14 comments

  • briandw 2 hours ago
    Restarting testing is a bad idea. However this is a false equivalence. H-Bombing an island nation isn't the same as testing. Underground testing in the middle of nowhere NM has very little consequence to anyone. Restarting testing is unnecessary and a very bad precedent to set, but The Marshall Islands have nothing to do with it.
    • teachrdan 2 hours ago
      I think your point is missing the big picture. The US starting testing again -- even underground -- would likely start other countries testing again, at least some of which would happen aboveground.
      • WillPostForFood 1 hour ago
        at least some of which would happen aboveground

        No reason to think this is true, All the major powers (US, Russia, China) have extensive underground testing capacity. All the recent powers have only done underground testing (Pakistan, India, North Korea). China was the last country to do an above ground test, in 1980, the 22 tests they've done since then were all underground.

    • nradov 1 hour ago
      I agree that restarting nuclear weapon testing is a bad idea but Russia has already taken that step by conducting several test flights of the 9M730 Burevestnik nuclear powered cruise missile. It isn't a bomb, but flying an unshielded open cycle nuclear engine is in some ways even worse.

      https://apnews.com/article/russia-putin-ukraine-nuclear-miss...

    • kingkawn 2 hours ago
      How do we know that underground testing has little consequences if all the sites are national security zones. What we do know is that the underground geology is likely permanently compromised, at least within any meaningful time frame, and all nearby aquifers and other water deposits are poisoned for all intents and purposes into the distant future. These tests are ecological horrors that are unnecessary and destructive.
  • mothballed 1 hour ago
    An interesting side effect of the US testing and association with Marshall Islands is that they were offered entry in the compact of free association, allowing Marshalese citizens mostly free travel and work rights to come to the USA and work and reside without a visa. Which offers . And vice versa, US citizen can live and work indefinitely in Majuro without visa.

    About as many Marshallese live in USA as on the islands.

  • delichon 8 minutes ago
    The Trump administration did not change policy with regards to supercritical testing. It increased funding to the National Nuclear Security Administration for subcritical experiments. The last explosive nuclear test was in 1992, and Trump has not proposed to change that.
  • foofoo12 1 hour ago
    From US documentary back in the day: https://youtu.be/wqdRIt1EnkY?si=J3Ntmgyx6P66RpJt&t=217

    "The Marshales caught by fallout got 175 wrenchons of radiation. These are fishing people, savages by our standards.

    So a cross-section was brought to Chicago for testing. The first was John, the mayor of Rangala Battle. John, as we said, is a savage, but a happy aminable savage."

  • Johnny555 2 hours ago
    This article is in response to Trump's declaration that the USA is starting nuclear weapons testing, the the energy secretary clarified that these are "non-critical" tests, i.e. they are testing the non-nuclear parts of the weapon but will not be causing any nuclear explosions.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cpd26yxxx3lo

    "These are not nuclear explosions," Wright told Fox News on Sunday. "These are what we call non-critical explosions."

    "Americans near historic test sites such as the Nevada National Security Site have no cause for concern," Wright said. "So you're testing all the other parts of a nuclear weapon to make sure they deliver the appropriate geometry, and they set up the nuclear explosion."

    • Finnucane 2 hours ago
      We've been doing sub-critical component tests at the NNTS since the end of full-scale testing. So Wright is attempting to make it sound like there won't really be a change of policy, but with these guys who knows. It's not like Il Douche has any clue what he's talking about.
      • IAmBroom 1 hour ago
        Even money that they simply set off some M80 on the White House lawn, and tell him that was a nuke test.
      • ourmandave 1 hour ago
        Say and do anything they can think of to delay the Epstein bomb from going off.
  • PeterStuer 2 hours ago
    This is not US specific. Ask the people of French Polynesia how they feel about French nuclear weapons testing etc.
    • lawlessone 1 hour ago
      Are the French restarting testing?
  • xoxxala 2 hours ago
    Map of every nuclear explosion (over 2000) since 1945:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=auRQg7AaE-U

    • joshstrange 1 hour ago
      The land/water distinction (or lack thereof) could use some work. I spent way too long trying to figure out what I was looking at before I released we were zoomed all the way out and the dark blue was land while the light blue was water.

