LLAW’s All Things Nuclear #759, Monday, (09/23/2024)

“End Nuclear Insanity Before Nuclear Insanity Ends Humanity”

Lloyd A. Williams-Pendergraft

Sep 23, 2024

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Nuclear Power Plant

The huge towers of the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Londonderry Township, Pennsylvania ~ (See credits in article)

LLAW’s NUCLEAR VIEWS, ISSUES & COMMENTS, Monday, (09/23/2024)

I have been avoiding, with gritted teeth, posting this story—that has been out and growing with more details for several days. Let me just say this is the most thoughtless, unbelievable, and dangerous national proposal I have ever encountered in my nearly 83 years (coming November 23rd) of life on planet Earth, much of it in the nuclear industry, and Three Mile Island was my personal reason for ending a career that had spanned parts of three decades. My reason was and still is the very same reason that nuclear plant TMI-2 (the one that is shut down forever because of a partial meltdown on March 28, 1979) and will remain under clean-up and final demolition until 2052, at least. That is a clean-up span of 73 years. Just that single accident tells us how dangerous nuclear power plants are to sustained life on planet Earth. And we want to re-open old ones and build hundreds of new ones around the world?

From the article: “The symbolism is enormous,” said Joseph Dominguez, CEO of Constellation. “This was the site of the industry’s greatest failure, and now it can be a place of rebirth.” Obviously, a major new capital infusion from a group of big banks that together control trillions of dollars in potential funding can only help jump-start a new expansion of nuclear power.

A symbolic place of rebirth? Apparently we have no common sense of values, and will spend trillions upon trillions of dollars (including bigger and stronger nuclear bombs) in order to ensure our own and other unnecessary demise of life on planet Earth for reasons that make no common sense at all. ~llaw

Forbes Logo, symbol, meaning, history, PNG, brand

A Rising Mass Of Support Could Lead To A U.S. Nuclear Renaissance

David Blackmon

Senior Contributor

David Blackmon is a Texas-based public policy analyst/consultant.

Sep 23, 2024,07:19am EDT

Nuclear Power Plant
The huge towers of Three Mile Island nuclear power plant in Londonderry Township, Pennsylvania, near … [+]Bettmann Archive

A group of the world’s biggest banks said Monday they will increase support for the expansion of nuclear power, according to the Financial Times. The banks, including Barclay’s, Bank of America, Citi, Morgan Stanley, BNP Paribas, and Goldman Sachs will make the formal announcement later Monday at an event with White House climate policy advisor John Podesta.

The stepped-up commitment from the banks is in support of goals set out at last year’s COP 28 conference to triple nuclear generation globally by 2050. It comes as expansion of wind generation – and, to a lesser extent, solar – is meeting with rising opposition from communities and struggling with profitability even while benefitting from a suite of government subsidies and tax incentives. It also comes as power grid managers struggle with increasing reliability issues as they are forced to integrate more and more intermittent wind and solar into their regional power structures.

Developers of AI and other cutting-edge technologies that require power-hungry data centers have become increasingly concerned that their needs can’t be met by intermittent generation, even with backup provided by current battery technology. U.S. companies are increasingly seeking to execute power supply agreements with traditional forms of 24/7 baseload generation to fill their needs. Nuclear generation, as a zero-emissions power source, helps such companies meet both their power needs and emissions reductions goals.

On Friday, Microsoft announced it had reached a deal with Constellation Energy to restart Unit 1 of its Three Mile Island nuclear facility in Pennsylvania to provide power to fill its own regional data center needs. Unit 2 of the Three Mile Island facility suffered a partial meltdown in 1979, an incident that released radioactive gases and iodine into the atmosphere, and which still ranks at the most severe nuclear incident in U.S. history. The U.S. nuclear power industry, which had undergone a rapid expansion during the 1970s, has struggled to restore public and policymaker confidence in the safety of its operations across the 45 years since that event.

Three Mile Island’s Unit 1 was not impacted by that incident and continued in service until it was retired by Constellation in 2019 due to economic reasons. Constellation said it plans to invest $1.6 billion to refurbish Unit 1, with a target for restarting the reactor by 2028. Its deal with Microsoft is for a 20-year power provision commitment.

“The symbolism is enormous,” said Joseph Dominguez, CEO of Constellation. “This was the site of the industry’s greatest failure, and now it can be a place of rebirth.” Obviously, a major new capital infusion from a group of big banks that together control trillions of dollars in potential funding can only help jump-start a new expansion of nuclear power.

But much will depend on regulators who oversee the permitting process for restarting existing units and building new ones. Reuters reports that Constellation has yet to file a formal application for the restart of the Three Mile Island unit. It quotes Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) spokesperson Scott Burnell as saying “It’s up to Constellation to lay out its rationale for justifying restart, so we’re prepared to engage with the company on next steps.”

symbol

The Bottom Line

Historically, the steps in America’s regulatory permitting processes have been painstakingly slow to evolve. Recent attempts by West Virginia Senator Joe Manchin and other pro-energy members of congress to streamline those processes via legislation have met with opposition from Democrats and Republicans alike.

Whether strong new commitments from major banks along with pressure from tech developers and nuclear generation companies can combine to speed things along remains to be seen. It also remains to be seen if activist groups who favor wind and solar but have historically opposed nuclear expansion – largely by exploiting the fright scenarios from the Three Mile Island incident over the last 45 years – will now work in opposition to these rapidly evolving plans for a nuclear renaissance.

Nothing related to energy and energy policy in the United States is ever simple. The only element of absolute certainty about this new pro-nuclear initiative is that it will be no exception to that rule.

Follow me on Twitter or LinkedIn. Check out my website

David Blackmon

David Blackmon

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David Blackmon is an energy-related public policy analyst/consultant based in Mansfield, TX.


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There are 7 categories, with the latest addition, (#7) being a Friday weekly roundup of IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) global nuclear news stories. Also included is a bonus non-nuclear category for news about the Yellowstone caldera and other volcanic and caldera activity around the world that play an important role in humanity’s lives. The feature categories provide articles and information about ‘all things nuclear’ for you to pick from, usually with up to 3 links with headlines concerning the most important media stories in each category, but sometimes fewer and occasionally even none (especially so with the Yellowstone Caldera). The Categories are listed below in their usual order:

  1. All Things Nuclear
  2. Nuclear Power
  3. Nuclear Power Emergencies
  4. Nuclear War
  5. Nuclear War Threats
  6. Yellowstone Caldera (Note: There are no Yellowstone Caldera bonus stories available in this evening’s Post.)
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Whenever there is an underlined link to a Category media news story, if you press or click on the link provided, you no longer have to cut and paste to your web browser, since this Post’s link will take you directly to the article in your browser.

A current Digest of major nuclear media headlines with automated links is listed below by nuclear Category (in the above listed order). If a Category heading does not appear in the daily news Digest, it means there was no news reported from this Category today. Generally, the three best articles in each Category from around the nuclear world(s) are Posted. Occasionally, if a Post is important enough, it may be listed in multiple Categories.

TODAY’S NUCLEAR WORLD’S NEWS, Monday, (09/23/2024)

All Things Nuclear

NEWS

Oceans and their role in climate change are at the center of the new book ‘Category Five’

WBUR

It is entropy, tearing everything down as quickly as it appears. I smelled seaweed and saw miles of sand crushed by the waves, wind, rocks, and …

Would long-range missiles for Ukraine pull the U.S. into a war with Russia? – NPR

NPR

And that, of course, raises concerns about nuclear weapons. CONSIDER THIS – the … All Things Considered team. You can sign up at np.org …

Nuclear Power

NEWS

World’s largest banks to throw weight behind nuclear energy – Miningmx

Miningmx

… electricity needs in Gulnar district of Mersin, Turkiye on June 14, 2023. Work at the Akkuyu Nuclear Power Plant (NPP) continues as planned.

A Rising Mass Of Support Could Lead To A U.S. Nuclear Renaissance – Forbes

Forbes

A group of the word’s biggest banks said Monday they will increase support for the expansion of nuclear power, according to the Financial Times.

Major global banks to show support for nuclear power – report | Seeking Alpha

Seeking Alpha

Fourteen of the top financial institutions will pledge more support for nuclear energy to unlock financing for the industry. Read more.

Nuclear Power Emergencies

NEWS

Kenya should rethink its decision to build nuclear power plant – The Standard

The Standard

… emergencies on the scale that nuclear energy demands. The inherent risks of a nuclear reactor in a country with inconsistent infrastructure and a …

Nuclear War

NEWS

Putin Ally Warns of Nuclear War Over Growing Western Support for Ukraine | ET Now

YouTube

Tensions between Russia and the West have sharply intensified, with Vyacheslav Volodin, a top Putin ally, issuing a nuclear threat in response to …

nuclear war in Ukraine is a distinct possibility | THE AFRICAN

The African

A Ukrainian rescuer works at the site of a missile attack in Kyiv on March 25, 2024, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The war hasn’t gone at …

Putin Realizing That Nuclear Threats ‘Don’t Frighten Anyone’: Report – Newsweek

Newsweek

… nuclear weapons in the war that Putin started. In its latest update, the Institute for the Study of War (ISW) said on Sunday that threats of …

Nuclear War Threats

NEWS

Putin Realizing That Nuclear Threats ‘Don’t Frighten Anyone’: Report – Newsweek

Newsweek

Vladimir Putin is looking at a different response to Western approval of long-range strikes into Russia after realizing that nuclear threats …

America inching toward World War III? Nonsense. – The Hill

The Hill

Since a global war risks becoming a nuclear war, deterrence will work. … Despite Putin’s threats, Russia does not have the ability to launch a .

LLAW’s All Things Nuclear #758, Sunday, (09/22/2024)

“End Nuclear Insanity Before Nuclear Insanity Ends

Lloyd A. Williams-Pendergraft

Sep 22, 2024

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U.S. Secretary of State Blinken and British Foreign Secretary Lammy visit Kyiv

Ukraine Foreign Minister Andriy Svbiha

LLAW’s NUCLEAR VIEWS, ISSUES & COMMENTS, Sunday, (09/22/2024)

Continuing on with the latest on Russia/Ukraine war, courtesy of Reuters: This kind of demented reasoning, irritational as it is, as opposed to nuclear missiles attacking Ukraine, at least for now, though cruel, cowardly, and inhumane, makes far more sense than a nuclear war with nuclear bombs that could easily grow from Russia/Ukraine and part of Europe to the entire world in a matter of days if not hours.

Still, if true, this kind of nuclear use would be an extremely hideous and dangerous attack, but somewhat localized to Ukraine and Europe via drifting radioactive nuclear fallout from an assault that would destroy Ukraine’s three nuclear power plants and their multiple reactors, which also supplies about half of Ukraine’s electricity with winter not far ahead. Such an attack, no matter what else Russia decides to do to avoid losing an already lost war demonstrates the inhumanity of man toward life, human or otherwise, on our beautiful and generous life-offering planet Earth. She deserves better . . . ~llaw

File:Reuters Logo.svg - Wikipedia

Ukraine says Russia is planning strikes on nuclear facilities

By Reuters

September 21, 20247:18 AM PDTUpdated a day ago

U.S. Secretary of State Blinken and British Foreign Secretary Lammy visit Kyiv
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha attends a joint press conference with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and British Foreign Secretary David Lammy (both not pictured), amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine, September 11, 2024. REUTERS/Alina Smutko/file Photo

KYIV, Sept 21 (Reuters) – Ukraine’s foreign minister said on Saturday that Russia is planning strikes on Ukrainian nuclear facilities before the winter, and urged the U.N.’s nuclear watchdog and Ukraine’s allies to establish permanent monitoring missions at the country’s nuclear plants.

“According to Ukrainian intelligence, (the) Kremlin is preparing strikes on Ukrainian nuclear energy critical objects ahead of winter,” Foreign Minister Andriy Sybiha wrote on X.

“In particular, it concerns open distribution devices at (nuclear power plants and) transmission substations, critical for the safe operation of nuclear energy.”

Sybiha did not elaborate on why Kyiv believed such strikes were being prepared.

There was no immediate comment from Moscow.

The U.N.’s nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Ukrainian president’s chief of staff, Andriy Yermak, called for a swift global response to the purported threat of a strike on a nuclear facility.

“This is preparation for a possible nuclear disaster scenario. Russia is a terrorist,” he wrote on Telegram.

“They must be stopped here and now. The countries of the West and the Global South must react harshly to preparations for terror.”

Russia has been waging an aerial bombardment campaign on Ukraine’s power grid since autumn 2022 after invading the country earlier that year.

It has damaged or destroyed most of Ukraine’s thermal power generating capacity and has sometimes hit dams, but has not yet struck any Ukrainian-controlled nuclear facilities.

Ukraine has previously accused Russia of nuclear blackmail after Russian forces occupied the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, Europe’s largest, in March 2022, early on in the invasion.

Moscow denies that allegation.

Both sides have regularly accused each other of shelling areas next to the plant, which has on several occasions cut power lines to the plant, increasing the chance of a blackout that could cause a nuclear accident.

IAEA head Rafael Grossi has visited Ukraine and Russia several times throughout the war and has urged the sides not to engage each other near nuclear facilities.

“I think it is always a risk when there is a possibility of an attack on a nuclear power plant,” he said on a visit to Kyiv at the beginning of September.


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ABOUT THE FOLLOWING ACCESS TO “LLAW’S ALL THINGS NUCLEAR” RELATED MEDIA”:

There are 7 categories, with the latest addition, (#7) being a Friday weekly roundup of IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) global nuclear news stories. Also included is a bonus non-nuclear category for news about the Yellowstone caldera and other volcanic and caldera activity around the world that play an important role in humanity’s lives. The feature categories provide articles and information about ‘all things nuclear’ for you to pick from, usually with up to 3 links with headlines concerning the most important media stories in each category, but sometimes fewer and occasionally even none (especially so with the Yellowstone Caldera). The Categories are listed below in their usual order:

  1. All Things Nuclear
  2. Nuclear Power
  3. Nuclear Power Emergencies
  4. Nuclear War
  5. Nuclear War Threats
  6. Yellowstone Caldera (Note: There is one Yellowstone Caldera bonus story available in this evening’s Post.)
  7. IAEA Weekly News (Friday’s only)

Whenever there is an underlined link to a Category media news story, if you press or click on the link provided, you no longer have to cut and paste to your web browser, since this Post’s link will take you directly to the article in your browser.

