Military policy
Treaties to reduce the weapons of mass destruction.
Bearing Arms refers to the ability to control and operate weapons. In the 2nd amendment refers to the ability to have weapons with no abridgements to possession.
David B. Thomson has written: 'A guide to the nuclear arms control treaties' -- subject(s): Nuclear arms control, Nuclear weapons (International law)
Stephen P. Lambert has written: 'U.S. nuclear weapons in Europe' -- subject(s): NUCLEAR WEAPONS, ARMS CONTROL
Jeffrey Arthur Larsen has written: 'Historical dictionary of arms control and disarmament' -- subject(s): Arms control, Dictionaries, Disarmament, History 'Emerging missile challenges and improving active defenses' -- subject(s): Ballistic missile defenses, Ballistic missiles, Military policy 'NATO counterproliferation policy' -- subject(s): Defenses, International relations, North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Nuclear arms control, Nuclear nonproliferation, Weapons of mass destruction
Ray Perkins has written: 'The ABCs of the Soviet-American nuclear arms race' -- subject(s): Arms race, Military policy, Nuclear arms control, Nuclear weapons
John T. Cappello has written: 'Tactical nuclear weapons' -- subject(s): Deterrence (Strategy), Military policy, Nuclear arms control, Nuclear weapons, Tactical nuclear weapons
The development and deployment of nuclear weapons in 1949 marked a significant shift in global security dynamics. It led to the start of the nuclear arms race and heightened tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cold War. The possession of nuclear weapons also brought immense destructive power, raising concerns about the potential for global annihilation and the need for arms control agreements. Overall, it fundamentally altered the calculus of warfare and international relations.
An arms factory is a place where weapons are produced.
Valour means courage and arms are weapons. Getting something by valour and arms means getting it by courage and weapons--basically by fighting for it.
Arms