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The leak comes at an extremely sensitive moment in US-Israeli relations and is bound to anger the Israelis, who have been preparing to strike Iran in response to Iran’s missile barrage on October 1. One of the documents also suggests something that Israel has always declined to confirm publicly: that the country has nuclear weapons. The document says the US has not seen any indications that Israel plans to use a nuclear weapon against Iran.
“If it is true that Israeli tactical plans to respond to Iran’s attack on October 1 have been leaked, it is a serious breach,” said Mick Mulroy, former deputy assistant secretary of defense for the Middle East and a retired CIA officer.
First time it has been ‘officially’ confirmed that Israel possesses nuclear weapons.
And this is any surprise because...?![]()
Ukraine ‘will seek nuclear weapons’ if it cannot join Nato
Membership vital to ‘victory plan’, Volodymyr Zelensky tells EU summit, as he warns of need for powerful deterrent against Russiawww.telegraph.co.uk
Desperation is in the air, and no mistake.
North Korea has learned this lesson and now it is scary to destroy itThe lesson is clear, have nukes and you can do what you want. Don't have nukes and countries will shit all over you.
Simply having them gives some latitude but unless you have a lot you don't have carte blanche. In the case of NK, sure it's unlikely anybody is going to invade, not that they were anyway and it was in fact them who attacked last time. However, they don't have enough to allow them to attack ROK and get away with it, because the US has enough interceptors to make the chances of getting a warhead through unlikely and the penalty for trying would be complete obliteration.The lesson is clear, have nukes and you can do what you want. Don't have nukes and countries will shit all over you.
However, they don't have enough to allow them to attack ROK and get away with it, because the US has enough interceptors to make the chances of getting a warhead through unlikely and the penalty for trying would be complete obliteration.
You forgot Jordan. And yes, it's pretty much a nightmare scenario for nuclear proliferation.Fantastic. So Syria, Egypt, Iraq, Lebanon will have nuclear weapons: Israel have it. A really big idea.
As the war in Ukraine intensifies, North Korea has increased its involvement by requesting nuclear technologies from Russia in exchange for missiles and military personnel. According to Kyrylo Budanov, Chief of Defense Intelligence of Ukraine, North Korea's request includes low-yield tactical nuclear weapons and submarine-launched missile systems. South Korean intelligence services have also warned that Russian assistance in modernizing North Korea's military could destabilize the region.
Major breach of international law:
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North Korea Requests Russian Nuclear Technologies in Exchange for Missiles and Troops in Ukraine War
North Korea Requests Russian Nuclear Technologies in Exchange for Missiles and Troops in Ukraine Wararmyrecognition.com
Might add Poland to that list, but that may just be my impression from watching too much Habitual Line Crosser...20-30 years from now will we call it the third nuclear age? New countries with nukes 2040-2050.
1) Iran - sooner probably but would be considered part of this proliferation timeline
2) S. Korea
3) Japan
4) Saudi Arabia
5) China as peer or superior numbers
6) Australia
I rather expect new version of Nuclear Sharing Program but based on French and maybe UK warheads.Might add Poland to that list, but that may just be my impression from watching too much Habitual Line Crosser...
I rather expect new version of Nuclear Sharing Program but based on French and maybe UK warheads.
https://www.csis.org/analysis/frances-nuclear-offer-europe
I'd missed that one, holy crap!Don't forget Algeria, which at the turn of the Century had a nuclear breakout capability estimated as being at around two years (a legacy of a covert, Chinese backed, late Cold War nuclear weapons program which had to be mothballed in the early 1990s after it was exposed, with Algeria basically forced into joining the NPT in 1995).
Fictionary scenario - “Orange guy” pull US forces and nuclear weapons from Europe - maybe declare not to honor NATO. Then it will be natural for Europe to consolidate defense around France and UK potential. And France or UK will be happy rest of the Europe to pay them to retain nuclear weapons production capabilities.I find it hard to believe either of those things.
Fictionary scenario - “Orange guy” pull US forces and nuclear weapons from Europe - maybe declare not to honor NATO. Then it will be natural for Europe to consolidate defense around France and UK potential. And France or UK will be happy rest of the Europe to pay them to retain nuclear weapons production capabilities.
And as Polish citizen I see Poland going nuclear in traditional manner highly unlikely. It will require at least 30 years of investment. We have some uranium ore in Stołowe/Sowie mountains but I don’t know if it’s practical to mine. Lack of any capability to enrich uranium, nor reactor to produce plutonium. Lack of indigenous ballistic missile technology. Sorry, this is not going to fly. Only option for shortcut is, if Ukrainians forget about couple of hundred of nuclear warheads and are willing to sell them.
SSBN warheads are small and have a good power/weight ratio. Those plus their re-entry bodies alone would be a nice "donation".French weapons are SSBN warheads, so even ignoring wild political hypotheticals, practically France has nothing to offer unless Poland intends to deploy SSBNs to the Baltic Sea.
SSBN warheads are small and have a good power/weight ratio. Those plus their re-entry bodies alone would be a nice "donation".
110kt is arguably a tactical size, if big.It is still a bit of a leap from tactical to strategic. I cannot imagine the French design a brand new weapon just for export.
It's certainly within what West Germany was willing to accept being used on their soil in case of WW3.
Not for very long. As soon as the Redstones were replaced, Germany said no more than 200kt on their soil.IIRC they were prepared, if not okay with, the use of the PGM-11 Redstone MRBM on their own territory and its' W39 warhead cam in two yields - the full 3.8iMT dirty warhead and the 425KT clean warhead.
Its liquid fueled: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/ILR-33_AMBER.Erm.
You have sounding rockets developed and produced since 1960s. The last launch was in 2024, actually breaking 100 km barrier.
You forget ASMP-A and future derivatives ASN4G. This come in par with East Flank adopting Rafale as second type of airframe and significant money going to France to sustain Rafael’s, weapons and ASMP. Shame France didin’t figure this out yet.French weapons are SSBN warheads, so even ignoring wild political hypotheticals, practically France has nothing to offer unless Poland intends to deploy SSBNs to the Baltic Sea.
You forget ASMP-A and future derivatives ASN4G. This come in par with East Flank adopting Rafale as second type of airframe and significant money going to France to sustain Rafael’s, weapons and ASMP. Shame France didin’t figure this out yet.
ASMP-A will be for East flank strategic weapon - basically 600km range missile that launched above Belarus have Moscow in range. ASN4G have enough range to reach Moscow from Poland.
They have the air-launched ASMP, there's probably some residual institutional knowledge of the Hades ballistic missile. Not to mention that Poland has increasingly close integration with its military industrial base with that of South Korea, which has wide range of Ballistic Missiles ranging from KTSSM to Hyunmoo 5.French weapons are SSBN warheads, so even ignoring wild political hypotheticals, practically France has nothing to offer unless Poland intends to deploy SSBNs to the Baltic Sea.
Add to that list: Turkey, United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Brazil, and maybe Sweden20-30 years from now will we call it the third nuclear age? New countries with nukes 2040-2050.
1) Iran - sooner probably but would be considered part of this proliferation timeline
2) S. Korea
3) Japan
4) Saudi Arabia
5) China as peer or superior numbers
6) Australia
I can see Sweden with nuclear powerplants, but nuclear weapons that aren't NATO-shared?Add to that list: Turkey, United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Brazil, and maybe Sweden
Most likely part of common European deterrence; french-build nukes shared among EU members.can see Sweden with nuclear powerplants, but nuclear weapons that aren't NATO-shared?
Okay, yes I could also see that.Most likely part of common European deterrence; french-build nukes shared among EU members.