A current Digest of major nuclear media headlines with automated links is listed below by nuclear Category (in the above listed order). If a Category heading does not appear in the daily news Digest, it means there was no news reported from this Category today. Generally, the three best articles in each Category from around the nuclear world(s) are Posted. Occasionally, if a Post is important enough, it may be listed in multiple Categories.

TODAY’S NUCLEAR WORLD’S NEWS, Sunday, (09/22/2024)

All Things Nuclear

NEWS

Three Mile Island nuclear plant will reopen to power Microsoft data centers – KUOW

KUOW

1 of 2The Three Mile Island nuclear plant is seen in March 2011 in Middletown, Pa. … All Things Considered Weekend. 5:00 PM PDT. Wait Wait… Don’t …

Three Mile Island could reopen for Microsoft AI data center – YouTube

YouTube

… All in one place. #microsoft #ai #nuclear. … All Things Secured•210K views · 3:30 · Go to channel · TMI to start up Unit 1 again, state officials …

Microsoft Goes Nuclear. Here Are the Biggest Beneficiaries of Its Massive Power Grab.

The Globe and Mail

That’s a good run, all things considered. As good as these broad market returns have been, MercadoLibre (NASDAQ: MELI) stock has left the S&P 500 …

Nuclear Power

NEWS

Ukraine says Russia is planning strikes on nuclear facilities – Reuters

Reuters

There was no immediate comment from Moscow. The U.N.’s nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), did not immediately respond to …

For Now, There’s Only One Good Way to Power AI – The Atlantic

The Atlantic

When the Three Mile Island power plant in Pennsylvania was decommissioned in 2019, it heralded the symbolic end of America’s nuclear industry.

First major inspection at Palisades nuclear plant finds ‘large number’ of needed repairs

MLive.com

Federal nuclear energy regulators said last week that the closed and defueled Palisades Nuclear Power Plant in Covert Township will require …

Nuclear Power Emergencies

NEWS

Year In Review: Unit 2 incidents raise notification concerns at Arkansas Nuclear One

couriernews.com

Nuclear power plant personnel ready to handle an emergency, NRC concludes By Sean Ingram News Editor While Arkansas Nuclear One officials and …

Kanpur-Prayagraj Route: Another sabotage attempt? Goods train driver pulls emergency …

The Financial Express

Govt gives approval for NPCIL-NTPC JV to take up nuclear power projects. gst council, cess, money. Council resolves to lower GST burden on insurance …

Nuclear War

NEWS

Putin Ally Warns Russia’s Nuclear Weapons in ‘Full Combat Readiness’ – Newsweek

Newsweek

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said that Russia possesses weapons “that will have serious implications for the handlers of the Ukrainian …

Vladimir Putin’s nuclear war warnings show he fears defeat in Ukraine – Daily Express

Daily Express

Vladimir Putin’s threats of nuclear war are a form of “psychological warfare” designed to cover up his fears of defeat in Ukraine, David Lammy has …

With nuclear option unlikely, Putin struggles to defend his red lines – Washington Post

Washington Post

There’s a growing realization in the Kremlin that the West is not falling for its nuclear threats and Putin is searching for new ways to enforce …

Nuclear War Threats

NEWS

With nuclear option unlikely, Putin struggles to defend his red lines – Washington Post

Washington Post

Nuclear measures or a direct attack on NATO territory would only be considered if “Putin feels there is a threat to the existence of Russia in its …

Vladimir Putin’s nuclear war warnings show he fears defeat in Ukraine – Daily Express

Daily Express

Vladimir Putin’s threats of nuclear war are a form of “psychological warfare” designed to cover up his fears of defeat in Ukraine, David Lammy has …

Nuclear War in Ukraine Is a Distinct Possibility – ScheerPost

ScheerPost

Russia considered NATO in Ukraine to be an existential threat, and NATO refused to give Russia any security guarantees to mitigate these security ..

Yellowstone Caldera

NEWS

National Parks Quiz And Trivia #78 – Yellowstone Revisited

National Parks Traveler

True or False: Mud Volcano is one of the most acidic springs in Yellowstone. a) True. b) False. 2. True or False: At Mammoth Hot Springs, inactive …

LLAW’s All Things Nuclear #757, Saturday, (09/21/2024)

“End Nuclear Insanity Before Nuclear Insanity Ends Humanity”

Lloyd A. Williams-Pendergraft

Sep 21, 2024

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Ukraine firefighter in Kharkiv

LLAW’s NUCLEAR VIEWS, ISSUES & COMMENTS, Saturday, (09/21/2024)

Although the big news today (and yesterday) is about the possibility of the long shut-down Three Mile Island nuclear power plant accident that caused a partial meltdown of one of the nuclear reactors and possibly providing nuclear power to Microsoft.

The clean-up work at that reactor (TMI – 2) is still ongoing since the accident back in 1979 — which caused me to rethink my future and exit the nuclear business soon thereafter — and clean-up/demolition is not expected to be completed until 2052. Unit 1 is being considered to possibly be re-born to service Microsoft’s AI power demands in the not-too-distant future, although the total demolishing of both Units has long been scheduled for 2079.

But the more immediate and important news concerns the Russia/Ukraine war that could soon boil over into the use of missile driven nuclear weapons in addition to the nuclear power plants in both countries that are playing important extremely dangerous nuclear war roles such that those plants are essentially doubling as stationary nuclear-weapons themselves. And with the United States, a NATO member, now re-united and reinforced by the rest of NATO, including, of course, Ukraine, seem unsure of how to proceed in a strategic war that would win the war. Russia, however, is tempted and threatening to deploy nuclear weapons to defend themselves against possible conventional missiles provided by America.

That is why I have been saying for consecutive days now that the USA is increasingly being crushed between a ‘rock and a hard place’. This war has been mishandled by both NATO and the U.S. and setting the revised strategy is going to be extremely dangerous and difficult. Following is the latest from ”Common Dreams” . . . ~llaw

Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community | Common ...
Ukraine firefighter in Kharkiv

Ukrainian rescuers of the State Emergency Service and firefighters continue to extinguish the forest fire after a Russian bomb explosion in Kharkiv Oblast, Ukraine on September 17, 2024.

(Photo by Stringer/Anadolu via Getty Images)

A Nuclear War in Ukraine Is a Distinct Possibility

An interview with Norwegian political scientist Glenn Diesen.

C.J. Polychroniou

Sep 21, 2024 Common Dreams

15

The war in Ukraine has been going on for 2.5 years with no end on sight. Not only that, but we are now close to a nuclear war, according to the Norwegian scholar Glenn Diesen who predicted in November 2021 that “war was becoming increasingly unavoidable” as NATO was escalating tensions with Russia by strengthening its ties with Ukraine. Indeed, as Diesen argues in the interview that follows, NATO provoked Russia and sabotaged all peace negotiations, using Ukraine as a proxy to a geopolitical chessboard. Diesen is professor of political science at the University of South-Eastern Norway and author of scores of academic articles and books, including, most recently, The Ukraine War & the Eurasian World Order(2024).

C. J. Polychroniou: On February 22, 2022, in a move that few had anticipated, Russia invaded Ukraine by launching a simultaneous ground and air attack on several fronts. The war hasn’t gone at all as Moscow had intended and it rages on as neither side is seriously considering an end to the fighting. Yet, the invasion is in many ways a continuation of a territorial conflict between Russia and Ukraine that goes back to 2014. What lies behind the Russia-Ukraine conflict? How did we arrive at this dangerous juncture that is now dragging NATO into the conflict?

Glenn Diesen: I predicted the war in an article in November 2021, in which I argued war was becoming “unavoidable” as NATO continued to escalate while rejecting any peaceful settlement. This should have been evident to everyone if we had an honest discussion about what had been happening.

NATO was always part of this conflict, and it did not start as a territorial conflict. The conflict began with the Western-backed coup in Ukraine in February 2014, which was seen as a precursor to NATO expansion and the eventual eviction of Russia from its Black Sea fleet in Sevastopol. As the New York Times has confirmed, on the first day after the coup, the new Ukrainian government hand-picked by Washington established a partnership with the CIA and MI6 for a covert war against Russia. It is important to remember that Russia had not laid any claims to Crimea before seizing it in the referendum in March 2014. This is not a commentary on legality or legitimacy, merely the fact that Russia’s actions were a reaction to the coup.

We are very close to a nuclear war, and we are deluding ourselves by suggesting we are merely helping Ukraine defend itself.

A proxy war broke out in which NATO backed the government it installed in Kiev and Russia backed the Donbas rebels who refused to recognize the legitimacy of the coup and resisted the de-russification and purge of the language, political opposition, culture, and the church. The Minsk-2 peace agreement of 2015 laid the foundation for resolving the conflict, but this was merely treated as a deception to buy time and build a large Ukrainian army as confirmed by the Germans, French and authorities in Kiev. After 7 years of Ukraine refusing to implement the Minsk agreement and NATO’s refusing to give Russia any security guarantees for NATO’s military infrastructure that moved into Ukraine—Russia invaded in February 2022.

It is correct that the war has not gone as Moscow expected. Russia thought it could impose a peace but was taken by surprise when the U.S. and U.K. preferred war. When Russia sent in its military, the small size and conduct of the invading forces indicated that the purpose was merely to pressure Ukraine to accept a peace agreement on Russian terms. Ukraine and Russia were close to an agreement in Istanbul, although it was sabotaged by the U.S. and U.K. as they saw an opportunity to fight Russia with Ukrainians.

The nature of the war changed fundamentally as it became a war of attrition. Russia withdrew to more defensible front lines, began mobilizing its troops and sourcing the required weapons for a long-term war to defeat the NATO-built army in Ukraine. After 2.5 years of war, this has become a territorial conflict that makes it impossible to resolve in a manner that would be acceptable to all sides. As NATO refuses to accept losing its decade-long proxy war in Ukraine, it must continue to escalate and thus get more directly involved in the war. We are now at the brink of a direct NATO-Russia War.

Did NATO provoke Russia’s invasion of Ukraine? Even if so, didn’t Moscow have any other options other than to resort to the use of military force?

NATO provoked the invasion and sabotaged all paths to peace. The NATO countries affirmed on several occasions that the UN-approved Minsk agreement was the only path to a peaceful resolution of the conflict in Ukraine, yet then admitted that it was merely a ruse to militarize Ukraine. This convinced the Russians that NATO was pursuing a military solution to the conflict in Ukraine that would also involve an invasion of Crimea. As argued by a top advisor to former French president Sarkozy, the U.S.-Ukrainian strategic agreement of November 2021 convinced Russia it had to attack or be attacked.

Russia considered NATO in Ukraine to be an existential threat, and NATO refused to give Russia any security guarantees to mitigate these security concerns. The former U.S. ambassador to NATO, Kurt Volker, argued during the Biden-Putin discussions that no agreements should be made with Russia as “success is confrontation.” This war is a great tragedy as it has resulted in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of young Ukrainians and Russians, made Europe weaker and more dependent, and taken the world to the brink of nuclear war. By failing to admit NATO’s central role in provoking this war, we also prevent ourselves from recognizing possible political solutions.

Russia and Ukraine were close to war-ending agreements in April of 2022, but apparently certain western leaders convinced Ukrainian president Zelensky to back down from such a deal. Is Ukraine a US pawn on a geo-political chessboard?

Zelensky confirmed on the first day after the Russian invasion that Moscow had contacted Kiev to discuss a peace agreement based on restoring Ukraine’s neutrality. On the third day after the invasion, Russia and Ukraine agreed to start negotiations. Yet, the American spokesperson suggested the US could not support such negotiations. When the negotiations nonetheless began, Boris Johnson was sent to Kiev to sabotage them. Johnson later wrote an op-ed warning against a bad peace. The Ukrainian negotiators and the Israeli and Turkish mediators all confirmed that Russia was willing to pull back its troops and compromise on almost everything if Ukraine would restore its neutrality to end NATO expansionism. The mediators also confirmed that the US and UK saw an opportunity to bleed Russia and thus weaken a strategic rival by fighting with Ukrainians. The US and UK told Ukraine they would not support a peace agreement based on neutrality, but NATO would supply all the weapons Ukraine would need if Ukraine pulled out of the negotiations and chose war instead. Interviews with American and British leaders made it clear that the only acceptable outcome for the war was regime change in Moscow, while other political leaders began to speak about breaking up Russia into many smaller countries.

Yes, I believe that Ukraine is a pawn on the geopolitical chessboard. Why do we not listen to all the American political and military leaders who describe this as a good war and an opportunity to weaken Russia without using American soldiers?

What does Russia want from Ukraine?

Russia demands peace based on the Istanbul+ formula. The Istanbul agreement of early 2022 involved Russia retreating from the territory it seized since February 2022 in return for Ukraine restoring its neutrality. However, after 2.5 years of fighting, the war has also evolved into a territorial conflict. Russia therefore demands that Ukraine also recognizes Russian sovereignty over the territories it annexed.

Russia will not accept a ceasefire that merely freezes the front lines, because this could become another Minsk agreement that merely buys time for NATO to re-arm Ukraine to fight Russia another day. Moscow therefore demands a political settlement to the conflict based on neutrality and territorial concessions. In the absence of such an agreement and continued threats by NATO to expand after the war is over, Russia will likely also annex Kharkov, Dnipro, Nikolaev, and Odessa to prevent these historical Russian regions from falling under the control of NATO.

Ukraine has become increasingly a de facto NATO member. What are the chances that Russia might introduce tactical nuclear weapons in the battlefield to achieve its aims?

