Nuclear weapons haven’t been tested in the United States since 1992. Find out why, and what could happen if the hiatus ends.
The Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) remains the cornerstone of global efforts to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons. Adopted in 1970, the NPT’s objectives are threefold: ...
US President Donald Trump has instructed the Pentagon to resume nuclear weapons testing immediately, “on an equal basis” with other countries' testing programmes. If Trump is referring to the ...
Japan doesn’t seem likely to develop nuclear weapons in the short-term. However, the tensions that triggered this episode are ...
Bombshell explores how the U.S. manipulated the narrative about the impact of the WWII bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and ...
Energy Secretary Chris Wright revealed the U.S. will not be testing nuclear explosions, putting to rest questions over whether the Trump administration would reverse a decades-old taboo. Testing will ...
The only four categories of weapons expressly outlawed by majority of EU states are personnel mines, cluster munitions, ...
Warren Buffett has warned that the lack of understanding among AI leaders about the technology's future is dangerous, ...
During the Cold War the U.S. considered putting nuclear weapons on balloons and letting them float into enemy territory for a strike.
EADaily, January 13th, 2026. The Oreshnik complex— a new Russian weapon, is comparable in destructive power to nuclear, but ...