• U.S. leaders contemplated a nuclear first strike, including the use of those based in Japan, following the intervention by the People's Republic of China during the Korean War. (wikipedia.org)
  • Following the Korean War, U.S. nuclear weapons based in the region were considered for Operation Vulture to support French military forces in Vietnam. (wikipedia.org)
  • He also said the North was sending a message to Obama that it wants to replace the armistice agreement that ended the Korean War in 1953 with a permanent peace treaty while keeping its nuclear weapons. (heraldnet.com)
  • He ended the Korean War in 1953, but sent the first US troops to Vietnam and prepared to intervene in Cuba. (biographyonline.net)
  • It's time to end the Korean War and reunite Korean families, demilitarize the Korean Peninsula and reduce the risk of nuclear war in northeast Asia. (workers.org)
  • The U.S. would lift sanctions and remove North Korea from its list of state sponsors of terrorism, normalize the political relationship, which is still the subject of terms of the 1953 Korean War armistice. (therealnews.com)
  • Let's face it: We don't really know why North Korea decided to test a nuclear weapon last week, why it has suddenly declared the Korean War armistice of 1953 null and void, why it has launched several test missiles and is preparing to launch others. (anneapplebaum.com)
  • By the time the armistice was signed, on July 27, 1953, B-29s had more than paid their way. (wikiquote.org)
  • And up to this year, seven decades later, the ceasefire is still a fragile one, made ever more dangerous since the U.S. first introduced nuclear weapons in South Korea in 1958, unilaterally abrogating paragraph 13d of the Armistice Agreement and breaking it despite concerns by its allies in the United Nations. (workers.org)
  • Weeks later the war was stopped by an armistice, and on Oct. 1, 1953. (koreatimes.co.kr)
  • Israel refuses (unlike Iran) to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and open its nuclear programme to international inspection. (dissidentvoice.org)
  • It has signed but not ratified the Comprehensive Nuclear Test-Ban Treaty, similarly the Chemical Weapons Convention. (dissidentvoice.org)
  • To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs what steps he is taking to encourage Israel to (a) sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and (b) open its nuclear programme to international inspection. (dissidentvoice.org)
  • The British Government supports fully the universalisation of the Nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty (NPT). (dissidentvoice.org)
  • My understanding of the Israeli nukes situation is that in 2009 the IAEA again called on Israel to join the Non-Proliferation Treaty, open its nuclear facilities to inspection and place them under comprehensive IAEA safeguards. (dissidentvoice.org)
  • Transcript of questions and answers between members of the Rajya Sabha and the Minister of External Affairs, Shri M. C. Chagla, on the government's goals for the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. (wilsoncenter.org)
  • Washington has consistently said that Pyongyang must abandon its nuclear arsenal for any peace treaty to be concluded. (heraldnet.com)
  • The 1953 mutual defense treaty does not contain an automatic intervention clause applicable to the U.S., and also did not mention the concept of "extended deterrence. (koreatimes.co.kr)
  • NASA entertained it as an option for powering a manned mission to Mars until the Nuclear Test Ban treaty put the kibosh on it. (motherjones.com)
  • North Korea would allow the IAEA to conduct routine inspections of nuclear facilities and remain a party to the nuclear proliferation treaty. (therealnews.com)
  • John Walker, 'British nuclear weapon stockpiles 1953-1978. (nuclearinfo.org)
  • He made some attempts to limit nuclear weapon proliferation, but this was generally unsuccessful, and nuclear stockpiles increased on both sides. (biographyonline.net)
  • Okinawa hosted 'hundreds of nuclear warheads and a large arsenal of chemical munitions,' for many years. (wikipedia.org)
  • Although actual nuclear weapons were removed from Iwo Jima at the end of 1959, Chichi Jima, which had the same legal status, continued to house warheads with their nuclear materials until 1965. (wikipedia.org)
  • The United Kingdom has a stockpile of approximately 225 nuclear warheads, of which up to 120 are operationally available for deployment on four Vanguard-class nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs). (thebulletin.org)
  • Over the past two decades, however, the United Kingdom has made several declarations about reducing the sizes of its nuclear inventory and operationally available warheads. (thebulletin.org)
  • It is believed that around that time, the UK nuclear stockpile included 240 to 245 nuclear warheads. (thebulletin.org)