      Reminds me of this scene from Arrested Development https://getyarn.io/yarn-clip/28b0326d-cba4-4d26-8c54-977f04b...

  • WillPostForFood 2 hours ago
    US atmospheric testing ended over 60 years ago. Underground testing doesn't "scar a nation". If nuclear deterrence relies on functional weapons, an underground test every few decades seems prudent. The last test was 1992. This article is fearmongering.
    • hypeatei 2 hours ago
      > If nuclear deterrence relies on functional weapons

      I don't think it does. No one will mess with you if you merely have one bomb let alone the US which has 5k+ warheads and a triad of delivery mechanisms. Blowing up nuclear bombs anywhere for "testing" purposes is stupid.

      • WillPostForFood 1 hour ago
        How do you know they work? We haven't tested one in 33 years. Are you still confident after 50 years? 75 years? We all see the problems with aging physical infrastructure - bridges collapsing, dams failing. If you are relying on nuclear weapons as the primary deterrent to stop major wars, they need to work, and people need to know and believe they work. The cost is negligible.
        • hypeatei 1 hour ago
          What does testing one nuke say about the thousands of nukes you have stockpiled? The point is: having a nuclear weapon is already a major deterrent and no one is going to poke your buttons to find out if they work or not. Doing a test detonation doesn't move the needle at all.

          > The cost is negligible

          Environmentally, not at all neglible. Financially, probably since we fund our military more than anyone else.

    • Finnucane 2 hours ago
      I guess it depends on what you mean by 'scar'. Certainly the NNTS looks plenty scarred by the hundreds of subsidence craters left behind by the tests. Only once in a while would there be a leak like the Baneberry test in 1970. And plenty of the folks working in the test area were 'scarred', by radiation sickness, leukemia, etc.
    • stronglikedan 2 hours ago
      > This article is fearmongering

      of course it is, it's CNN

  • Joker_vD 1 hour ago
    How about asking Las Vegas instead? It's pretty close to Nevada Test Site, isn't it?
    • hvb2 1 hour ago
      In the sense that there's pictures of the skyline of Las Vegas with the plumes on the background, yes.
    • IAmBroom 1 hour ago
      Upwind, which matters a lot. Nebraska is more affected.
  • otikik 2 hours ago
    Just ask Hiroshima and Nagasaki
    • psunavy03 2 hours ago
      Ask the orders of magnitude more of Americans and Japanese people who weren't slaughtered in a ground invasion. Or starved to death in the mass famines a blockade would have caused. And all their descendants. Sometimes wars require the least shitty of a menu of shitty choices.
      • teachrdan 2 hours ago
        There is ample data that says Japan was on the verge of surrendering before the US dropped atom bombs on them. If you doubt it, ask yourself why the US rushed to drop a second bomb only three days after the first. It was in our interest to intimidate the USSR before Japan had a chance to surrender.

        https://time.com/6297240/atomic-bomb-expert-oppenheimer-inte...

        • IAmBroom 1 hour ago
          I have never before seen someone so amply and reliably document their own wrongness.
        • arwhatever 1 hour ago
          I don’t see how that link could support your contention any less.
        • psunavy03 1 hour ago
          Literally the exact quote of the historian in the article you're linking:

          "Any myths about this history you want to debunk or set the record straight on?"

          "The big one was that the Japanese were ready to surrender and would have surrendered even if we had not dropped those bombs. I think that is a myth. Oppenheimer seems to have believed that the weapon was used against a country that was about to surrender—as he puts it, essentially defeated. The Japanese were essentially defeated—that’s true. Their fleet had been sunk and their cities had been burned. But they were not ready to surrender."

          "Did the bombs lead to the Japanese surrender on Sep. 2?"

          "Two atomic bombs forced them to. The dominant reason [the U.S.] used the bomb was to end the war. [The U.S.] thought the only way to end the war was to use these two terrible weapons."

          • FpUser 1 hour ago
            >"[The U.S.] thought the only way to end the war was to use these two terrible weapons."'