Russia permits the use of nuclear weapons in response to a nuclear attack or if its existence is threatened. NATO becoming directly involved in the war is considered an existential threat by Russia, and Russia has warned that NATO would become directly involved by supplying long-range precision missiles. Such missiles will need to be operated by American and British soldiers and navigated by their satellites, thus this represents a NATO attack on Russia. We are very close to a nuclear war, and we are deluding ourselves by suggesting we are merely helping Ukraine defend itself.

Can you briefly discuss the implications for world order if the West defeats Russia? And what would the international system look like if Russia wins the war in Ukraine?

The West would like to defeat Russia to restore a unipolar order. As many military and political leaders in the US argue, once Russia has been defeated then the US can focus its resources on defeating China. It is worth remarking that few Western political leaders have clearly defined what “victory” over the world’s largest nuclear power would look like. Russia considers this war to be an existential threat to its survival, and I am therefore convinced that Russia would launch a nuclear attack long before NATO troops get to march through Crimea.

A Russian victory will leave Ukraine a dysfunctional state with much less territory, while NATO will have lost much of its credibility as this was bet on a victory. The war has intensified a transition to a multipolar world, and this likely increase at a much higher pace if NATO loses the war in Ukraine.

NATO expansion that cancelled inclusive pan-European security agreements with Russia was the main manifestation of America’s hegemonic ambitions after the Cold War, thus the entire world order will be greatly influenced by the outcome of this war. This also explains why NATO will be prepared to attack Russia with long-range precision missiles and risk a nuclear exchange.


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ABOUT THE FOLLOWING ACCESS TO “LLAW’S ALL THINGS NUCLEAR” RELATED MEDIA”:

There are 7 categories, with the latest addition, (#7) being a Friday weekly roundup of IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) global nuclear news stories. Also included is a bonus non-nuclear category for news about the Yellowstone caldera and other volcanic and caldera activity around the world that play an important role in humanity’s lives. The feature categories provide articles and information about ‘all things nuclear’ for you to pick from, usually with up to 3 links with headlines concerning the most important media stories in each category, but sometimes fewer and occasionally even none (especially so with the Yellowstone Caldera). The Categories are listed below in their usual order:

  1. All Things Nuclear
  2. Nuclear Power
  3. Nuclear Power Emergencies
  4. Nuclear War
  5. Nuclear War Threats
  6. Yellowstone Caldera (Note: There is one Yellowstone Caldera bonus story available in this evening’s Post.)
  7. IAEA Weekly News (Friday’s only)

Whenever there is an underlined link to a Category media news story, if you press or click on the link provided, you no longer have to cut and paste to your web browser, since this Post’s link will take you directly to the article in your browser.

A current Digest of major nuclear media headlines with automated links is listed below by nuclear Category (in the above listed order). If a Category heading does not appear in the daily news Digest, it means there was no news reported from this Category today. Generally, the three best articles in each Category from around the nuclear world(s) are Posted. Occasionally, if a Post is important enough, it may be listed in multiple Categories.

TODAY’S NUCLEAR WORLD’S NEWS, Saturday, (09/21/2024)

All Things Nuclear

NEWS

Three Mile Island nuclear plant will reopen to power Microsoft data centers

WCMU Public Radio

View all programs · 1A · All Things Considered · Destination Out · Fresh Air · Here and Now · Homespun · Juke Joint · Morning Edition · On Point · The …

Three Mile Island nuclear plant will reopen to power Microsoft data centers | Alabama Public Radio

Alabama Public Radio

All Classical HD 3 Music Programs · All Things Acoustic · Bama Bluegrass · Classical Music with David Duff · Getting Sentimental Over You · Something …

Three Mile Island nuclear plant will reopen to power Microsoft data centers – KNPR

KNPR

All Things · Culture · Food and Drink · The Guide · All Things · Culture · Food and Drink · The Guide · Classical · Ways To Give · Corporate Support …

Nuclear Power

NEWS

Three Mile Island nuclear plant will reopen to power Microsoft data centers – NPR

NPR

Three Mile Island, the Pennsylvania power plant that was the scene of the worst commercial nuclear accident in American history, will reopen and …

Three Mile Island nuclear plant to reopen, sell power to Microsoft – USA Today

USA Today

A dormant nuclear power plant in Pennsylvania may soon be reactivated to help power some of the increasing energy needs of Microsoft.

Microsoft wants Three Mile Island to fuel its AI power needs – The Verge

The Verge

Microsoft has signed a deal to bring Three Mile Island back online to power its AI ambitions. The deal will see a nuclear plant powering …

Nuclear Power Emergencies

NEWS

After violations, Louisiana’s River Bend nuclear power plant to seek cut in emergency water

The Advocate

Entergy’s River Bend nuclear power plant near St. Francisville sits next to the Mississippi River for a reason.

Divers of the Ministry of Emergency Situations examine the flooded The Kara Sea nuclear …

EADaily

… weapons for Kiev is a success — expert; 17:21 Sibiga said that Russia is preparing a strike on nuclear power facilities; 16:49 The Russian Armed …

‘It’s a great day for central PA’: lawmakers react to Three Mile Island restart plan

PennLive.com

He said his experience of participating in the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency’s public safety exercises with nuclear power plants that …

Nuclear War

NEWS

Russia’s u-turn: Day after Putin ally threatens use of nuclear arms, Kremlin says it ‘wants no …

Firstpost

Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov assured that Russia does not want nuclear conflict, saying, “Nobody wants a nuclear war.” His comments are in stark …

Former envoy Joseph R. DeTrani: Danger of nuclear war with North Korea greater than ever

Washington Times

The danger that North Korea will set off a nuclear war in Northeast Asia poses the most serious threat to peace in the region since the end of the …

Nuclear War in Ukraine Is a Distinct Possibility – Common Dreams

Common Dreams

Russia permits the use of nuclear weapons in response to a nuclear attack or if its existence is threatened. NATO becoming directly involved in the …

Nuclear War Threats

NEWS

Nuclear War in Ukraine Is a Distinct Possibility – Common Dreams

Common Dreams

Russia permits the use of nuclear weapons in response to a nuclear attack or if its existence is threatened. NATO becoming directly involved in …

Putin will lose the war against NATO in three days – ФАКТИ.БГ

ФАКТИ.БГ

Bill Browder, like other political and military analysts, says that Kiev should be given this logical right, and that the Kremlin’s nuclear threats …

US Military Policy Is Stoking the Risk of Nuclear War on Korean Peninsula – ScheerPost

ScheerPost

After North Korea’s 2017 nuclear weapons test, Trump responded with bellicose threats to unleash “fire and fury” on the peninsula. However, in …

Yellowstone Caldera

NEWS

New research reenvisions Earth’s mantle as a relatively uniform reservoir | ScienceDaily

ScienceDaily

Early Humans. RELATED TERMS. Mantle plume · Hotspot (geology) · Volcano · Biodiversity hotspot · Yellowstone Caldera · Basalt rock · Biodiversity …

LLAW’s All Things Nuclear #756, Friday, (09/20/2024)

“End Nuclear Insanity Before Nuclear Insanity Ends Humanity”

Lloyd A. Williams-Pendergraft

Sep 20, 2024

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From Donald Trump to Putin, nuclear weapons are once again making headlines. However, crises often create opportunities for initiatives and movements like the Campaign for the Abolition of Nuclear Weapons.

LLAW’s NUCLEAR VIEWS, ISSUES & COMMENTS, Friday, (09/20/2024)

The only reason I have posted this short Forbes story is to point out that the whole concept of nuclear proliferation and “deterrence” is a terrible waste of all human resources including our future, and to quote Forbes on the financial part of it, which anyone with the slightest amount of common sense ought to clearly understand that ‘all things nuclear’ are a dead-end for all life on planet Earth: The quote: “A nuclear war could end humanity, but even without one, the costs are staggering. Last year, nuclear-armed nations spent $91.4 billion on their arsenals — a 34% increase from the year before. That’s $3,000 every second, or $173,000 a minute, wasted on weapons that threaten life instead of saving it.”

This is the existing ‘threat’ to all life — that we should instead be protecting and preserving; yet we continue to do the exact opposite of what we ought to be doing for life to continue to survive . . . ~llaw

Forbes Logo, symbol, meaning, history ...

Call For Disarmament And Solidarity As Trump Raises Nuclear Threats

Michael Sheldrick

Sep 20, 2024,12:18am EDT

Updated Sep 20, 2024, 09:11am EDT

From Donald Trump to Putin, nuclear weapons are once again making headlines. However, crises often create opportunities for initiatives and movements like the Campaign for the Abolition of Nuclear Weapons.
From Donald Trump to Putin, nuclear weapons are back in the headlines. Yet, times of crisis often … [+]Getty Images

Nuclear weapons are back in focus. Donald Trump Jr. and RFK Jr. recently penned a joint article, warning that “the world is at greater risk of nuclear conflagration than at any time since the Cuban missile crisis.” North Korea shows no signs of scaling back its nuclear ambitions, while Iran blames the U.S. for walking away from its deal with world powers, pushing it to explore nuclear development. Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin hints at resuming nuclear tests, breaking a 30-year taboo. Donald Trump, whose administration abandoned the nuclear agreement with Iran, has even claimed—perhaps bizarrely—that nuclear war poses the biggest threat to American autoworkers.

Agree with Trump or not, one thing is clear: the nuclear threat is once again front and center. Experts, including the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, say the risk of nuclear Armageddon is higher today than ever before. With nuclear-armed states locked in hot and cold wars, disarmament seems like a distant dream. But history has shown that it’s often in moments of heightened danger that diplomacy can produce breakthroughs.

Some say nuclear weapons are an even bigger threat than climate chaos — and they certainly make it worse. A nuclear war could end humanity, but even without one, the costs are staggering. Last year, nuclear-armed nations spent $91.4 billion on their arsenals — a 34% increase from the year before. That’s $3,000 every second, or $173,000 a minute, wasted on weapons that threaten life instead of saving it. Imagine the impact if that money went towards clean energy — enough to power 12 million homes with wind or plant 1 million trees every minute.

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ABOUT THE FOLLOWING ACCESS TO “LLAW’S ALL THINGS NUCLEAR” RELATED MEDIA”:

There are 7 categories, with the latest addition, (#7) being a Friday weekly roundup of IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) global nuclear news stories. Also included is a bonus non-nuclear category for news about the Yellowstone caldera and other volcanic and caldera activity around the world that play an important role in humanity’s lives. The feature categories provide articles and information about ‘all things nuclear’ for you to pick from, usually with up to 3 links with headlines concerning the most important media stories in each category, but sometimes fewer and occasionally even none (especially so with the Yellowstone Caldera). The Categories are listed below in their usual order:

  1. All Things Nuclear
  2. Nuclear Power
  3. Nuclear Power Emergencies
  4. Nuclear War
  5. Nuclear War Threats
  6. Yellowstone Caldera (Note: There are two Yellowstone Caldera bonus stories available in this evening’s Post.)
  7. IAEA Weekly News (Friday’s only)

Whenever there is an underlined link to a Category media news story, if you press or click on the link provided, you no longer have to cut and paste to your web browser, since this Post’s link will take you directly to the article in your browser.

A current Digest of major nuclear media headlines with automated links is listed below by nuclear Category (in the above listed order). If a Category heading does not appear in the daily news Digest, it means there was no news reported from this Category today. Generally, the three best articles in each Category from around the nuclear world(s) are Posted. Occasionally, if a Post is important enough, it may be listed in multiple Categories.

TODAY’S NUCLEAR WORLD’S NEWS, Friday, (09/20/2024)

All Things Nuclear

NEWS

Air Force braces for new nuclear-war scenarios – Defense One

Defense One

That represents a big change in the way the military has historically talked about the possibility of nuclear war. … “I think at all levels we …

Three Mile Island Nuclear Plant Will Reopen to Fuel Microsoft’s AI Operations

Reason Magazine

The fact is the future requires power and the plants needed to generate it. That we need new power plants at all is evidence that new things are …

Three Mile Island is reopening and selling its power to Microsoft | CNN Business

CNN

… that is carbon-free and reliable every hour of every day, and nuclear plants are the only energy sources that can consistently deliver on that …

Nuclear Power

NEWS

Microsoft deal would reopen Three Mile Island nuclear plant to power AI – Washington Post

Washington Post

The Three Mile Island Nuclear plant, home of the worst nuclear accident in U.S. history, would restart under a deal in which Microsoft purchases …

Constellation to restart Three Mile Island nuclear plant in Microsoft AI power deal | Reuters

Reuters

Constellation Energy has signed an exclusive deal with Microsoft to restart one of the units at the noted Three Mile Island nuclear plant in …

Three Mile Island’s Nuclear Plant to Reopen, Help Power Microsoft’s AI Centers – WSJ

Wall Street Journal

The 20-year deal with Constellation Energy would kick-start the site of the nation’s worst nuclear accident.