  • In May 2010, Foreign Secretary William Hague declared, "[f]or the first time, the government will make public the maximum number of warheads that the United Kingdom will hold in its stockpile-in [the] future, our overall stockpile will not exceed 225 nuclear warheads" (Hague 2010, col. 181). (thebulletin.org)
  • He sidesteps the taboo subject of Israel's hundreds of nuclear warheads, which have never been subject to international safeguards, while he and his colleagues enjoy their sport of punishing Iran, which is properly signed up to the NPT and has no nuclear weapons. (dissidentvoice.org)
  • Even though this weapon wouldn't involve nuclear warheads, one possible flaw is that its profile would be hard to distinguish from a conventional nuke-which could be a problem if it had to fly over, say, Russia or China. (motherjones.com)
  • Another example often cited is the Trump administration's criticism and backtracking of the Iran nuclear deal reached under President Barack Obama. (cnn.com)
  • Tehran agreed in 2015 to limit its peaceful nuclear energy program in exchange for a reduction in sanctions, but Trump has since said the deal contained "disastrous flaws" and threatened to scrap it if Iran continued ballistic missile testing not covered by the original deal. (cnn.com)
  • The exact same statements - verbatim - were included in Clapper's unclassified report , including the assessment that "Iran is developing nuclear capabilities to enhance its security, prestige, and regional influence and give it the ability to develop nuclear weapons, should a decision be made to do so. (wideasleepinamerica.com)
  • We do not know if Iran will eventually decide to build nuclear weapons. (wideasleepinamerica.com)
  • Of course, as Clapper notes, Iran's ability to potentially manufacture the components is inherent to its advanced nuclear infrastructure and is not an indication of an active nuclear weapons program, which all U.S. intelligence agencies agree Iran does not have. (wideasleepinamerica.com)
  • As such, Clapper again reported to the Senate Committee, "Iran has the scientific, technical, and industrial capacity to eventually produce nuclear weapons. (wideasleepinamerica.com)
  • In his testimony, Clapper stated that, were the decision to weaponize its nuclear energy program to be made by Ayatollah Khamenei, Iran could theoretically reach a "breakout" point within "months, not years. (wideasleepinamerica.com)
  • His report repeats the assessment, though, that "[d]espite this progress, we assess Iran could not divert safeguarded material and produce a weapon-worth of WGU before this activity is discovered. (wideasleepinamerica.com)
  • Again, undermining the bogus claims that Iran is an irrational and reckless actor, Clapper maintained the judgment that "Iran's nuclear decisionmaking is guided by a cost-benefit approach," balancing its own domestic interests with "the international political and security environment. (wideasleepinamerica.com)
  • Not mentioned in the session, of course, are the decades of repeated affirmations by senior Iranian officials that Iran rejects nuclear weapons on strategic, moral and religious grounds. (wideasleepinamerica.com)
  • It's just as easy for a nuclear disarmament advocate as a hawk to believe that a state such as Iran that has not only established a nuclear energy program but also experimented with nuclear weapons until 2003 is still developing them. (antiwar.com)
  • When, earlier this month, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) released a report on Iran's nuclear program, several media agencies and politicians walked away with two messages: that the Vienna-based agency now refutes past estimates of the US intelligence community, and that Iran is now making a break for the bomb. (antiwar.com)
  • The Obama administration pledged that Iran would suffer painful consequences for plotting to assassinate the Saudi ambassador in Washington and for refusing to freeze its nuclear program. (antiwar.com)
  • Most analysts familiar with the report agree that there "is nothing in the report that was not previously known by the governments of the major powers" - a nuclear Iran is "neither imminent nor inevitable. (antiwar.com)
  • The new report, therefore, leaves us where we've been since 2002, when George Bush declared Iran to be a member of the Axis of Evil - with lots of belligerent talk but no definitive evidence of a nuclear-weapons program. (antiwar.com)
  • He uses a claim in the report that Iran built an explosives chamber for nuclear testing to kill two myths - that and another in the report - with one stone. (antiwar.com)
  • Today was the first time nuclear war didn't steadily approach since more than ten years ago despite Nuclear tension between Iran and Israel. (unexplainable.net)
  • A nuclear strike on Iran by Israel or vice versa would no doubt push the clock forward considerably, and some are afraid such a strike isn't far from happening. (unexplainable.net)
