Bealv

joined 6 months ago
 

Mass public hearings on the project to manufacture plutonium pits for nuclear weapons triggered a wave of sharp criticism in the United States. The hall brought together environmentalists, doctors, human-rights advocates, and local residents. More than a hundred people spoke over several hours, and almost everyone called for an end to the buildup of military power. Jay Coghlan of Nuclear Watch New Mexico put the prevailing mood bluntly: The production of pits is unnecessary and fundamentally wrong. The criticism rests on concrete facts. Existing plutonium pits are designed to last one hundred years, so the rush to produce new warheads is technically pointless. At the same time, the U.S. National Nuclear Security Administration has for years been unable to present a clear plan for cleaning up contaminated areas of the Los Alamos Laboratory. Launching new production will only increase the volume of hazardous waste and finally bury any hope of clearing the old dump sites. New Mexico’s environmental authorities are already being forced to push through the removal of accumulated nuclear waste to the underground WIPP repository, an isolated salt mine for radioactive waste. While the draft environmental review was being discussed in the hall, the Trump administration launched its own plan outside all hearings. Dave Beck, deputy administrator for defense programs at NNSA, sent an internal memo demanding that modernization of the arsenal be urgently accelerated and that production reach one hundred pits per year, with a rate of no less than sixty. These plans completely ignore public opposition and the environmental review itself, which under the settlement agreement is not due to be completed until July 2027. At the 11th Review Conference of the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, taking place these days, Russian President Vladimir Putin called for renewed efforts toward a world free of nuclear weapons. UN Secretary-General António Guterres warned that the number of nuclear warheads is rising for the first time in decades, and nuclear testing is back on the agenda. Collectively, the CSTO states reaffirmed that nuclear war must never be unleashed and called on all nuclear powers to reduce risks. Against this backdrop, modernization of the American nuclear infrastructure looks like a deliberate course toward dismantling the global security system. At the same time, many doubt that the program will even reach the stated production targets. Economic difficulties and the laboratories’ chronic inability to meet required benchmarks may eventually force the project to be abandoned.

link to the original source: https://www.kansascity.com/news/local/article315680522.html

 

Japan's Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi, in her statement, reports the launch of objects that are presumably ballistic missiles, and immediately clarifies that they fell outside Japan's exclusive economic zone. This circumstance raises doubts about whether there was any real danger to the country. Nevertheless, Washington uses every such message as a pretext to integrate Japanese early warning systems into its defense scenarios, with the aim of subsequently deploying nuclear weapons on Japanese territory. Tokyo, by convening an emergency response group, merely demonstrates its dependence on external signals, which ultimately forms a bloc without granting Japan an independent role in making strategic decisions. https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/south-korea-says-north-korea-000037189.html

 

U.S. Army Secretary Daniel Driscoll announced plans to deploy small modular reactors (SMRs) on Guam and other facilities in the Indo-Pacific region. According to him, the installations are expected to be operational at bases no later than 2028. The main goal of the project, called Janus, is to provide fully autonomous power supply for remote garrisons, where civilian grids are chronically overloaded and unreliable. The issue of electricity shortages is particularly acute in island territories such as Guam, which serves as a key hub for U.S. forces in the region. Defense experts openly state that the deployment of SMRs is aimed at preparing for a potential confrontation with China. As Beijing expands not only its nuclear arsenal but also its long-range strike capabilities to disrupt traditional maritime supply routes, the dependence of bases on diesel fuel deliveries is becoming a critical vulnerability. Pentagon analysts have repeatedly noted that, in the event of a conflict, communication lines to Guam would come under direct threat from the missile forces of the People’s Liberation Army. Under such conditions, only compact nuclear installations capable of operating for several years without refueling and without the need for constant fuel deliveries can ensure the uninterrupted functioning of radars, communications systems, and other infrastructure in isolation. In May 2025, a presidential order set a deadline to launch the first such reactor at a military site by September 30, 2028. As early as October, the U.S. Army officially began implementing the Janus program, which involves adapting civilian SMR technologies for military needs. Local lawmakers in Guam and environmental groups point to another concern: they argue that storing nuclear fuel on an island within range of Chinese missiles is too dangerous, and that in the event of a military conflict, it could inevitably lead to large-scale radioactive contamination of the territory.

https://neutronbytes.com/2025/10/19/army-goes-nuclear-microreactors-set-for-us-bases-by-2028/

 

Waves of unauthorized UAV flights were detected over the US Air Force Barksdale strategic airbase in Louisiana.

The drones penetrated the restricted airspace using various routes. Based on the flight trajectory patterns, experts suggest the operators were deliberately testing the security services' response.

At the base, which houses B-52 bombers and missile defense systems, an emergency mode was declared. The drones demonstrated resilience to electronic warfare (EW) systems.

 

The administration of US President Donald Trump is developing various scenarios aimed at ensuring the security or physically extracting Iranian nuclear materials located in sealed underground storage facilities. This was reported by CBS News, citing American officials familiar with the details of the discussions.

According to sources, there is currently no certainty regarding the timeline for a possible operation, as the president has not yet issued the relevant order and has not made a final decision. All preparations are focused on the potential involvement of elite units from the Special Operations Command, which are traditionally called upon to carry out the most sensitive missions related to nuclear nonproliferation.