Nuclear Power Emergencies

NEWS

IAEA team observes Russian-led emergency exercise at Ukrainian nuclear power plant

New Civil Engineer

A team of International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) officials have observed an emergency exercise by the Russian authorities at Ukraine’s …

FEMA finds problems with Monroe Co.’s public alert system during nuclear disaster drill

The Detroit News

Homes are seen near the DTE Fermi II nuclear power plant. Monroe County emergency management officials will re-do the drill and demonstrate to FEMA …

DISASTER DRILL: Nuclear fuel emergency exercise held at rail yard in Pocatello | Local

Idaho State Journal

Nuclear Energy · Nuclear Technology · Radioactivity · Nuclear Physics · Energy Technology · Deep Geological Repository · Nuclear Reactor · Nuclear …

Nuclear War

NEWS

Ukraine-Russia war live: Putin ally warns of nuclear war if Kyiv uses long-range missiles

The Independent

Ukraine downed 61 drones during Russia’s overnight attack. Ukraine’s forces destroyed 61 out of 70 Russian attack drones and one out of four missiles …

Air Force braces for new nuclearwar scenarios – Defense One

Defense One

That represents a big change in the way the military has historically talked about the possibility of nuclear war. It used to be that intelligence or …

Putin rattles nuclear saber. This time, it seems different for Ukraine, NATO. – CSMonitor.com

The Christian Science Monitor

… nuclear war. Deterrence is absent,” says Sergei Strokan, an international affairs columnist with the Moscow daily Kommersant. During the Cold War …

Nuclear War Threats

NEWS

Call For Disarmament And Solidarity As Trump Raises Nuclear Threats – Forbes

Forbes

Call For Disarmament And Solidarity As Trump Raises Nuclear Threats … nuclear war poses the biggest threat to American autoworkers. Agree …

Air Force braces for new nuclearwar scenarios – Defense One

Defense One

“When I was younger, at the end of the Cold War, the biggest threat we had was no-notice-1,000 ICBMs just coming over the North Pole, and how would …

Putin rattles nuclear saber. This time, it seems different for Ukraine, NATO. – CSMonitor.com

The Christian Science Monitor

Many Russian experts agree. And for now, Washington seems to be heeding his threat and holding off on permitting Ukraine to use the weapons. “Russia’s 

Yellowstone Caldera

NEWS

The 6 Most Active Volcanoes in the United States | HISTORY

history.com

… Volcano, Mount Spurr, and Augustine Volcano. 5. Kilauea … The USGS ranks the Yellowstone caldera 21st on its list of high-threat volcanoes.

Aira (Japan) Volcano () – Smithsonian / USGS Weekly Volcanic Activity Report for 11 September …

Volcano Discovery

List and interactive map of current and past earthquakes near Yellowstone volcano. Android App · Android App · Volcanoes & Earthquakes Upgrade the …

IAEA Weekly News

20 September 2024

Read the top news and insights from this week’s 68th IAEA General Conference. For more in-depth coverage, check out our conference blog or visit IAEA.org.

https://www.iaea.org/sites/default/files/styles/thumbnail_165x110/public/gc68-week-in-review-1140x640.png?itok=TmAvuNgF

20 September 2024

Week in Review: 68th General Conference

The 68th annual IAEA General Conference is coming to a close, with final discussions around possible resolutions likely to last into the evening. Read more →

https://www.iaea.org/sites/default/files/styles/thumbnail_165x110/public/dgstatementjapanchinaweb.jpg?itok=Brp8RXq4

20 September 2024

IAEA Director General’s Statement on the Announcement of an Agreement Between China and Japan

IAEA Director General’s Statement on the announcement of an agreement between China and Japan. Read more →

https://www.iaea.org/sites/default/files/styles/thumbnail_165x110/public/2024gcphototemplate-landscape1.png?itok=TuTYm5Oy

19 September 2024

New Members Elected to IAEA Board of Governors

Eleven countries have been newly elected to serve on the 35-member IAEA Board of Governors for the 2024–2025 period. The election took place on Thursday, 19 September, at the plenary session of the 68th IAEA General Conference. Read more →

https://www.iaea.org/sites/default/files/styles/thumbnail_165x110/public/sf2024-grossi-1140x640.jpg?itok=Amqlo_Zf

17 September 2024

IAEA Scientific Forum on Food Security Opens

The IAEA Scientific Forum 2024, themed Atoms4Food: Better Agriculture for a Better Life, opened alongside the 68th IAEA General Conference, focusing on how nuclear technology can help tackle global food insecurity. Read more →

https://www.iaea.org/sites/default/files/styles/thumbnail_165x110/public/gc68-plenary-1140x640.jpg?itok=kQLnhyuG

16 September 2024

68th IAEA General Conference: Opening Day Highlights

From welcoming the IAEA’s newest Member States to learning about all aspects of the IAEA’s work, find out what happened on the first day of the IAEA’s 68th General Conference. Read more →

LLAW’s All Things Nuclear #755, Thursday, (09/19/2024)

“End Nuclear Insanity Before Nuclear Insanity Ends Humanity”

Lloyd A. Williams-Pendergraft

Sep 19, 2024

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President Vladimir Putin talks with the governor of Kursk on the situation regarding the Ukrainian invasion of the south of the oblast. Kremlin.ru, CC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

LLAW’s NUCLEAR VIEWS, ISSUES & COMMENTS, Thursday, (09/19/2024)

Although I don’t agree with some of the thoughts and resulting considerations and conclusions in this article, as presented by the typical political and military standards of war, the contents of the the evaluations are probably more right than wrong. It shows, once again, how the United States is caught between a ‘rock and a hard place’ over what to give Ukraine for weapons as well as restricting the use of them.

No doubt the conservatively strategized support to Ukraine over the last two-and-a-half years has been an attempt to avoid the use of nuclear weapons by Russia while at the same time depriving any opportunity for Ukraine to win the war by minimizing the military aid and conventional war equipment and limiting the permission to use our help, but with their own military strategies. This has been patently unfair to Ukraine, and I’m sure Russia knows that . . . and therefore has not found it necessary to consider nuclear weapons. But, as the article points out, such tactics only pile up with no chance of a mutually agreed upon conclusion to the war by either side. Putin wants Ukraine and Kiev back, and Ukraine doesn’t want to give it back. And so the war goes on . . . (And, I will add, this war is already using nuclear power plants as nuclear weapons as physical threats in a direct and dangerous way.)

And now we have a third participant, NATO, that has ideas of its own well-considered strategies, making that US ‘rock and a hard place’ a narrower tightening turn of the vice the free world is in. This is partly why the article’s author, Philips P. O’Brien makes his conclusion as he does. He also understands the scales and balances of those ‘Strategists’ who for better or worse contrive the progress of wars, of which I have no clue.

So, to the point Mr. O’Brian makes about the possibility or probability of the military form of nuclear weapons of mass destruction entering the war makes a lot of sense even if I don’t agree, because to me, the whole concept of war is humanitarianly ridiculous. ~llaw

Times Square Arts: The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

The new red line: Why a prolonged conflict in Ukraine makes a nuclear attack more likely

By Phillips P. O’Brien | September 19, 2024

President Vladimir Putin talks with the governor of Kursk on the situation regarding the Ukrainian invasion of the south of the oblast. Kremlin.ru, CC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

President Vladimir Putin talks with the governor of Kursk on the situation regarding the Ukrainian invasion of the south of the oblast. Kremlin.ru, CC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

There should have been a nuclear war by now—at least if the wargames and academic models of state behavior are to be believed. For the last two-and-a-half years, Ukraine, in its fight to protect its land and people, has repeatedly and in an escalatory fashion continued to flout the warnings of nuclear-armed Russia. In doing so, the Ukrainians have steadily done things that were confidently claimed to be clear triggers for Russian nuclear weapons use.

First, the Ukrainians began and have steadily waged an increased-range weapons campaign against Crimea, part of Ukraine that Russia had illegally annexed and claimed for its own. Starting with sea drones, and then expanding to a range of missiles and unpiloted aerial vehicles (UAVs), Ukraine has attacked countless targets on and around the peninsula, destroying Russian military equipment, command and control facilities, and even sinking major warships and attempting to blow up the Kerch Bridge, which Russia built after the annexation to connect the two countries.

Crimea has been only the start of Ukraine’s increasing attacks against Russia. The Ukrainians have for over a year now waged a long-range campaign against Russian military and economic infrastructure throughout Russia itself—which some thought would prompt a Russian nuclear weapons attack.

The Ukrainians have attacked air bases hundreds of miles from the Ukrainian border, sent UAVs against targets in Moscow and St. Petersburg, and waged an increasingly effective campaign against Russian oil and gas infrastructure—targeting refineries and storage areas. On September 1st, the Ukrainians launched what might be their largest ever UAV attack on Russian infrastructure, hitting power plants in the Moscow area. These are vital links in Vladimir Putin’s economic system of control, and yet the Ukrainians have gone after them whenever possible.

Finally, the Ukrainians invaded Russia itself. A secretly prepared force of experienced Ukrainian troops laid out a clever plan to attack where the Russians were weakest, and in a few days struck deep into Russian sovereign territory in Kursk Oblast and Belgorod Oblast. Initially thought to be a raid, it now seems that the Ukrainians intend to stay. There are even signs that the Ukrainians are planning on digging in and setting up a fortified zone—inside Russia itself. Moreover, the Ukrainians are regularly using weapons supplied by the United States and major western European states inside Russia itself: blowing up bridges, attacking Russian reinforcements, and inflicting a great deal of military loss.

To summarize, more than two-and-a-half years after nuclear-armed Russia invaded Ukraine, the Ukrainians have invaded and seized a large swathe of Russian land—the first invasion of Russia since World War II. And what remains to be seen? Not only has Russia declined to use nuclear weapons to strike back against the Ukrainian invaders; the Russians have not taken any step to even prepare nuclear weapons for use.

Amid significant nuclear threats and saber-rattling, Russia has proposed changing its nuclear doctrine to make the use of weapons easier. And yet, there has been no concrete evidence to show that Russia was serious in its nuclear bluster.

This lack of concrete steps to prepare any kind of nuclear action is fascinating and flies in the face of what was expected in the upper echelons of the US government and other circles, who have clearly been looking for signs of Russian nuclear escalation. “Scores” of wargames played out in the US government for years have culminated in the use of nuclear weapons long before reaching a Ukrainian invasion of Russia itself. Certainly, Biden administration officials in both the White House and Department of Defense have acted consistently as if they believe that US actions could trigger a nuclear response by Russia. There has been reporting that details how some in the Biden administration misinterpreted intelligence, concluding Russia might be preparing to strike—but no evidence shows that any steps were actually taken. The Carnegie Endowment’s Christopher Chivvis warned in March 2022 that nuclear weapons use was one of two of the most likely results of the war—based on “scores” of war games in which they had been deployed.

And yet, the conflict has remained nuclear-weapons-free. On the one hand, this could be something to celebrate. Events long thought to lead to nuclear weapons use have not.

RELATED:

Searching for nuclear bombs at the Democratic convention

On the other hand, this failure to understand when and how nuclear weapons might be used should actually lead to a wholesale reevaluation of predominant preconceptions about the weapons’ role in international relations, how to deter them, and when not to defer to them. The scary reality might be that prevailing assumptions of how nations could reach the threshold of nuclear weapons usage were overwrought, but the way those assumptions have shaped policy has made a nuclear conflict far more likely.

Flawed assumptions. One of the basic flaws in experts’ views of how and when nuclear weapons might be used involves process; this decision has often been seen as being a rational endpoint to a conventional series of military escalation steps. Herman Kahn’s extremely over-wrought but well-known escalation ladder has an impressive 44 steps to move from crisis to calamity. In such an ordered world, the use of conventional weapons in any given war gets considerably more offensive and all encompassing, until eventually it reaches the top of an escalation ladder and nuclear weapons are used.

However, the use of nuclear weapons might only have the most tangential and illogical connection to the use of conventional weapons. The Russo-Ukraine war has shown that there are huge disincentives to the use of nuclear weapons, that there can be significant escalation on the conventional side without risking a nuclear attack—even when only one side possesses nuclear weapons.

Indeed, the disincentives have proven considerable. One of the foundational countervailing forces relates to other nuclear powers, which will exert massive pressure against a nuclear armed state to prevent it from attacking a non-nuclear state with nuclear weapons. For example, during this war, India and, particularly, China have played a massive role in deterring Russia from using nuclear weapons.

What may have previously been misunderstood is that if a nuclear weapon is ever used, it will effectively destroy the nuclear non-proliferation argument that nuclear powers love to use to convince non-nuclear powers to remain non-nuclear. For instance, China must fear that a Russian nuclear attack as part of an expansionist war against a non-nuclear neighboring state would prompt others to prepare for such an attack. China’s regional neighbors, such as Japan, South Korea, and even Taiwan—all of which could make nuclear weapons quite easily—would quickly go nuclear for their own protection. South Korea is even openly discussing such a possibility.

China has even publicly humiliated Russia by forcing Putin, in the midst of all his nuclear saber-rattling, to agree a joint communique with Chinese President Xi Jingping in which Putin disavowed the use of nuclear weapons. The official Chinese communique was clear that Putin had agreed that “nuclear war cannot be won and must not be fought.” It was a stunning Chinese power play in the midst of all the fanfare, one that has not received the prominence it deserves.

China’s scolding against Russia using nuclear weapons has been matched by India. In 2022, the Indians were happy to have it known publicly that the Indian defense secretary had warned his Russian counterpart against using nukes against Ukraine.

It’s not just Russia’s most important international friends putting on the pressure. The United States has reportedly let the Russians know that if they ever used a nuclear weapon against Ukraine, the response would be conventional and overwhelming.

Indeed, if Russia did use a nuclear weapon, it would destroy the one foundation that makes Russia a significant power: It has nuclear weapons, and most other states don’t. Russia has been shown to be a seriously overrated military power, with a relatively small economy that is now almost entirely dependent on China to remain functional. Its nuclear arsenal is the only buttress to its claim as a global player. However, if it uses a nuclear weapon in a war of expansion, it will almost certainly set off a major chain-reaction of nuclear proliferation that will greatly diminish its own influence.

A hollow threat. As it has resulted in a Ukrainian invasion of Russia, the Russian invasion of Ukraine has shown how unlikely nuclear weapons usage ever was. All the war games that end up in a nuclear exchange say more about the uselessness of war games in correctly estimating nuclear risk than anything else.

RELATED:

Question for the candidates: What will you do if Iran gets the bomb?

The creation of an intellectual world in which decision-making is based on restraining conventional escalation because it could lead to nuclear weapons usage might be deemed acceptable, as restraining weapons usage is positive. But this might be the greatest fallacy of the current focus on escalation dynamics and nuclear weapons use.

By deferring to Putin’s nuclear threats in the way that the United States has in this war, two very dangerous precedents have been set that, if anything, could make nuclear weapons usage more likely in the future.