  • 25 June 1950 - 27 July 1953) was a war between North and South Korea , in which a United Nations force led by the United States of America fought for the South, and China fought for the North, which was also assisted by the Soviet Union . (wikiquote.org)
  • Today, the idea of launching a reusable spaceplane into a suborbital altitude practically sounds run of the mill, thanks to similar concepts being leveraged by everything from nuclear ICBMs to the most advanced, cutting-edge hypersonic weapons, but Dornberger and Ehricke's proposal was submitted in 1952 - five years before the Soviet Union would launch the world's first man-made satellite into orbit. (nationalinterest.org)
  • The last time it was this close to midnight was in 1953 - a time when the U.S and the Soviet Union tested their first nuclear weapons. (nbcnews.com)
  • Throughout the 'Cold War,' the two main protagonists the Soviet Union and the US, avoided direct confrontation, but there was a confrontational build up in nuclear weapons and, during the 'Cuban Missile Crisis' of 1961, the two sides came close to war. (biographyonline.net)
  • Cuban Missile Crisis (1962) - Closest to nuclear war as the Soviet Union moved nuclear missiles towards Cuba. (biographyonline.net)
  • Joseph Stalin (1879 - 1953) Leader and dictator of the Soviet Union. (biographyonline.net)
  • He led the Soviet Union from 1953 to 1964 during the tense years of the Cold War. (biographyonline.net)
  • He cut conventional forces, but built up the number of nuclear missiles and was involved in the stand-off when in 1962 missiles were sent to Cuba - an ally of the Soviet Union. (biographyonline.net)
  • The only times the Soviet Union has used the Red Army since World War II have been against its own allies in East Germany in 1953, in Hungary in 1956, and in Czechoslovakia in 1968. (ucsb.edu)
  • The increase in the clock of one minute means humanity is about as safe from nuclear annihilation as in 1988 when the cold war was just ending and relations between the US and Soviet Union were improving. (unexplainable.net)
  • The closest to nuclear apocalypse we ever came was in 1953 when the Soviet Union and the United States tested Nuclear weapons within nine months of one another. (unexplainable.net)
  • On January 16, 1966, two B-52 airplanes, each carrying four thermonuclear weapons containing 239Pu, flew to the southern fringes of the former Soviet Union. (cdc.gov)
  • On November 30, 1950, President Harry S. Truman announces during a press conference that he is prepared to authorize the use of atomic weapons in order to achieve peace in Korea . (history.com)
  • The Soviets had matched America's nuclear weapons with a test of their own in 1949, and again with the hydrogen bomb in 1953. (nationalinterest.org)
  • following by the Russians creation of the Hydrogen bomb in 1953 this led to the world becoming a much more dangerous place. (markedbyteachers.com)
  • When the Nuclear Age was launched, nuclear advocates predicted that the probability of a severe core meltdown and major release of radiation among the world's reactors would be 1 in 10,000 reactor years. (neis.org)
  • It was used to research government-sponsored liquid metals, to develop liquid propellant rocket engines for NASA, & to house nuclear reactors. (neis.org)
  • Over the years, four of the ten nuclear reactors experienced accidents. (neis.org)
  • On March 28th, 1979, a mechanical failure at the site resulted in nuclear reactor coolant being leaked from one of the reactors. (neis.org)
  • US would lead the effort to build two light-water nuclear reactors in North Korea to compensate for the loss of nuclear power. (therealnews.com)
  • A number of radiation accidents have occurred over the past 50 years involving radiation producing machines, radio- active materials, and uncontrolled nuclear reactors. (cdc.gov)
  • We have not accumulated 10,000 years-worth of reactor operation, yet have already experienced the catastrophic nuclear disasters at Chornobyl in 1986, and the three meltdowns and explosions at Fukushima, Japan in 2011. (neis.org)
  • U.S. officials of both capitalist parties are barreling toward a new hot war in the region that could easily spiral into a catastrophic nuclear conflict. (workers.org)
  • This estimate is based on publicly available information regarding the size of the British nuclear arsenal, conversations with UK officials, and analysis of the nuclear forces structure. (thebulletin.org)
  • Some Ukrainian politicians have also claimed that had the country not given up its post-Soviet nuclear arsenal, Russia would not have annexed Crimea in 2014, though Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko has rejected calls for Kiev to become a nuclear power again. (cnn.com)
  • Bomb-powered spaceships, mininukes, atomic excavation, and other bizarre uses for our nuclear arsenal. (motherjones.com)
  • Of all the nuclear weapon states, the United Kingdom has moved the furthest toward establishing a minimum nuclear deterrent. (thebulletin.org)
