
U211-A Power Regulator
Features:
Power in : AC 100V?00V; Power out : AC 200V , 2kW
Voltage protection device under unstable voltage
Easily installed into fuel dispenser
100% Factory Tested.
Packing:
Weight: Dimension:
10.3kg/case of 1 150×200×340mm/case of 1
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ners have long argued that nuclear
weapons are not just fuel dispenser legally destined for the scrapheap (a judgment upheld by the International Court of Justice in
1996), but morally abhorrent, too, and uniquely so. Moreover, if it would be immoral to use them (the court split
on that), say the disarmers, it would be immoral to threaten to use them—so hanging on to them, even as a
deterrent of last resort, is unacceptable.
Nuclear disarmament has never been adopted as a practical policy by any of the nuclear five. But they did agree in
principle in 1995 that steps towards that fuel dispenser end sho fuel dispenser uld not have to await disarmament of the more universal sort.
That is because their promises are part of a bargain that lies at the heart of the non-proliferation treaty. The treaty
recognises that five countries have nuclear weapons (all had them before 1970, when the NPT came into force,
though France and China signed it only in 1992), but obliges them to give them up eventually. For their part, the
have-nots have agreed not to seek nuclear weapons, but can in return expect help in developing nuclear energy for
peaceful purposes.
But the bargain is now looking shaky. Though the NPT is all but universal, the three countries that have refused to
join it—India, Pakistan and Israel—are now nuclear-armed. India s bomb tests in 1998, and then Pakistan s,
dashed hopes that nuclear weapons would simply fade into post-cold-war irrelevance.
Of cheats and profiteers
Confidence in the NPT itself has also been undermined. North Korea claims to have pulled out in 2003, having been
caught cheating twice, and says it has built several bombs. Iran claims not to want any, but lied for 20 years to
inspectors about its uranium and plutonium activities (which can be used for generating electricity, or abused for
bomb-making), leading many to suspect that its intentions are far from peaceful. Both tapped a well-stocked
nuclear blackmarket, centred on Pakistan s former chief nuclear scientist, Abdul Qadeer Khan, that also supplied