First, the United States has provided massive battlefield advantages to Russia throughout the war by overreacting to Russia’s nuclear threats. Ukraine has been consistently limited in what it can receive from the US conventional arsenal, and the United States has even limited what Ukraine can do with what it has been given. The deliveries of HIMARS, or Abrams tanks, F-16s, or ATACMS ammunition (all rather old systems by US standards) have been far slower than they needed to be. Furthermore, the geographic and political limits the United States has tried to impose on Ukraine—discouraging it from attacking Crimea and Russian military units just over the border in Russia that were poised to attack Ukraine, and now forbidding Ukraine from attacking Russian air bases being used to bombard Ukrainian cities—have provided Russia with a major asymmetrical advantage in this war.

Even now, as the US and Britain appear ready to approve Ukraine’s use of long-range missiles, the delay has allowed Russia to move its glide bombers outside the range of those weapons. Once again, in its desire to limit escalation, what the US has done is lengthened the war—making it longer and more destructive.

In other words, the United States is deliberately incentivizing the spread of nuclear weapons. Any power looking logically at the Russo-Ukraine war has to calculate that having nuclear weapons, even if they will never be used, provides a massive advantage in a conventional war. By overreacting to the possible use of nuclear weapons, the United States is incentivizing their spread.

Second, the US policies that try to limit Ukraine from going up a (probably mythical) escalation ladder have lengthened this war a great deal. If Ukraine had been properly armed in depth in 2022, it could have devastated the Russian army when it was at its weakest—particularly in the second half of the year. However, because Ukraine had been so poorly armed by the United States, Ukraine only had the partial victories at Kharkiv and Kherson.

This pattern repeated in 2023. Instead of allowing Ukraine to strike Russia in depth, the United States prepared the Ukrainians for a frontal assault against prepared Russian defensive positions within Ukraine. The result was small gains and heavy losses, as the Russians were able to fight knowing that their rear areas were protected, thanks to the United States.

A counterintuitive outcome. The United States has lengthened the war and made it far bloodier and indecisive than it needed to be. Oddly enough, this probably makes it more likely that Putin will use a nuke. The longer a war goes on, the more politically intense and brutal it gets. People start contemplating doing things they would not have contemplated at the start. In other words, the real escalation is not one of weapons; it’s the one that happens in leaders’ minds.

A shorter, sharp war is almost certainly less likely to lead to nuclear weapons usage than a longer, unstable, and embittered one.

After two-and-a-half years of full-scale conventional war, many of the assumptions underlying the use of nuclear weapons lie in tatters. Strategists need to rethink and reframe this debate entirely. And it’s important to start soon. The old policies that counselled against escalation because it could lead to nuclear weapons usage might prove to have entirely the opposite effect.


Subscribed

ABOUT THE FOLLOWING ACCESS TO “LLAW’S ALL THINGS NUCLEAR” RELATED MEDIA”:

There are 7 categories, with the latest addition, (#7) being a Friday weekly roundup of IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) global nuclear news stories. Also included is a bonus non-nuclear category for news about the Yellowstone caldera and other volcanic and caldera activity around the world that play an important role in humanity’s lives. The feature categories provide articles and information about ‘all things nuclear’ for you to pick from, usually with up to 3 links with headlines concerning the most important media stories in each category, but sometimes fewer and occasionally even none (especially so with the Yellowstone Caldera). The Categories are listed below in their usual order:

  1. All Things Nuclear
  2. Nuclear Power
  3. Nuclear Power Emergencies
  4. Nuclear War
  5. Nuclear War Threats
  6. Yellowstone Caldera (Note: There are no Yellowstone Caldera bonus stories available in this evening’s Post.)
  7. IAEA Weekly News (Friday’s only)

Whenever there is an underlined link to a Category media news story, if you press or click on the link provided, you no longer have to cut and paste to your web browser, since this Post’s link will take you directly to the article in your browser.

A current Digest of major nuclear media headlines with automated links is listed below by nuclear Category (in the above listed order). If a Category heading does not appear in the daily news Digest, it means there was no news reported from this Category today. Generally, the three best articles in each Category from around the nuclear world(s) are Posted. Occasionally, if a Post is important enough, it may be listed in multiple Categories.

TODAY’S NUCLEAR WORLD’S NEWS, Thursday, (09/19/2024)

All Things Nuclear

NEWS

The new red line: Why a prolonged conflict in Ukraine makes a nuclear attack more likely

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

… things that were confidently claimed to be clear triggers for Russian nuclear weapons use. … All the war games that end up in a nuclear exchange say …

Can Pennsylvania’s nuclear power save the PJM grid? Maybe – Colorado Springs Gazette

Colorado Springs Gazette

“As long as people want to build data centers and Bitcoin and all the other things that are going on with this new technology like AI, there’s gonna ..

Trump talks auto industry, nuclear weapons in Flint town hall – The Michigan Daily

The Michigan Daily

“I’m concerned about everything that you hear in the media, like the dangerous things they say about what should happen to President Trump, and even …

Nuclear Power

NEWS

West still relies on Russian nuclear power sector, shielding Moscow from further sanctions …

Sky News

The interdependence of Russian and Western nuclear industries partly explains Europe’s hesitations to impose sanctions on the nuclear sector, …

FPL gets an operating extension for its Miami-Dade Turkey Point nuclear plant

WMNF 88.5 FM

By Jim Saunders ©2024 The News Service of Florida. TALLAHASSEE — As the state looks at expanding the use of nuclear energy, Florida Power & Light …

US regulator says Michigan nuclear plant needs work before restart | Reuters

Reuters

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission said on Wednesday that inspections found issues at the Palisades nuclear reactor in Michigan, which Holtec …

Nuclear War

NEWS

Top Russian lawmaker warns West of nuclear war over Ukraine – Reuters

Reuters

A senior Russian lawmaker on Thursday said that Ukrainian strikes on Russia with Western missiles would lead to global war with the use of nuclear …

Will Russia-Ukraine conflict to lead to nuclear war? Putin’s ally suggests so – Firstpost

Firstpost

That Cold War standoff brought the United States and the Soviet Union to the brink of nuclear conflict.

Top Russian lawmaker warns West of nuclear war over Ukraine – StreetInsider

StreetInsider

MOSCOW (Reuters) – A senior Russian lawmaker on Thursday said that Ukrainian strikes on Russia with Western missiles would lead to global war with …

Nuclear War Threats

NEWS

The new red line: Why a prolonged conflict in Ukraine makes a nuclear attack more likely

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

A hollow threat. As it has resulted in a Ukrainian invasion of Russia, the Russian invasion of Ukraine has shown how unlikely nuclear weapons usage …

Nuclear posture and cyber threats: Why deterrence by punishment is not credible

European Leadership Network

… warfare Military Doctrine NATO Nuclear Arms Control Nuclear … nuclear threats, particularly from emerging technologies or emerging threats.

Question for the candidates: Do you agree with other world leaders that the use of—or threat …

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

As Russia’s war in Ukraine drags on, there is a heightened risk of escalation that could involve US or NATO forces, or Russian nuclear threats, or .

LLAW’s All Things Nuclear #754, Wednesday, (09/18/2024)

“End Nuclear Insanity Before Nuclear Insanity Ends Humanity”

Lloyd A. Williams-Pendergraft

Sep 18, 2024

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Donald Trump started rambling at his town hall with Sarah Huckabee

Donald Trump started rambling at his town hall with Sarah Huckabee Sanders (Image: RSBN)

LLAW’s NUCLEAR VIEWS, ISSUES & COMMENTS, Wednesday, (09/18/2024)

Donald Trump has made the astonishing claim that “nuclear weapons” are the biggest threat to the car manufacturing industry. His statement tells us how deranged Trump is because nuclear war has absolutely nothing to do with ‘car manufacturing’ or any other kind of manufacturing or other corporate industry. All industries will fail if nuclear war becomes a reality. Here is what he said, and why he said such a thing in one short paragraph:

“We have countries that are hostile to us. They don’t have to be. I got along great with Vladimir Putin, President Xi and Kim Jong Un,” he said. “It’s the single biggest threat to the world. You won’t care about making cars if that stuff starts happening.”

He thinks he is one of them — a powerful buddy to the two most dangerous nuclear 1st strike threats on the planet, excluding Xi, whose country, China, has a “No First Use” (NFU), but the United State has refused to adopt a “no-1st use” policy. Trump could and probably would, without a second thought, start a nuclear war all by himself, and he has said so publicly several times to leaders of other countries, which of course means the United States including you and me — especially if Trump wins the presidency.

There is a wise old saying about “never fraternizing with the enemy” that Trump has no doubt never heard about, or if he has, he is intentionally ignoring it. Henry Kissinger pointed it out in an astute way, implying that the battle was between the sexes, which in a fraternal world is essentially the same thing: “No one will ever win the battle of the sexes; there’s too much fraternizing with the enemy.” Trump believes Putin, Kim Jong un, and even Xi are his bosom buddies. Either Trump is dead wrong or he is a traitor to our country. ~llaw

Daily Express Logo | Gudrun Jonsson

Struggling Donald Trump bizarrely claims nuclear war is biggest threat to car industry

Donald Trump rambled at a town hall in Flint, Michigan, alongside Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders, and was asked what the biggest threat to the car industry was

By Kyle OsullivanJoseph Wilkes

01:30, Wed, Sep 18, 2024 | UPDATED: 01:30, Wed, Sep 18, 2024

92Bookmark

Donald Trump started rambling at his town hall with Sarah Huckabee

Donald Trump started rambling at his town hall with Sarah Huckabee Sanders (Image: RSBN)

Donald Trump has made the astonishing claim that “nuclear weapons” are the biggest threat to the car manufacturing industry. The former president was back on the campaign trail in Flint, Michigan, alongside Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders, following a poll showing Kamala Harris making significant strides.

After struggling through a painful interview about cryptocurrency on Monday in which he kept trying to change the topic, the 78-year-old last night also showed no signs of having any fresh ideas for the automobile industry. When asked by a supporter what he saw as the biggest threat to Michigan’s car manufacturing future, Trump said: “We have one major threat…nuclear weapons.”

He then launched into an odd tirade about his relationships with world leaders, the Biden administration and climate change, the Express US reports.

“We have countries that are hostile to us. They don’t have to be. I got along great with Vladimir Putin, President Xi and Kim Jong Un,” he said. “It’s the single biggest threat to the world. You won’t care about making cars if that stuff starts happening.”

Trump also revealed that Kamala Harris “could not have been nicer” when she called him after his second failed assassination attempt.

He concluded: “The fact is we have to have people who are respected by the opponent. Even Pakistan has nuclear weapons. It’s the single biggest threat to civilisation by far and no one is talking about it.”

After a lengthy tirade on climate change and allegations that Mexico is “stealing jobs,” Trump ultimately circled back to the auto industry, vowing he would “turn it all around by taxation and tariffs in 24 hours.”

The internet erupted in bewilderment as social media users expressed their astonishment at Trump’s tangent taking. On platform X, one individual posted: “This guy at Trump’s town hall asks ‘what do you think is a major threat to the autoworkers in Michigan? ‘ AND BRO STARTS RAMBLING ABOUT NUCLEAR WEAPONS”.

Echoing the sentiment, another added: “Trump’s response to a question about what he sees as the major threats to manufacturing in Michigan: NUCLEAR WAR. Keep in mind, his last rambling response was about how he doesn’t ramble in his answers.”

Donald Trump And Sarah Huckabee Sanders Hold Town Hall Event

Donald Trump and Sarah Huckabee Sanders hold town hall (Image: Getty)

A third voice chimed in agreement stating, “Trump was asked what he thought was the biggest threat to the auto industry. His answer: nuclear war and proceeded to ramble about dictators and war for ten minutes.”

The bewildering town hall discussion took place just 24 hours following Trump’s convoluted dialogue on cryptocurrency with Farokh Sarmad, a social media influencer and entrepreneur.

Speaking from Mar-A-Lago during an X Spaces interview, the ex-president discussed overhauling the ‘old’ financial framework and embracing cryptocurrency.

Posed with the question of why it’s crucial for America to be at the forefront of crypto adoption, he responded: “It’s so important. It’s crypto. It’s AI. It’s so many other things.”

“AI needs tremendous electricity capabilities beyond anything I ever heard.”

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Trump vowed to transform the United States into the “crypto capital of the planet” but struggled with the concept, confessing he needed to be educated by his 18 year old son Barron, who was scheduled to speak but was nowhere to be found.

“Barron knows so much about this,” Trump declared. “Barron is a young guy. He’s got four wallets or something.”

“I’m saying ‘explain this to me.’ He knows it so well. And Eric and Don. I have a lot of respect for them.”

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ABOUT THE FOLLOWING ACCESS TO “LLAW’S ALL THINGS NUCLEAR” RELATED MEDIA”:

There are 7 categories, with the latest addition, (#7) being a Friday weekly roundup of IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) global nuclear news stories. Also included is a bonus non-nuclear category for news about the Yellowstone caldera and other volcanic and caldera activity around the world that play an important role in humanity’s lives. The feature categories provide articles and information about ‘all things nuclear’ for you to pick from, usually with up to 3 links with headlines concerning the most important media stories in each category, but sometimes fewer and occasionally even none (especially so with the Yellowstone Caldera). The Categories are listed below in their usual order:

  1. All Things Nuclear
  2. Nuclear Power
  3. Nuclear Power Emergencies
  4. Nuclear War
  5. Nuclear War Threats
  6. Yellowstone Caldera (Note: There is one Yellowstone Caldera bonus story available in this evening’s Post.)
  7. IAEA Weekly News (Friday’s only)

Whenever there is an underlined link to a Category media news story, if you press or click on the link provided, you no longer have to cut and paste to your web browser, since this Post’s link will take you directly to the article in your browser.

A current Digest of major nuclear media headlines with automated links is listed below by nuclear Category (in the above listed order). If a Category heading does not appear in the daily news Digest, it means there was no news reported from this Category today. Generally, the three best articles in each Category from around the nuclear world(s) are Posted. Occasionally, if a Post is important enough, it may be listed in multiple Categories.