  • In the past, Pyongyang has repeatedly pointed to US military interventions around the world as a justification for its nuclear program, viewing it as a vital deterrent to any attempts at regime change instigated or led by Washington. (cnn.com)
  • However, the arms race acted as a strong deterrent through promise of 'Mutually Assured Destruction' and also creating a limited war due to the capacity of the nuclear weapons. (markedbyteachers.com)
  • and a letter from Sir Hermann Bondi, 28 January 1981, about a British nuclear deterrent. (cam.ac.uk)
  • To the U.S. government and much of the media, the recent report on Iran's nuclear program by the International Atomic Energy Agency is damning. (antiwar.com)
  • While it is clear that Iran's continuing research on nuclear weapons is a serious concern for international security, there "has been no smoking gun when it comes to Iran's nuclear weapons intentions. (antiwar.com)
  • Forrestal-class aircraft carriers with jet bombers, as well as missiles with miniaturized nuclear weapons, soon entered service, and regular transits of U.S. nuclear weapons through Japan began thereafter. (wikipedia.org)
  • The SSBNs, each of which has 16 missile tubes, constitute the United Kingdom's sole nuclear platform, and submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs) comprise its sole nuclear delivery system. (thebulletin.org)
  • While most of these tests and the stories related to nuclear weapons have been very ordinary, because they're basically just massive explosions either underground or in the atmosphere, there are some very interesting but obscure stories from the history of nuclear testing. (listverse.com)
  • It was a collaborative project between the US Army and Navy to test the effect of nuclear weapons on ships as well as investigate the mushroom clouds that resulted from nuclear explosions. (listverse.com)
  • The drones were guided by pilots flying in aircraft alongside the drones and entered the mushroom cloud formed by the nuclear explosions mere minutes after the blasts. (listverse.com)
  • As part of the Plowshare project, 27 bombs were set off between 1961 and 1973, and plans were drawn up to use nuclear explosions to create new roadways, widen the Panama Canal, and tap natural gas reserves. (motherjones.com)
  • The International Nuclear Event Scale measured it as a 6, meaning it was the third worst nuclear disaster of all time. (neis.org)
  • The unprecedented decision about whether to drop atomic bombs on Japanese cities was made in wartime by an intelligent and humble but completely unprepared man who had known about the weapon for less time than it takes to teach the first semester of college physics, during which time he also happened to be employed as President of the United States. (themontrealreview.com)
  • We will not prematurely or unnecessarily risk the costs of worldwide nuclear war in which even the fruits of victory would be ashes in our mouth," he said grimly, "but neither will we shrink from the risk at any time it must be faced. (tomdispatch.com)
  • In just three years, an estimated 4 million people - more than half of them Korean civilians - had been killed by the time of the 1953 ceasefire agreement. (workers.org)
  • Were President Trump to authorize such a move, it would represent the first time in the history of the world that any nation had launched a formal military attack on the territory of a declared nuclear state. (time.com)
  • Unfortunately, the time would be pushed forward as humanity teetered toward nuclear war forward more than 12 minutes as international relations began to fall apart. (unexplainable.net)
  • At the time, the U.S. was the only country to possess nuclear weapons. (history.com)
  • A command-and-control team was then established in Tokyo by Strategic Air Command and President Truman authorized the transfer to Okinawa of atomic-capable B-29s armed with Mark 4 nuclear bombs and nine fissile cores into the custody of the U.S. Air Force. (wikipedia.org)
  • It is true that Chichi Jima, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa were under U.S. occupation, that the bombs stored on the mainland lacked their plutonium and/or uranium cores, and that the nuclear-armed ships were a legal inch away from Japanese soil. (wikipedia.org)
  • People during this war learned to be on theier toes and be ready for nuclear bombs. (timetoast.com)
  • By the end of 1953, the United States had close to 1,000 A-bombs, H-bombs, and "tactical" nuclear weapons. (tomdispatch.com)
  • The parallel question today would ask whether American weapons - including the so-called Mother of All Bombs, which the U.S. has just used in Afghanistan - would in fact be able to disable underground North Korean nuclear facilities, and whether the U.S. really can locate all key North Korean nuclear installations. (time.com)
  • A map of the nuclear bombs in your backyard and a look at our expensive, expanding nuclear weapons complex . (motherjones.com)
  • Then, the United States had a monopoly or overwhelming superiority of nuclear weapons. (ucsb.edu)
