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With the demise of the Cold War, virtually all the major problems that afflicted great power relations over the last half-century have been resolved. Many argue, however, that new dangers such as those posed by rogue and terrorism have emerged to re place the old ones of conventional or nuclear war. As part of this shift in how threats are constructed and perceived, old worries about nuclear have been subsumed under the new con cept of weapons of mass (wmd), lumped together with arms that have killed relatively few people to date (biological weapons), arms of much lower potential lethality (chemical weapons), and dramatic but costly and often ineffective delivery vehicles (ballistic missiles). As these have become prominent bogeymen, the maturation of another impressive method, if not exactly a weapon, of mass destruction has been largely overlooked. The irony is that in contrast to the others, this device?economic sanctions?is deployed frequently, by large states rather than small ones, and may have contributed to more deaths during the post-Cold War era than all of mass destruction throughout history. Comparing the record of these various threats to human well-being is an instructive exercise?and
Mueller et al. (Fri,) studied this question.