Trump orders Pentagon to resume nuclear weapons testing, citing rival nations' programs
Trump appears not to know that theres another department for this. I wish there were someone to take him aside to point that out.
Trump orders Pentagon to resume nuclear weapons testing, citing rival nations programs
PUBLISHED WED, OCT 29 2025 10:40 PM EDT
UPDATED 4 HOURS AGO
Lim Hui Jie
@IN/HUI-JIE-LIM-A7371176/
KEY POINTS
Trump ordered the Pentagon to restart nuclear testing for the first time since 1992, citing rival nations actions.
Trumps claim that the U.S. has the largest arsenal contradicts data showing Russia leads in total warheads.
The announcement followed reports that Russia had successfully tested a Poseidon nuclear-powered super torpedo on Wednesday.
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Botany
(75,852 posts)Last edited Tue Nov 4, 2025, 05:43 AM - Edit history (1)
Septua
(2,924 posts)He loves to keep the world's attention centered on him and about something other than his miserable failings as "your favorite president."
Septua
(2,924 posts)When Norah O'Donnell probed Trump a little on the validity of the statement, he said "You just don't know." End of discussion. Rather than attempting to get at the truth, she moved on to the next question, to no doubt get yet another, distortion of the facts.
What's the point of interviewing the guy? Boost the ratings I suppose.
no_hypocrisy
(53,744 posts)Venezuela.
Orrex
(66,373 posts)global1
(26,302 posts)Boy - those Epstein Files must really hold some bombshell revelations!!!
What's he trying to hide?
Response to mahatmakanejeeves (Original post)
BobsYourUncle This message was self-deleted by its author.
C_U_L8R
(48,521 posts)hes so predictable.
Ray Bruns
(5,786 posts)would be involved in the testing?
spike jones
(1,973 posts)Septua
(2,924 posts)Estimates suggest a single nuclear weapon test could cost around $140 million, based on past studies, although the total cost is not precisely known and would also include significant environmental and political consequences.
And he's going to catch a lot of flak against the idea.
Presidential authority and constraints
Sole authority: The U.S. president, as Commander-in-Chief, has the sole constitutional authority to order the use of nuclear weapons. This includes the ability to order a test, as no one in the military or Congress can legally overrule that order.
Congressional oversight: While Congress does not need to approve the president's order, it does have a critical role through its power of the purse. Restarting nuclear testing would be expensive, and Congress could deny or restrict funding for the necessary preparations and execution.
The Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT): The U.S. is a signatory to the CTBT, which bans all nuclear test explosions, but it has not ratified it. Resuming testing would violate the spirit of the treaty and draw sharp condemnation from U.S. allies and the international community.
Practical hurdles
Time and cost: It would take an estimated 24 to 36 months to prepare for and execute an underground nuclear test at the Nevada National Security Site. The last U.S. test was in 1992, and the required workforce and infrastructure are no longer fully in place.
Environmental and safety concerns: Previous testing caused radioactive fallout that resulted in illnesses for many people. Resuming tests would face renewed opposition from environmental and anti-nuclear groups and local residents.
International reaction: Any decision by the U.S. to resume nuclear testing would likely cause other nuclear powers, such as Russia and China, to do the same. This could destabilize decades of non-proliferation efforts and escalate a new nuclear arms race.