  • Paul Nitze of the State Department, who for at least four decades insisted that strategic nuclear superiority was essential for the United States, raised closely related questions. (time.com)
  • Nuclear weapons are different, in the scale of their destruction, the health and environmental effects of radiation, and the risk of reprisals. (themontrealreview.com)
  • The population was ignorant of the danger of radiation and instead welcomed the nuclear tests because their province was being selected for the advancement of Chinese technology. (listverse.com)
  • Radiation accidents may be viewed as unusual exposure events which provide possible high exposures to a few people and, in the case of nuclear plant events, low exposures to large populations. (cdc.gov)
  • This is sort of the whole reason why North Korea has pursued nuclear weapons," Rodger Baker, VP of strategic analysis for the global intelligence firm Stratfor, told CNN. (cnn.com)
  • In light of wider Danish strategic priorities, Danish Foreign Minister Martin Lidegaard's restrained reaction to Russia's decision to target Danish military frigates with nuclear weapons was understandable. (global-politics.co.uk)
  • Thus it seems urgently necessary to employ "substantial extended deterrence," in its true sense, against the North's nuclear threat by actively re-engaging the Extended Deterrence Strategy Consultation Group (EDSCG) between the two countries, so as to move towards considering all possible options, including the sharing of tactical nuclear weapons, in the event of a serious security situation. (koreatimes.co.kr)
  • Both sides would provide formal assurances against the threat or use of nuclear weapons. (therealnews.com)
  • What you just described was for the reactor at Yongbyon, which was a plutonium producing reactor, and the reprocessing facilities necessary to make that plutonium into weapons grade material. (therealnews.com)
  • Activation products - radionuclides that result from the absorption of neutrons by uranium, and other materials present in a nuclear reactor. (cdc.gov)
  • By 1960, American military and political leaders had signed off on the country's first Single Integrated Operational Plan or SIOP for the use of nuclear weaponry in war. (tomdispatch.com)
  • Plans are afoot to wield nuclear weapons "as just another item in the warfighting toolbox" for future "preventive" wars against powers our government merely thinks might be considering using chemical or biological weaponry against U.S. forces or our allies. (tomdispatch.com)
  • After affirming that the president always had to consider the use of nuclear weaponry in any scenario involving U.S. troops, Truman went on to assure the press that day that he never wanted to see the bomb used again. (history.com)
  • This tactical nuclear recoilless rifle with a 0.01-kiloton payload was designed for use on conventional battlefields . (motherjones.com)
  • The X-20 was a 1950s science fiction fever dream born of the nuclear age and the earliest days of the Cold War… And according to some experts, it very likely would have worked. (nationalinterest.org)
  • US government scientists have been dreaming up unusual applications for nuclear weapons since the earliest days of the atomic age. (motherjones.com)
  • Thus, both sides have recognized a vital mutual interest in halting the dangerous momentum of the nuclear arms race. (ucsb.edu)
  • In 2009 the IAEA concluded that nuclear material, facilities or other items to which safeguards were applied in Israel remained in use for peaceful activities. (dissidentvoice.org)
  • Official pronouncements and estimates of the costs of these nuclear disasters are always underestimates, couched in vast cover-ups, and "blessed" with official imprimaturs of the U.N World Health Organization (WHO) and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), whose role it is to promote and expand the so-called "peaceful" use of nuclear power worldwide. (neis.org)
  • So the US and USSR, and their allies, made a series of agreements to reduce the risk that anyone would use the weapons. (themontrealreview.com)
  • The United States was now relying on atomic weapons to defend allies around the world, and if they did not work in Korea, allies might lose confidence in the U.S. We also had to ask, he said, "whether the USSR [which had exploded an atomic bomb nearly four years earlier]. (time.com)
  • The Doomsday Clock has been moved to 2 minutes to midnight in response to growing nuclear threats and climate change. (nbcnews.com)
  • The clock was created with seven minutes left until midnight, and was designed to measure how close humanity was to nuclear destruction. (unexplainable.net)
  • He has watched … what has happened around the world relative to nations that possess nuclear capabilities and the leverage they have, and seen that having the nuclear card in your pocket results in a lot of deterrence capability," he said at an event last year . (cnn.com)
