Thursday, May 14, 2026
38.1 C
New Delhi

Trump says US will resume nuclear tests because Pakistan and other countries are doing so

Trump says US will resume nuclear tests because Pakistan and other countries are doing so

Donald Trump (File photo)

The TOI correspondent from Washington: US President Donald Trump on Sunday said Pakistan, North Korea, China, and Russia were conducting secret underground nuclear tests to assert that the U.S too would resume nuclear tests. In a CBS 60 minutes interview telecast Sunday night, Trump insisted that other countries, including Pakistan, were conducting underground tests, rejecting the questioner’s contention that countries like Russia were only testing delivery systems like missiles without nuclear payload.

Defence Experts Offer Stark Warnings After Donald Trump Claims Pakistan Is Conducting Nuclear Tests

“No, we’re going to test because they test and others test. And certainly North Korea’s been testing. Pakistan’s been testing,” Trump maintained, adding, “You don’t necessarily know where they’re testing. They test way underground where people don’t know exactly what’s happening with the test.”According to Washington’s own account under previous administrations, all five formally recognized nuclear powers (P-5), including the US, Russia, and China have observed a moratorium on explosive nuclear testing for more than 25 years. Russia’s last test was in 1990 (as the Soviet Union), and China’s last test was in 1996. India too, as a de facto nuclear power, announced a voluntary and unilateral moratorium on nuclear testing after its Shakti tests in May 1998 even though it is not legally obligated to do so since it is not a signatory to the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT). North Korea is the only country that has conducted nuclear weapon tests (explosions) in the 21st century.However, US government reports have occasionally expressed suspicion that Russia and China may have conducted very low-yield or “sub-critical” tests that could technically violate the “zero-yield” standard of the testing moratorium, but they have not provided definitive public proof of full-scale nuclear explosions. Experts say low-yield tests are hard to distinguish from sub-critical tests, which are generally considered permissible under the CTBT. Trump appeared to be suggesting that countries are conducting such low yield, sub-critical tests, saying “people don’t know exactly what’s happening with the test…you feel a little bit of a vibration.”Energy Secretary Chris Wright later brought some clarity to Trump’s announcement, tempering the President’s remarks to say the US would be focusing on system tests or what are called noncritical explosions. “These are not nuclear explosions. These are what we call noncritical explosions. So you’re testing all the other parts of a nuclear weapon,” he told Fox News. This is a routine and ongoing practice for all nuclear powers. Russia recently said it had successfully tested a nuclear-powered cruise missile, the Burevestnik, and a large torpedo, the Poseidon, which are nuclear-capable weapons systems. Wright suggested Trump had greenlighted such systems testing following Russia’s announcement to reassure Americans that the U.S will do whatever it takes to remain the pre-eminent world power. In fact, Trump appeared not to know that the Department of Energy, specifically the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) under it, manages the nation’s nuclear arsenal and test sites, since he directed his order to resume nuclear testing “immediately” and “on an equal basis” with Russia and China to the Pentagon. Non-proliferation experts were mystified by Trump’s announcement, calling it incoherent and foolish. “By foolishly announcing his intention resume nuclear testing, Trump will trigger strong public opposition in Nevada, from all US allies, and it could trigger a chain reaction of nuclear testing by US adversaries, and blow apart the nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty,” Darryl Kimball, Director of Arms Control Association, wrote on X. He said Trump’s post is not clear about whether he is talking about n-explosive testing (which the NNSA would do) or flight testing of n-capable missiles (which the DoD does). In either case, the announcement seemed to go against Trump’s anathema towards nuclear weapons. Although he has frequently boasted of the potency of US nuclear arsenal and his role in maintaining its primacy, Trump has often said he abhors nuclear weapons for their destructive power and wishes the world could get rid of them. Go to Source

Hot this week

Trump in China: US and China are unlikely to fall into the Thucydides Trap, but history has another warning

For those unfamiliar, there’s a website called Jmail that has repurposed Jeffrey Epstein’s emails into a Gmail format, so it appears that one is actually browsing the late paedophile’s inbox. Read More

Iran allows Chinese ships through Hormuz as new vessel attacks escalate maritime tensions

The move followed requests from China’s foreign minister and ambassador to Iran, with Tehran agreeing to facilitate the passage of a number of Chinese ships in line with the two countries’ strategic partnership, according to a report Go to Source Read More

Trump China Visit Live Updates: Trump Hails US-China Ties, Xi Calls US President’s Visit ‘Historic’

Donald Trump China visit Live Updates: The US President will leave for Washington on Friday. Read More

Ukraine Breaks Russia’s Year-Long Winning Streak On Battlefield, Gains Ground In South: Report

Russia gains momentum in Ukraine, advancing in Donetsk and Kharkiv as Kyiv faces troop and aid shortages, while Moscow bets on a long war amid slow Western support. Read More

‘Will initiate contempt proceedings’: Delhi HC judge in Arvind Kejriwal’s excise policy case over ‘villifying’ posts

NEW DELHI: Delhi high court judge Swarana Kanta Sharma on Thursday said that she had decided to initiate contempt proceedings against some of the discharged accused in the excise policy case for posting “vilifying” and def Read More

Topics

Trump in China: US and China are unlikely to fall into the Thucydides Trap, but history has another warning

For those unfamiliar, there’s a website called Jmail that has repurposed Jeffrey Epstein’s emails into a Gmail format, so it appears that one is actually browsing the late paedophile’s inbox. Read More

Iran allows Chinese ships through Hormuz as new vessel attacks escalate maritime tensions

The move followed requests from China’s foreign minister and ambassador to Iran, with Tehran agreeing to facilitate the passage of a number of Chinese ships in line with the two countries’ strategic partnership, according to a report Go to Source Read More

Trump China Visit Live Updates: Trump Hails US-China Ties, Xi Calls US President’s Visit ‘Historic’

Donald Trump China visit Live Updates: The US President will leave for Washington on Friday. Read More

Ukraine Breaks Russia’s Year-Long Winning Streak On Battlefield, Gains Ground In South: Report

Russia gains momentum in Ukraine, advancing in Donetsk and Kharkiv as Kyiv faces troop and aid shortages, while Moscow bets on a long war amid slow Western support. Read More

‘Will initiate contempt proceedings’: Delhi HC judge in Arvind Kejriwal’s excise policy case over ‘villifying’ posts

NEW DELHI: Delhi high court judge Swarana Kanta Sharma on Thursday said that she had decided to initiate contempt proceedings against some of the discharged accused in the excise policy case for posting “vilifying” and def Read More

VD Satheesan To Take Oath As Kerala CM On May 18 At Thiruvananthapuram Central Stadium

Satheesan was elected as the Congress Legislature Party leader on Thursday after several rounds of discussions within the party following the UDF’s emphatic victory in Kerala. Read More

Petrol Pumps Closed On Sundays After PM Modi’s Appeal? Govt Debunks Viral Claim

The misinformation suggested that fuel stations in certain states would shut operations on Sundays as part of fuel-saving measures. Read More

‘What’s This Idiot Doing’: Marco Rubio’s Beijing Visit Goes Viral For This One Great Hall Moment

The clip, which quickly spread across social media platforms, showed Marco Rubio momentarily taking in the architecture during the formal diplomatic setting. Read More

Related Articles