TODAY’S NUCLEAR WORLD’S NEWS, Wednesday, (09/18/2024)

All Things Nuclear

NEWS

Everything You Wanted to Know About World War III but Were Afraid to Ask

The American Prospect

For generations, we thought fear of nuclear holocaust would prevent world war. Is that faith obsolete? by Rick Perlstein. September 18, 2024.

“Even Pakistan has nuclear weapons…” Donald Trump expresses concern over global … – YouTube

YouTube

Former US president Donald Trump expressed concern over global nuclear stockpiles while addressing town hall in flint Michigan US.

Renowned Russian Academic Karaganov: ‘The Current Nuclear Doctrine No Longer Works …

MEMRI

American media suddenly spawned a series of publications on the need to avoid nuclear escalation by all means. … things, stresses the inadmissibility …

Nuclear Power

NEWS

China and U.S. Face Competition for Nuclear Energy Dominance – AMAC

AMAC

Nuclear power is a key battleground in the U.S.-China rivalry, with both nations facing challenges in expansion.

The Coming Nuclear Space Race | RealClearEnergy

RealClearEnergy

China has been very busy developing nuclear technology here on Earth. It recently announced the world’s first melt-down-proof nuclear reactor, …

Global nuclear power surges for fourth consecutive year, IAEA says

Power Technology

At the end of 2023, global nuclear capacity stood at 371.5GW. Credit: BearFotos via Shutterstock. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has …

Nuclear Power Emergencies

NEWS

Saudi Cabinet affirms continuation of work to build first nuclear power plant

The Peninsula Qatar

… nuclear emergencies in cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency at the end of next year, within the context of the Kingdom’s …

Stormwater Modeling To Prepare For Biological And Radiological Emergencies

Water Online

… nuclear power plant in Japan. EPA’s Nuclear Emergency Drinking Water Guidelines Take Heat. The U.S. EPA has proposed a rule that could allow the …

Presence of IAEA inspectors at key NPP substations is critical to ensure nuclear and radiation safety

Кабінет Міністрів України

… Energy of Ukraine, posted 18 September 2024 12:26. Emergency Energy security International activity. 0. spreads. On the sidelines of the 68th IAEA …

Nuclear War

NEWS

Nuclear War If US Missiles Fired Into Russia” RFK Jr, Trump Jr Slam “Insane Ukraine War Agenda”

YouTube

Russian nuclear test chief says Moscow is ready to resume testing ‘at any moment’ The head of Russia’s nuclear testing site said on Tuesday his …

Paint the B-52s Brightly: Reducing Confusion Between Conventional and Nuclear Weapons …

War on the Rocks

What if the next war goes nuclear because one side mistakes a conventional missile for a nuclear one, and responds accordingly? This issue of.

“Even Pakistan has nuclear weapons…” Donald Trump expresses concern over global … – YouTube

YouTube

Former US president Donald Trump expressed concern over global nuclear stockpiles while addressing town hall in flint Michigan US.

Nuclear War Threats

NEWS

Struggling Donald Trump bizarrely claims nuclear war is biggest threat to car industry

Daily Express

Struggling Donald Trump bizarrely claims nuclear war is biggest threat to car industry … threats to manufacturing in Michigan: NUCLEAR WAR. Keep in …

Negotiate with Moscow to end the Ukraine war and prevent nuclear devastation – The Hill

The Hill

In September 2022, Putin said, “If the territorial integrity of our country is threatened, we will without doubt use all available means to protect …

Opinion | Why China’s ‘no first use’ policy requires more nuclear weapons

South China Morning Post

… nuclear weapons. This explains why Moscow has made several thinly veiled threats of using nuclear weapons during its war in Ukraine and will 

Yellowstone Caldera

NEWS

The Mountain That Roared – National Parks Traveler

National Parks Traveler

Editor’s note: Yellowstone Caldera Chronicles is a weekly column written by scientists and collaborators of the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory.

LLAW’s All Things Nuclear #753, Tuesday, (09/17/2024)

“End Nuclear Insanity Before Nuclear Insanity Ends Humanity”

Lloyd A. Williams-Pendergraft

Sep 17, 2024

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Are decades of arms control treaties being threatened? Credit: International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN)

LLAW’s NUCLEAR VIEWS, ISSUES & COMMENTS, Tuesday, (09/17/2024)

This article, an extension to the possible escalation of the Russia/Ukraine war news, adding NATO and the United States to the mix, that I have been posting daily for about a week now tells us how bleak the idea of preventing nuclear war has become.

My answer to the opening question in the article asking, “Can there be a World War III without the use of nuclear weapons?” My answer as well as Albert Einstein’s (many years ago) was, of course, “No!”. Einstein insinuated his own “no” in a more colorful way, saying “After World War III the next war will be fought with sticks and stones.”

Only 5 nations, including the United Kingdom and France, had nuclear weapons during the Cold War, and only the United States, Russia, and perhaps China were considered to be legitimate threats of nuclear war. Today there are 9, and you can add the newcomers of North Korea, Pakistan, Israel, and India. The nation that makes the 1st nuclear strike will cause the instant defensive retaliation of at least the original 5, but there is also the more localized war in Gaza to consider.

With power-mongering leaders like Putin, Kim Jong Un, Netanyahu, and the possible return of the loose-cannon war-threatening Donald Trump, any one of whom is a likely possibility to press the “nuclear button” with his individual control of the ‘nuclear football’, and it only takes one of them to force one or more of the the others to retaliate, bringing the entire nuclear-war world down upon humanity and all other life on planet Earth. ~llaw

Final Global Issues Colloquium Set for Nov. 20 - Vol. 20 No ...

Are the World’s Ongoing Conflicts in Danger of Going Nuclear?

Are decades of arms control treaties being threatened? Credit: International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN)
Are decades of arms control treaties being threatened? Credit: International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN)
  • by Thalif Deen (united nations)
  • Tuesday, September 17, 2024
  • Inter Press Service

UNITED NATIONS, Sep 17 (IPS) – The constant drumbeat of nuclear threats seems never ending—emanating primarily from the Russians, Israeli right-wing politicians and North Koreans.

The threats also prompt one lingering question: Can there be a World War III without the use of nuclear weapons?

In a report August 27, Reuters quoted a senior Russian official as saying the West was playing with fire by considering allowing Ukraine to strike deep into Russia with Western missiles—and cautioned the United States that World War III would not be confined to Europe. 

Sergei Lavrov, Russia’s longstanding foreign minister and former UN ambassador, said the West was seeking to escalate the Ukraine war and was “asking for trouble” by considering Ukrainian requests to loosen curbs on using foreign-supplied weapons.

Putting it in the right context, the Washington-based Arms Control Association (ACA) pointed out last week, “the global nuclear security environment could hardly be more precarious.”

Carol Giacomo, chief editor of Arms Control Today, the ACA’s flagship publication, said that weeks before the US elects a new president, the global nuclear security environment could hardly be more precarious.

“Russia continues to raise the specter of escalating its war on Ukraine to nuclear use; Iran and North Korea persist in advancing their nuclear programs; China is moving to steadily expand its nuclear arsenal; the United States and Russia have costly modernization programs underway; and the war in Gaza threatens to explode into a region-wide catastrophe entangling Iran and nuclear-armed Israel, among other countries,” she pointed out.

Meanwhile, Russia and China are refusing to enter arms control talks with the United States, new countries are raising the possibility of acquiring nuclear weapons and decades of arms control treaties are unraveling.

The situation has also prompted Rafael Mariano Grossi, director-general of the International Atomic Agency (IAEA), to warn, in an interview with The Financial Times on August 26, that the global nonproliferation regime is under greater pressure than at any time since the end of the Cold War.

The U.S. presidential election campaign has not engaged publicly on most of these issues in any serious way despite the fact that whichever candidate wins will, once inaugurated, immediately inherit the sole authority to launch U.S. nuclear weapons, wrote Giacomo, a former member of The New York Times editorial board (2007-2020).

Dr M.V. Ramana, Professor and Simons Chair in Disarmament, Global and Human Security, School of Public Policy and Global Affairs, Graduate Program Director, MPPGA at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, told IPS the dangers posed by nuclear arms, and the very powerful institutions and governments that possess these weapons of mass destruction, have never been greater.

“In the last 16 months, we have seen government officials from Russia (Dmitry Medvedev) and Israel (Amihai Eliyahu) threatening to use, or calling for the use of, nuclear weapons against Ukraine and Gaza respectively” he noted.

The rulers of these countries have already shown the willingness to kill tens of thousands of civilians. “Going further back, we can remember U.S. President Donald Trump threatening to “totally destroy” North Korea. Coming from a person like Trump and a country like the United States that is the only one to use nuclear weapons in war, there is good reason to take such a threat with utmost seriousness”.

Such great dangers, he argued, can be ameliorated only with great visions, by people demanding that no one should be killed in their name, especially using nuclear weapons but not only using nuclear weapons.

This would require people to make common cause with people all over the world, and refuse to be divided by the “narrow nationalisms” that Albert Einstein identified as an “outmoded concept,” as far back as 1947.

Norman Solomon, executive director, Institute for Public Accuracy and national director, RootsAction.org told IPS the momentum of the nuclear arms race is moving almost entirely in the wrong direction. The world and humanity as a whole are increasingly in dire circumstances, made even more dire by the refusal of the leaders of nuclear states to acknowledge the heightened jeopardy of thermonuclear annihilation for nearly all of the Earth’s inhabitants.

As the nuclear superpowers, the United States and Russia, he said, have propelled the drive to keep developing nuclear weaponry. There are always rationalizations, but the result is proliferation of nuclear weapons.

“Nations with smaller nuclear arsenals and those with nuclear-arms aspirations are keenly aware of what the most powerful nuclear states are doing. Preaching about nonproliferation while proliferating is hardly a convincing role model to halt the spread of nuclear weapons to more and more countries,” Solomon pointed out.

“Notably, amid the vast amount of media coverage and diplomatic verbiage about Israel, rarely do we read or hear mention of the fact that Israel — uniquely in the Middle East — possesses nuclear weapons. Given Israel’s impunity to attack other countries in the region, it would be a mistake to have any confidence in Israeli self-restraint with military matters.”

The return of a cold war between the U.S. and Russia, said Solomon, is fueling the nuclear arms race to a dangerous extreme. Arms control has become a thing of the past, as one treaty after another in this century has been abrogated by the U.S. government. The Open Skies and Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces treaties were canceled by President Trump.

Earlier, the Anti-Ballistic Missile treaty was canceled by President George W. Bush. The absence of those pacts makes a nuclear war with Russia more likely. But President Biden has not tried to revive those agreements snuffed out by his Republican predecessors, he argued.

“If sanity is going to prevail, a drastic change in attitudes and policies will be needed. The current course is headed toward unfathomable catastrophe for the human race”, said Solomon, author, “War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine.”

Jacqueline Cabasso, Executive Director, Western States Legal Foundation, told IPS: “Looking around today’s world, we see a growing mob of nationalist authoritarian governments and leaders—including in nuclear-armed Russia, Israel, India, China, North Korea and increasingly, the United States. All of them are busily preparing for war in the name of peace.

But it doesn’t have to be this way. Reflecting the urgency of this moment, in June, the United States Conference of Mayors (USCM), the official nonpartisan association of more than 1,400 American cities with populations over 30,000, adopted a sweeping resolution, titled “The Imperative of Dialogue in a Time of Acute Nuclear Dangers.”

The resolution rightly “condemns Russia’s illegal war of aggression on Ukraine and its repeated nuclear threats and calls on the Russian government to withdraw all forces from Ukraine.” But it also calls on the President and Congress “to maximize diplomatic efforts to end the war in Ukraine as soon as possible.”

The resolution, Cabasso said, “calls on the U.S. government to work to re-establish high-level U.S.-Russian risk reduction and arms control talks to rebuild trust and work toward replacement of the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, the only remaining bilateral nuclear arms control treaty, set to expire in 2026.”

Note: This article is brought to you by IPS Noram in collaboration with INPS Japan and Soka Gakkai International in consultative status with ECOSOC.


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ABOUT THE FOLLOWING ACCESS TO “LLAW’S ALL THINGS NUCLEAR” RELATED MEDIA”:

There are 7 categories, with the latest addition, (#7) being a Friday weekly roundup of IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) global nuclear news stories. Also included is a bonus non-nuclear category for news about the Yellowstone caldera and other volcanic and caldera activity around the world that play an important role in humanity’s lives. The feature categories provide articles and information about ‘all things nuclear’ for you to pick from, usually with up to 3 links with headlines concerning the most important media stories in each category, but sometimes fewer and occasionally even none (especially so with the Yellowstone Caldera). The Categories are listed below in their usual order:

  1. All Things Nuclear
  2. Nuclear Power
  3. Nuclear Power Emergencies
  4. Nuclear War
  5. Nuclear War Threats
  6. Yellowstone Caldera (Note: There are no Yellowstone Caldera bonus stories available in this evening’s Post.)
  7. IAEA Weekly News (Friday’s only)

Whenever there is an underlined link to a Category media news story, if you press or click on the link provided, you no longer have to cut and paste to your web browser, since this Post’s link will take you directly to the article in your browser.

A current Digest of major nuclear media headlines with automated links is listed below by nuclear Category (in the above listed order). If a Category heading does not appear in the daily news Digest, it means there was no news reported from this Category today. Generally, the three best articles in each Category from around the nuclear world(s) are Posted. Occasionally, if a Post is important enough, it may be listed in multiple Categories.

TODAY’S NUCLEAR WORLD’S NEWS, Tuesday, (09/17/2024)

All Things Nuclear

NEWS

The U.S. Is Playing Nuclear Chicken in Ukraine – The American Conservative

The American Conservative

As things currently stand the Ukrainian fighting position in the east appears increasingly precarious. … All signs point to the latter being the case.