  • In fact, in his farewell address to Congress in 1953 he warned, "We are being hurried forward, in our mastery of the atom…toward yet unforeseeable peaks of destructive power [when man could] destroy the very structure of a civilization…such a war is not a possible policy for rational men. (history.com)
  • UK nuclear submarine HMS Vanguard arrives back at HM Naval Base Clyde, Faslane, Scotland following a patrol. (thebulletin.org)
  • That] claim appears to be an effort to confuse Danilenko's well- established work on an explosives chamber for nanodiamond synthesis with a chamber for weapons testing, such as the IAEA now claims was built at Parchin. (antiwar.com)
  • The exchange of fire occurred as U.S. officials said Obama has decided to send a special envoy to Pyongyang for rare direct talks on the communist country's nuclear weapons program. (heraldnet.com)
  • It promised the delivery of over 3,200 nuclear weapons to 1,060 targets in the Communist world. (tomdispatch.com)
  • Then Dr. Syngman Rhee, the first president of the Republic of Korea, stunned the U.S. by unilaterally releasing North Korean anti-communist prisoners of war held on Geoje Island on June 18, 1953. (koreatimes.co.kr)
  • The North Korean communist government is currently in the midst of developing its own nuclear weapons. (history.com)
  • Since Kim took power that same year, North Korea has dramatically ramped up its nuclear and missile testing , and in November 2017 Pyongyang debuted a new intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) allegedly capable of striking the whole US mainland. (cnn.com)
  • The North Korean military, in general, is run down and suffering from two decades of neglect because of economic mismanagement, corruption and higher priority nuclear and ballistic missile programs. (strategypage.com)
  • North Korea has conducted two underground nuclear tests since 2006 and is believed to have enough weaponized plutonium for half a dozen atomic weapons. (heraldnet.com)
  • New types of weapons present new dangers. (ucsb.edu)
  • In 1960 the clock was turned five minutes backwards as science was met with political cooperation and education of the public on the dangers of nuclear war, and its potential effects on humanity. (unexplainable.net)
  • Truman continued to be mindful of the dangers of the nuclear arms race through the end of his tenure in office. (history.com)
  • To what extent did the nuclear arms race make the world a more dangerous place in the years 1949-63? (markedbyteachers.com)
  • Over the next several years the clock jumped back and forth with each major nuclear change, with the greatest change happening in 1990 and 1991 when the clock was pulled back 11 minutes to 11:43, the earliest the nuclear clock has ever been. (unexplainable.net)
  • Specially-equipped United States Navy C-130s, operating from Japanese bases, enabled the National Command Authority to control Single Integrated Operational Plan (SIOP) processes for theater or general nuclear war. (wikipedia.org)
  • However, three hours and 13 minutes after the test, the area above the underground chamber that the nuclear weapon had created suddenly collapsed , forming a crater more than 100 meters (330 ft) across and 5 meters (16 ft) deep at its deepest point. (listverse.com)
  • In December 2003, after months of negotiations with the US , Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi agreed to dismantle his nuclear, chemical and biological weapons programs. (cnn.com)
  • It has not signed the Biological and Toxin Weapons Convention. (dissidentvoice.org)
  • A long series of leaders came to realize, in the manner of Clausewitz, that there would be no political point to victory if nuclear weapons were used: even the "victors" would lose, and become pariahs to the rest of the world. (themontrealreview.com)
  • The futility and danger of nuclear weapons in the post-9/11 world is indisputable The 2003 Oscar-Winning documentary The Fog of War, containing Robert McNamara's post-Vietnam mea culpa, also highlighted one of the former US Defence Secretary's greatest concerns - nuclear weapons. (global-politics.co.uk)
  • Dome which, in the interest of national defense, required the Air Force to fly aircraft carrying nuclear weapons around the world 24 hours a day. (cdc.gov)
  • As the US prepares to try and convince North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to give up his nuclear weapons, it may have made his counter argument for him. (cnn.com)
  • As experts advise that North Korea seems ready to launch a new nuclear test, plans have been laid for a potentially large conventional strike by the U.S. against North Korean test sites and facilities, to be executed if North Korea goes ahead with another nuclear test. (time.com)
  • There was an agreement about the North Korean nuclear program. (therealnews.com)
  • That agreement in theory would have frozen or eliminated the North Korean nuclear weapons program and we wouldn't be in the moment we're in. (therealnews.com)
