Nuclear weapons haven’t been tested in the United States since 1992. Find out why, and what could happen if the hiatus ends.
Interesting Engineering on MSN
10 long-range missiles that could transform the way wars are fought
The rapid advances in technology have brought about a wave of radical changes in ...
Great power competition gives the United States all the more reason to invest in international cooperative frameworks for ...
The National Interest on MSN
Harnessing AI to Move from Threat-to-Threat Reduction
AI is lowering barriers to CBRN threats—but with coordinated public-private partnerships, the same technologies can become ...
This aging bomber continues to adapt, proving its resilience in a changing world.
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Inside the test of America’s “safest” nuclear bomb
Decades after the Cold War ended, U.S. defense planners concluded that deploying massive megaton-yield gravity bombs over Europe was no longer realistic, leaving much of America’s nuclear arsenal ...
If the US abandons New START, say goodbye to that comfortable feeling we once enjoyed of relative freedom from an imminent ...
A renewed wave of interest in the Rendlesham Forest case centres on claims that a UFO implanted a chilling binary warning ...
Today's world military news (January 22) includes the following: Singapore equips itself with P-8A Poseidon maritime patrol ...
The Su-75 fighter, Khabarovsk submarine, Sarmat missiles and other developments will undergo the last stages of testing.
Nor are there any emergency meetings or condemnations from the United Nations. Member states were busy denouncing the United ...
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