Trump declines to say if US will test nuclear weapons
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Vice Adm. Richard Correll said that Trump's announcement does not necessarily mean detonating a test weapon — noting that neither China nor Russia has conducted a nuclear explosive test in recent memory.
If conflict were to break out, the forces with assured access to electricity in all contested domains will prevail.
When Chinese leader Xi Jinping inserted a reference to “twists and turns” in his relationship with President Donald Trump in the opening remarks of their summit this week, he could hardly have imagined the twist that came minutes before the talks began.
Kathryn Bigelow’s new movie, A House of Dynamite, is more accurate on this point than the Defense Department itself.
President Donald Trump’s missile defense system aims to protect the U.S. from nuclear attack, but it may destabilize global security and cost over $1 trillion.
North Korea is one potential villain in a fictional movie about nuclear war on Netflix, Kathryn Bigelow’s “A House of Dynamite.” It is a “Rashomon”-style thriller about the concept of mutually assured destruction that the filmmakers mean to be a wakeup call for nuclear powers.
The Netflix film "A House of Dynamite" tells "a vastly different story" about U.S. ability to repel a nuclear attack than real-world testing suggests, according to an internal government memo obtained by Bloomberg.
Let's break down the real science behind Netflix's new movie "A House of Dynamite," which imagines a nuclear attack on the U.S.