            Sounds like a good recipe for all current and future wars. /s

        • shakow 2 hours ago
          > only three days after the first

          Maybe, just maybe because Japan was so close to surrender that there even was a coup attempt to prevent him from surrendering?

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ky%C5%ABj%C5%8D_incident

      • hitarpetar 1 hour ago
        very simplistic to characterize the decision as a trolley problem. lots of factors went into it, not least of which wanting to scare the USSR into the cold war
      • tehjoker 1 hour ago
        The USSR had just taken Manchuria (Korea) and the US wanted Japan in our pocket and to intimidate the USSR. No need to repeat atrocity apologia. Japan in that era was evil af, kind of like Israel today (but in sheer numbers, Japan killed way more people), but that doesn't mean they should be nuked.

        After the US took Japan, we reinstated the emperor, wrote their constitution, and used Japan as an imperial outpost to threaten Korea, Vietnam, Cambodia, China, and Russia, which we do to this day. In the case of Korea, we invaded in the 1950s and never left, setting up a puppet state. Okinawans and many Koreans want the US military out of their countries.

        This was an acceptable trade to the Japanese elite, because the communists would have removed their monarch in the name of liberty!

        https://foreignpolicy.com/2013/05/30/the-bomb-didnt-beat-jap...

      • kingkawn 1 hour ago
        Didn’t have to do that either Japan would’ve capitulated. But cute to dredge up old excuses for mass killing.
        • IAmBroom 1 hour ago
          An invasion by US forces was planned, with expected US losses to dwarf those on Normandy by an order of magnitude. Japanese losses would dwarf those, in turn.
          • psunavy03 38 minutes ago
            The invasion likely would have been stalled, and the alternate plan was blockade of the islands to interdict food supplies, and Hirohito is on the record after the war as saying he feared a Lord of the Flies-style mass breakdown of society after famine.
          • hollerith 33 minutes ago
            But the reason an invasion was planned rather than waiting for starvation was that Stalin was planning to invade. I.e, if the US were OK with Japan's ending up in the Soviet orbit, both a nuclear attack and an invasion could have been avoided.
        • gregbot 1 hour ago
          Im not sure Japan would have surrendered. The real question is: why was total surrender the only acceptable outcome to the FDR admin? To the point that mass killing civilians was preferred over a negotiated peace.
      • vbezhenar 1 hour ago
        Japan war was ended because of USSR won the war. US slaughtering civilians was just that - slaughter of civilians. They should be ashamed of this war crime for hundreds of years to come.
        • IAmBroom 1 hour ago
          Sure. Let's go with that, and assume every historian and member of the Japanese Imperial government consorted to lying about it.
    • shagmin 2 hours ago
      Could take this a couple different ways. Aren't those cities flourishing today?
      • voidfunc 2 hours ago
        Sure but it scarred the Japanese culture permanently.
        • gregbot 1 hour ago
          Could you expand on what exactly you mean by “scarring” a culture?
        • anticodon 1 hour ago
          It seems young Japanese doesn't even know who bombed their country. US controls most of the world media: they can highlight or hide any fact, or inculcate whatever interpretation.
          • Jtsummers 1 hour ago
            US media doesn't particularly hide the fact of the US bombing Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Oppenheimer was released just two years ago, to pick one recent and prominent example of the US not hiding the facts.
    • stronglikedan 2 hours ago
      the big, obvious distinction is that those weren't tests. "test" implies that what happened to the Marshall Islands should have been prevented.
  • umanwizard 2 hours ago
    *the Marshall Islands
  • maxdo 2 hours ago
    We don’t know what will be done but this is scary . We don’t like it. Content of article behind a paywall
  • FridayoLeary 2 hours ago
    That's shocking. Nuclear fallout must have been well understood by the 1950s. Back then people in general were far more ignorant of risks and assessing potential risks then today but they weren't foolish. How could they have been so negligent?
  • bpodgursky 2 hours ago
    I don't think the US should test nuclear weapons unless other countries do first, but this is pointless fearmongering. The tests are all underground now! There are no scars!