  • In 1984, the Midas Myth nuclear test was conducted 361 meters (1,184 ft) underground in the Nevada Desert. (listverse.com)
  • Underground nuclear tests often left behind huge craters, so someone got the bright idea to use nukes as giant earthmovers. (motherjones.com)
  • The United Kingdom is the only nuclear weapon state that operates a posture with a single deterrence system (Table 1). (thebulletin.org)
  • In addition, Biden made a strong commitment to defense and "extended deterrence" against North Korea's nuclear threats, as found in their concluding joint statement. (koreatimes.co.kr)
  • The U.S. Contemplated a Nuclear Confrontation in North Korea in 1953. (time.com)
  • Yet it behooves us to revisit another instance in which the U.S. government flirted with a nuclear confrontation with another nuclear power - one that would have taken place, as it happens, in the same territory, Korea, in 1953. (time.com)
  • During U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War the use of nuclear weapons was suggested in order to "defoliate forests, destroy bridges, roads, and railroad lines. (wikipedia.org)
  • It was fired only once, at a May 1953 test in Nevada captured in the video below (the gun goes off at 0:33). (motherjones.com)
  • Only three political actions as big as North Korea's test of a nuclear weapon seem to stand between us and Nuclear devastation. (unexplainable.net)
  • On Friday, US President Donald Trump announced he had given the order for US forces to strike the Syrian regime in response to an alleged chemical weapons attack on a rebel-held city in the southwest of the country, which he blames on Russia and Syria. (cnn.com)
  • In 1953 the Eisenhower Administration - like the Trump Administration - took power in the midst of a long, frustrating, indecisive conflict. (time.com)
  • In the end, the Korean conflict ended in stalemate, and did not involve the use of atomic weapons by either side. (history.com)
  • Scientists at NASA and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory think a spare nuclear warhead could "nudge" it out of our path. (motherjones.com)
  • On June 7, 1960 a helium tank exploded, which in turn started a fire in a nuclear missile. (neis.org)
  • However, South Korea still faces great challenges despite its strong alliance with the U.S. Many South Korean citizens are especially worried about their national security status as a result of the North's serious nuclear threats. (koreatimes.co.kr)
  • Make nuclear power something of the past! (neis.org)
  • In particular, both countries' decision to strengthen cooperation in key technological industries such as semiconductors, batteries and nuclear power and South Korea's decision to participate in the U.S.-initiated Indo-Pacific Economic Framework (IPEF) reflect this deepening relationship. (koreatimes.co.kr)
  • An analysis of the common characteristics of accidents is useful in resolving overarching issues, as has been done following nuclear power, industrial radiography, and medical accidents. (cdc.gov)
  • The report said the alleged explosives chamber was designed to contain "up to 70 kg of high explosives" which is claims would be "suitable" for testing what it calls a "multipoint initiation system" for a nuclear weapon. (antiwar.com)
  • Nevertheless, however much Tehran may experience lust in its heart for nuclear weapons, the evidence to judge it guilty of, as it were, an illicit affair is sorely lacking. (antiwar.com)
  • In the 1950s, after U.S. interservice rivalry culminated in the Revolt of the Admirals, a stop-gap method of naval deployment of nuclear weapons was developed using the Lockheed P-2 Neptune and North American AJ-2 Savage aboard aircraft carriers. (wikipedia.org)
  • By the spring of 1953, the remaining Soviet MiG-15 pilots in Korea began avoiding engagement with U.S. aircraft. (wikiquote.org)
  • Even more troubling is the general opinion of the average individual that intercontinental nuclear war isn't anywhere even close to happening, extending to the extreme of even saying it could never happen. (unexplainable.net)
  • I might point out the most dangerous program, because that's the fastest and easiest if there is an easy route to a nuclear weapon. (therealnews.com)
  • I'd be interested to know whether Dywyddyr believes Russia knows the same or less than Russia about nuclear weapons technology, although admittedly that distinction is irrelevant to the debate topic. (sciforums.com)
  • The US (and many Western countries) tend to be revolutionary in their weapon designs, while the USSR/ Russia is evolutionary - in general they squeeze the last drop of utility out of a system before incrementally improving it. (sciforums.com)
  • We don't have a paywall or run ads, which means we're not brought to you by the oil, gas, coal, or nuclear companies when we cover the climate catastrophe or by the weapons manufacturers when we cover war. (democracynow.org)