All We Know About World Liberty Financial, Trump’s Family Biz – YouTube

YouTube

Trump rolls Out New Crypto Business: All We Know About World Liberty Financial, Trump’s Family Biz … Why is North Korea Releasing Photos of Nuclear …

NASA nuclear engineer among group to visit NM nuclear facilities | KRWG Public Media

KRWG

KC Counts talks with Lindsay Kaldon, fission surface power project manager and Air Force Reserves Captain, about powering space exploration and …

Nuclear Power

NEWS

Nuclear Power Iran: What Would It Do? – Foreign Policy

Foreign Policy

What Would Iran Do With the Bomb? A nuclear-armed Tehran would affect not just the region but also the great powers. By Sina Azodi, a professorial …

People ‘waking up to the facts’ about nuclear energy being safe – YouTube

YouTube

… nuclear energy. Mr Shackel discussed with Sky News host Andrew Bolt the lack of radiation from living near nuclear plants. “There are simple facts …

It’s Time To follow The Navy’s 50-Year Safety Record Of Nuclear Power Generation

Eurasia Review

Nuclear power has the competitive advantage of being the only baseload power source that can accommodate the desired expansion of a clean electricity .

Nuclear Power Emergencies

NEWS

Saudi Arabia advances nuclear power project, set to host international conference in 2025

The Nation

The conference will focus on enhancing global preparedness for nuclear emergencies, with the Kingdom eager to work with other nations to ensure its …

Eskom had to shut down Koeberg Unit 1, but ‘reserves’ are enough to avoid load shedding

News24

Nuclear power station Koeberg’s Unit 1 had to be shut down last week … emergency reserves, the power utility said. Koeberg Unit 1 was …

New iodine tablets for communes near French nuclear power sites – The Connexion

The Connexion

The tablets are distributed for use in the event of an emergency, but some say the scheme does not go far enough. Iodine tablets are intended to be …

Nuclear War

NEWS

Kremlin Continues to Intimidate the West with Nuclear War Threats – Robert Lansing Institute

Robert Lansing Institute

Russian officials persist in threatening the West with nuclear weapons. However, the rhetoric has shifted from warnings of a direct strike on …

Is a political settlement between Russia and Ukraine on the cards? I am sceptical | Rajan Menon

The Guardian

Neither war fatigue nor the fear of an escalation into nuclear war seem enough to spur on negotiations to end the conflict, says political …

Negotiate with Moscow to end the Ukraine war and prevent nuclear devastation – The Hill

The Hill

When American leaders should be focused on finding a diplomatic off-ramp to a war that should never have been allowed to take place, …

Nuclear War Threats

NEWS

Kremlin Continues to Intimidate the West with Nuclear War Threats – Robert Lansing Institute

Robert Lansing Institute

Russian officials persist in threatening the West with nuclear weapons. · We believe that Russia’s nuclear threats always have a domestic political …

Are the World’s Ongoing Conflicts in Danger of Going Nuclear? – Global Issues

Global Issues

The threats also prompt one lingering question: Can there be a World War III without the use of nuclear weapons? In a report August 27, Reuters quoted …

The Trilateral Dilemma: Great Power Competition, Global Nuclear Order, and Russia’s War …

James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies

This article concludes, however, that the components of this longstanding order are durable. They have proven robust to Russian nuclear threats, just …

LLAW’s All Things Nuclear #752, Monday, (09/16/2024)

“End Nuclear Insanity Before Nuclear Insanity Ends Humanity”

Lloyd A. Williams-Pendergraft

Sep 16, 2024

1

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Officials in cleanroom suits tour Kursk nuclear plant

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) at an inspection in Russia’s Kursk plant

LLAW’s NUCLEAR VIEWS, ISSUES & COMMENTS, Monday, (09/16/2024)

I am pleased to finally see that a significant news outlet has at last realized the danger involving nuclear power plants in a war or a terrorist situation. And I am also pleased to see that the messenger is the “Bulletin of Atomic Scientists”, a publication that I subscribe to. No doubt other news agencies have noticed this risk for the future world — and in this case, the immediate potential of a world war that could be created by the ongoing territorial present war between Russia and Ukraine.

So I am gratified to the extent that I am no longer alone concerning the role of nuclear power plants as potential weapons of mass destruction, as is the case even now, as well as even moreso on our continual errant path toward building and operating more and more nuclear power facilities, large or small, in the USA and around the world.

We must stop in our tracks now, turn around, and promptly end the idea of expanded nuclear energy and get rid of what exists now and dispose of nuclear weapons and all uranium nuclear fuel and nuclear waste in the same major project that, as I have mentioned over recent years as well as in yesterday’s blog. Such an endeavor will take many unified long but politically tenuous years of compromise and cooperation among all nations in order for life, including human, to continue on this generous life-giving blue-green planet Earth — the essence of all life as we know it. ~llaw

Times Square Arts: The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

Nuclear power: future energy solution or potential war target?

By Ray Hughes | September 16, 2024

Ukraine’s president posted a video of a fire at Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant on social media on August 11, 2024. Credit: Ukrainian Presidency

Innovative small modular reactors, floating nuclear plants, and microreactors offer potential routes to decarbonization that many countries are embracing. However, these emerging technologies elevate concerns that wartime attacks could expose warfighters and civilians to nuclear fallout. The risk of such exposure could enable states or non-state actors to threaten nuclear consequences without violating the taboo against using nuclear weapons—weakening international resolve to intervene in conflicts.

Russia’s occupation of Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant has already set a dangerous precedent that could sway the course of future wars. More recently, Russia’s Kursk nuclear power plant also came under threat when Ukrainian forces advanced across the border.

The threat to these nuclear facilities underscores how both Russia and Ukraine view nuclear power plants as strategic assets that could bolster their negotiating positions in potential cease-fire discussions. Nuclear power plants could increasingly become strategic targets in war, and the emergence of advanced nuclear technology is likely to spread that danger to new regions of the world.

Caught in the crossfire. Shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, fighting broke out around Zaporizhzhia, the largest nuclear power plant in Europe. Direct attacks resulted in a temporary loss of electrical power for cooling, leading many observers in Ukraine and across the world to fear a nuclear disaster.

The Russian military continues to occupy the Zaporizhzhia plant, despite demands from the international community that Russia withdraw from the plant. International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi has visited Zaporizhzhia five times—most recently on September 5—in an effort to assess the safety and security of the plant and avert a disaster. On September 9, Grossi stated that Zaporizhzhia still suffers from regular explosions, drone attacks, and gunfire—increasing the risk of an accident. Zaporizhzhia’s six reactors currently remain in cold shutdown, and the IAEA has advised that no reactor should be restarted while the conflict continues.

Officials in cleanroom suits tour Kursk nuclear plant
Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi toured Russia’s Kursk nuclear power plant with staff members from the International Atomic Energy Agency and Russian officials on August 27, 2024. Credit: IAEA via Flickr

A few weeks before Grossi last visited Zaporizhzhia, Ukrainian forces crossed the Russian border and entered the Kursk region in a significant escalation of the conflict. As the Ukrainians gained territory, international concern grew regarding the safety of the Kursk nuclear power plant, one of the three largest in Russia. The IAEA issued statements expressing alarm over the plant’s security, particularly in light of reports that Russian forces were digging trenches around the facility in anticipation of Ukrainian advances.

Grossi visited the Kursk plant on August 27 and warned of the risk of a serious nuclear accident. Shortly before Grossi’s visit, Putin accused Ukraine of trying to attack the facility but provided no details or evidence. Amid the advances on Kursk, a fire erupted in one of Zaporizhzhia’s cooling towers, with both Russia and Ukraine pointing fingers at each other.

RELATED:

Ukrainian journalist Illia Ponomarenko on the horror and absurdity of Russia’s senseless, existential war

Nuclear power plants are designed to withstand terrorist attacks, but in the future will also have to be prepared for the possibility of an attack by another state.

Solution to the climate crisis? Climate change and international efforts to reduce carbon emissions have accelerated the ongoing debate about building new nuclear power plants. These debates persist not only in existing nuclear states but increasingly across developing states that have expressed sincere interest in nuclear power. There are about 30 countries that are considering, planning, or starting nuclear power programs around the world, with the majority looking to build small modular reactors.

Small modular reactors (SMRs) are often advertised as the solution to the climate crisis. Proponents argue that SMRs will be more affordable, safer, and better equipped to prevent the proliferation of nuclear weapons due to their sealed designs; however, this claim has yet to be substantiated. The IAEA highlights that there are currently over 80 SMR designs under development in 18 different countries.

The emergence of this new technology is happening at a time when nuclear power plants have become strategic targets in Russia’s war on Ukraine. This has renewed interest in, and international debate about, the need to establish a new convention to protect nuclear power plants during military conflicts.

Some voices insist that the Additional Protocols to the Geneva Conventions adopted in the 1970s are sufficient to protect civil nuclear power plants. Despite these protocols, however, Russia has set a dangerous precedent that an occupying army can use a nuclear power plant to shield itself from an adversary’s attacks. The nuclear power plant then becomes a valuable strategic asset, because the risk of a nuclear accident deters the defender from trying to liberate the plant.

Rising risks. The promise of SMRs will likely increase the number of nuclear power plants worldwide from the current 416 reactors in 32 countries. Many states in the Middle East and Africa have expressed interest in SMRs and are in volatile areas that face a heightened risk of armed conflict. It is imperative to establish an international initiative to prevent nuclear power plants from becoming wartime targets, while ensuring that the effort does not hinder the growth of nuclear energy, particularly in developing countries.

Russia is the world leader in nuclear technology exports and is currently building nuclear reactors in China, India, Iran, Egypt, and Turkey—and constantly looking for new markets. Russia also uses its state-owned-and-operated nuclear corporation Rosatom as a diplomatic tool to counter the influence of the West in many conflict-prone regions. For example, in 2023 Rosatom signed nuclear cooperation agreements with Mali and Burkina Faso, two unstable countries in Africa that have suffered from multiple coups d’etats and terrorism in the Sahel region. These countries have the right to establish nuclear power, but their history of instability makes the acquisition of nuclear technology risky. Given that Russia is the leading exporter of nuclear technology while also being directly involved in conflicts near nuclear power plants, the international community faces a delicate challenge in establishing standards for protecting these plants during times of conflict.

RELATED:

Russia plans to restart Ukraine’s embattled Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant. That won’t make the plant safer

The risks associated with nuclear energy during wartime are not solely heightened by commercial nuclear power. The US Defense Department’s Project Pele intends to provide the military with a transportable power source for a variety of operational needs such as disaster response and power generation at remote locations. Mobile microreactors would provide the military with a clean alternative to fossil fuels, but they should not be deployed to a war zone or unstable region, as they could become attractive targets for an adversary.

The US military is not alone. China has plans to deploy mobile floating nuclear power plants, similar to Russia’s Akademik Lomonosov, in support of its sovereignty claims in the South China Sea. In the event of a major conflict in the region over Taiwan, these floating nuclear power plants would become vulnerable targets for potential nuclear accidents, thus posing a significant risk.

New agreement needed. Warfighting around the Zaporizhzhia and Kursk nuclear power plants represents a dangerous paradigm shift. The safety and security concerns of nuclear power plants has escalated from terrorist threats to major powers occupying and attacking nuclear power plants. If the appetite for nuclear energy grows, the international community must establish an agreement to protect nuclear power plants during conflicts.

The risk of a nuclear catastrophe has the power to profoundly alter the future dynamics of both warfare and energy. Time is running out to establish a cooperative international environment for negotiating a new agreement.

The views and opinions expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Lawrence Livermore National Security LLC, the US Energy Department, the National Nuclear Security Administration, or the United States government, and shall not be used for advertising or product endorsement purposes. The LLNL document release number: LLNL-MI-869196.


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There are 7 categories, with the latest addition, (#7) being a Friday weekly roundup of IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) global nuclear news stories. Also included is a bonus non-nuclear category for news about the Yellowstone caldera and other volcanic and caldera activity around the world that play an important role in humanity’s lives. The feature categories provide articles and information about ‘all things nuclear’ for you to pick from, usually with up to 3 links with headlines concerning the most important media stories in each category, but sometimes fewer and occasionally even none (especially so with the Yellowstone Caldera). The Categories are listed below in their usual order:

  1. All Things Nuclear
  2. Nuclear Power
  3. Nuclear Power Emergencies
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Whenever there is an underlined link to a Category media news story, if you press or click on the link provided, you no longer have to cut and paste to your web browser, since this Post’s link will take you directly to the article in your browser.

A current Digest of major nuclear media headlines with automated links is listed below by nuclear Category (in the above listed order). If a Category heading does not appear in the daily news Digest, it means there was no news reported from this Category today. Generally, the three best articles in each Category from around the nuclear world(s) are Posted. Occasionally, if a Post is important enough, it may be listed in multiple Categories.

TODAY’S NUCLEAR WORLD’S NEWS, Monday, (09/16/2024)

All Things Nuclear

NEWS

Uranium, the energy transition & the nuclear fuel global supply chain – KWM

King & Wood Mallesons

Nuclear power currently accounts for about 10% of all electricity generation globally, with operational nuclear power plants in 31 countries worldwide …

Lindsey Graham: Iran Nuke Quest Powered by Biden-Harris – WCBM TALKRADIO AM 680

WCBM

All About Real Estate · The Weekly Wealth Report · Kevin … I’ve never been more worried about a nuclear breakout by Iran than I am right now.

Australia can’t afford an AUKUS about-face: 5 things the critics are getting wrong

ANU Reporter – The Australian National University

Australia doesn’t need nuclear-propulsion submarines; the deal makes our neighbours in South-East Asia uneasy; it drags us back to our Anglosphere …

Nuclear Power

NEWS

IAEA Outlook for Nuclear Power Increases for Fourth Straight Year, Adding to Global …

International Atomic Energy Agency

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has revised up its annual projections for the expansion of nuclear power for a fourth successive …

IAEA Projects 950 GW of Global Nuclear Power Capacity by 2050

POWER Magazine

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) said generation capacity of nuclear power worldwide is expected to rise more than the group …

Nuclear power: future energy solution or potential war target?

Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists

Many countries are exploring advanced nuclear reactors as a solution to the climate crisis. However, the proliferation of small reactors may …

Nuclear Power Emergencies

NEWS

Energy Minister: Saudi Arabia continues work on building first nuclear power plant

Saudi Gazette

He also revealed that Riyadh will host International Conference on Nuclear Emergencies by the end of 2025. Addressing the 68th Session of the General …

Saudi Arabia building first nuclear plant – ARY News

ARY News

… nuclear plant, Saudi nuclear power plant, nuclear energy … This conference will focus on preparedness for nuclear emergencies and will build on the …

Saudi Arabia Constructing Its First Nuclear Power Plant: Energy Minister – WE News English

WE News English

Prince Abdulaziz announced that Saudi Arabia will host an international conference on nuclear emergencies at the end of 2025 in Riyadh, as part of the …

Nuclear War

NEWS

Vladimir Putin ally makes terrifying claim over nuclear war as WW3 fears erupt

Daily Express

Putin has repeatedly made statements about nuclear weapons amid the war, and according to the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICANW) …

What’s The Nuclear Firestorm Russia Is Threatening West With? ‘US Can’t Hide’, Roars Putin’s Aide

YouTube

Russia’s US envoy issues spine-chilling threat. ‘US can’t hide from nuclear war‘. Heightened risk of nuclear war between Russia & NATO.

The Crumbling Nuclear Order – Foreign Affairs

Foreign Affairs

The risk of nuclear war is the highest it has been since the end of the Cold War. The cause lies primarily with Russia’s ongoing nuclear threats …

Nuclear War Threats

NEWS

The Crumbling Nuclear Order – Foreign Affairs

Foreign Affairs

The risk of nuclear war is the highest it has been since the end of the Cold War. The cause lies primarily with Russia’s ongoing nuclear threats …

After Ukraine’s incursion into Russian territory, fears of Moscow’s nuclear arsenal have diminished

NZZ

Despite Russian threats, Ukraine has crossed so-called red lines numerous times. Since February 2022, many observers have seen Russia’s war against …

Ignore ‘fascist’ Putin’s nuclear threat over Storm Shadow deployment, says Lammy – The Telegraph

The Telegraph

… threats to use nuclear weapons. The Foreign Secretary said the West should not be bullied by Putin’s threat of all-out war with Nato if Ukraine .

Yellowstone Caldera

NEWS

The mountain that roared | U.S. Geological Survey – USGS.gov

USGS.gov

Yellowstone Caldera Chronicles is a weekly column written by scientists and collaborators of the Yellowstone Volcano Observatory. This week’s …

LLAW’s All Things Nuclear #751, Sunday, (09/15/2024)

“End Nuclear Insanity Before Nuclear Insanity Ends Humanity”

Lloyd A. Williams-Pendergraft

Sep 15, 2024

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UKRAINE-RUSSIA-CONFLICT-WAR

Ukraine has three nuclear power plants that are targets of the Russia/Ukraine war.

LLAW’s NUCLEAR VIEWS, ISSUES & COMMENTS, Sunday, (09/15/2024)

As I wrote yesterday in my previous blog #750, expanding the US’s participation in the Russia/Ukraine war beyond limited and localized use of military weapons and other hardware has put the United States between a rock and a hard place. The following ‘Politico’ article helps to more clearly explain why. The overall situation is murkily scary and obviously dangerous.

But as I’ve said many times before, ‘deterrence’ alone cannot and will not avoid nuclear war forever, and the tense situation involving, in particular, the United States, Britain, Ukraine, other NATO countries, and Russia with their allies, may be moving beyond the much ballyhooed “deterrence” stage, which is based on fear of one another’s nuclear powers, including nuclear weapons of mass destruction and, now, nuclear power plants, which are obviously important participants in a real nuclear war. This situation alone, whether settled amicably or not, should convince all of us around the world that no new nuclear power plants should ever be built anywhere, and the older ones shut down and permanently dismantled and all existing nuclear arms together with all uranium fuel and radioactive nuclear waste buried deep in impenetrable ground where future access to it can never be accomplished by any nation for any reason.

Failing to do this now (and it will take many years of cooperative effort among global nations) may well mean the beginning of the end of sentient life on our wonderful planet Earth ~llaw

Media

As Biden deliberates, Ukraine’s nuclear plants are increasingly at risk

The risk of Ukraine losing the war this winter has pushed Washington and London to reconsider how Kyiv uses Western-supplied long-range missiles, but the U.S. remains fearful of escalation.

UKRAINE-RUSSIA-CONFLICT-WAR
Last year, Russia tried to isolate these nuclear power plants, focusing on degrading Ukraine’s energy transmission. | Genya Savilov/AFP via Getty Images

Unpacked

September 15, 2024 2:44 pm CET

By Jamie Dettmer

Jamie Dettmer is opinion editor at POLITICO Europe.

KYIV — As the U.S. ponders loosening some of the restrictions on Ukraine’s use of Western-supplied long-range missiles to allow for the targeting of airfields and missile launch sites deeper inside Russia, Ukraine remains on tenterhooks.

As it stands, Washington doesn’t appear ready to take the gloves off entirely and allow Ukraine to target Russia’s airfields with long-range U.S. missiles quite yet — though it may withdraw restrictions on the U.K.’s Storm Shadows, which use U.S. technology.

“I would like to see a more forthright position coming from the Biden administration that says there’s no reason why Ukraine shouldn’t be fighting back,” former U.S. envoy to NATO Kurt Volker told POLITICO. “Russia’s the one attacking Ukraine from all these facilities across Russia. There’s no reason for there to be a sanctuary. But I don’t think we’re going to see Biden authorizing the use of U.S. missiles to strike at Russian airfields, although the British might be allowed to proceed without U.S. objection,” he added. “That won’t be enough.”

And if that’s really the outcome of these weeks-long intense negotiations, Ukraine’s energy officials will be among those most alarmed.

They fear this coming winter may prove to be a breaking point for Ukraine in the energy war. And that’s largely because Russian commanders are adapting their airstrike tactics, having learned from their previous failed bombing campaign to collapse the country’s energy system — and the recent shipments of Iran’s Fath-360 close-range ballistic missiles to Russia will help them do so.

Ukrainian officials expect Russia will use these missiles, which have a range limit of 120 kilometers, to complement their glide bombs in targeting logistics and communications hubs and ammunition depots in the rear of Ukraine’s front lines. That, in turn, will free Russia up to concentrate its own longer-range missiles on civilian infrastructure — particularly the energy system in a bid to break it.

Stuck in the crosshairs are key substations feeding high voltage electricity to Ukraine’s still functioning nuclear power stations in Rivne, Khmelnytskyi and Yuzhnoukrainsk in southern Ukraine. Take these substations out and the reactors have to be shut down rapidly, or else it could provoke a “nuclear incident,” energy expert Mykhailo Gonchar told POLITICO. And “that’s what the Russians are aiming to do — hit the key substations.”

Currently, 55 percent of Ukraine’s energy is generated by its three operating nuclear power stations — the one in Zaporizhzhia, which is the largest nuclear plant in Europe, was captured by Russia in 2022 and has largely been shut down. Russian missile and drone strikes have destroyed 9 gigawatts of the country’s electrical generating capacity — that’s half of the peak winter consumption — with 80 percent of thermal generation from coal- and gas-fired power plants and a third of hydroelectric production capacity wiped out by bombing.

Last year, Russia tried to isolate these nuclear power plants, focusing on degrading Ukraine’s energy transmission. It targeted distribution to consumers and businesses but was met with characteristic Ukrainian ingenuity and confounded by improvised repairs and rerouting.

Paralyze the three nuclear power stations, though, and it’s game over for Ukraine in the energy war , diminishing its war-fighting capacity, crashing the economy and weakening its position if peace negotiations do ever commence.

And according to officials in Kyiv, it’s the fear of this happening that’s been one of the factors driving the Biden administration to reconsider the restrictions, including on U.S. ATACMS and British Storm Shadows. Washington sat up when Russian airstrikes started targeting the main substations feeding operational electricity to the nuclear power plants in late August. “That concentrated minds,” said one Ukrainian official who asked not to be identified in order to speak freely.

Currently, 55 percent of Ukraine’s energy is generated by its three operating nuclear power stations. | Sergei Supinsky/AFP via Getty Images

Based on a study by Gonchar’s Center for Global Studies that was shared with NATO, a Russian strike on Aug. 26 signaled this switch in tactics. It was massive — one of the biggest airstrikes since the start of the war almost three years ago — and made combined use of both Iranian-supplied Shahed drones and Russian-made cruise and ballistic missiles.

Russia launched 109 drones that day, in an offensive orchestrated to tie up Ukrainian air defenses, while strategic Russian bombers and MiG-31K fighters flying from airfields inside Russia launched 127 cruise and ballistic missiles targeting the nuclear power plants’ electricity-feeding substations. Ukrainian air defenses had success in intercepting them but, nonetheless, there were 32 hits causing significant damage.

“If we aren’t given the opportunity to target deeper inside Russia and reach Russian airfields, our chances [of getting] through this winter aren’t so great,” Gonchar noted grimly. And Volodymyr Kudrytskyi, the former CEO of Ukraine’s national power transmission network Ukrenegro, agrees with that assessment. Speaking to POLITICO, he said there were three factors that would prove critical for Ukraine this winter — the weather, Russian missiles and Ukraine’s ability to strike Russian airfields to interdict strategic bombers and fighters. His greatest fear is that it will turn into a repeat of late 2022, when he truly feared they wouldn’t manage to keep the lights on.

For their part, Ukrainian officials hope the prospect of the energy system’s collapse will ultimately outweigh Washington’s fears of escalation, which have so often unnerved Western allies when deciding what to supply Ukraine with, in what quantities and what Ukraine can do with what it’s given. They’ve been complaining about the West allowing Russia’s threats of retaliation to shape its policy and pursue escalation management based on fear.

Of course, Russian President Vladimir Putin predictably upped his rhetoric last week as news emerged of a possible reconsideration regarding restrictions on the use of Western-supplied long-range missiles inside Russia, saying it would put NATO “at war” with Russia and “significantly change” the nature of the Ukraine conflict. It would amount to “nothing less than the direct involvement of NATO countries,” he menaced.

Following his cue, other senior Russian officials chorused, with Deputy Minister of Defense Alexander Fomin warning that the West is playing a dangerous game, which could lead to a direct military clash between nuclear powers.

But Ukrainian officials argue that such blood-curdling nuclear threats — among the most explicit since the Cold War — are empty, and that each and every time a new weapons system has been supplied or used over the border inside Russia, or fired at targets in occupied Crimea and Donbas, they’ve come to nothing.

Meanwhile, Western officials argue they have little option but to be prudent and take the threats seriously — that they have a duty to do so because the consequences could be catastrophic if they miscalculate. And yet, last week CIA Director William Burns referenced Moscow’s nuclear threats from 2022 as an example of why such statements shouldn’t always be taken at face value: “Putin is a bully. He’s going to continue to sabre rattle . . . We cannot afford to be intimidated by that,” he said at a London conference.

Even so, Burns also stressed no one should underestimate the risk of escalation and admitted his agency genuinely feared Russia might resort to tactical nuclear weapons in 2022. And while Biden and British Prime Minister Kier Starmer brushed off Putin’s threats on Friday, the U.S. administration still appears to be trapped between two worries — fear of how Moscow might respond if Western-supplied missiles start striking Russian airfields, and wreck projects for peace talks to get going, and alarm over the prospect of Ukraine losing power.

Biden critics argue he’s being overly cautious. “Kyiv is getting hit; Kharkiv is getting hit. Ukraine should have the ability to defend itself by targeting military targets in Russia,” Donald Bacon, a U.S. congressman and former U.S. air force general told POLITICO. He expressed disappointment at emerging signs that Biden may agree to Britain’s Storm Shadows being used for attacks on Russian airfields but not American ATACMS, and he blamed the U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan for the caution.

“Time isn’t Ukraine’s friend. And so, you’ve got to give it the ability to use resources to defend itself. I think Russian escalation will be minimal because if they’re going to strike at Poland or the Baltics, I think that opens up a can of worms for Russia that it can’t afford. Who should be living in fear of who? Why are we walking in fear of Putin? Let’s let him fear us,” he added.

Volker concurs. “The president has this Cold War upbringing, a 1980s mindset that says we must avoid war at all costs. I think he’s stuck in that thinking . . . I also think that you have a team of people around him who are incredibly cautious and feel we can’t afford to be in a conflict with Russia [because] we need Russia for other issues as well,” he said.

“They think anytime the U.S. exercises power, it’s bad for the world, so we shouldn’t do it. It’s a completely wrong mindset in my view.”


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ABOUT THE FOLLOWING ACCESS TO “LLAW’S ALL THINGS NUCLEAR” RELATED MEDIA”:

There are 7 categories, with the latest addition, (#7) being a Friday weekly roundup of IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) global nuclear news stories. Also included is a bonus non-nuclear category for news about the Yellowstone caldera and other volcanic and caldera activity around the world that play an important role in humanity’s lives. The feature categories provide articles and information about ‘all things nuclear’ for you to pick from, usually with up to 3 links with headlines concerning the most important media stories in each category, but sometimes fewer and occasionally even none (especially so with the Yellowstone Caldera). The Categories are listed below in their usual order:

  1. All Things Nuclear
  2. Nuclear Power
  3. Nuclear Power Emergencies
  4. Nuclear War
  5. Nuclear War Threats
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Whenever there is an underlined link to a Category media news story, if you press or click on the link provided, you no longer have to cut and paste to your web browser, since this Post’s link will take you directly to the article in your browser.

A current Digest of major nuclear media headlines with automated links is listed below by nuclear Category (in the above listed order). If a Category heading does not appear in the daily news Digest, it means there was no news reported from this Category today. Generally, the three best articles in each Category from around the nuclear world(s) are Posted. Occasionally, if a Post is important enough, it may be listed in multiple Categories.

TODAY’S NUCLEAR WORLD’S NEWS, Sunday, (09/15/2024)

All Things Nuclear

NEWS

Iran says it launched a satellite under program criticized by West over missile fears – WVTF

WVTF

All Things Considered · BBC World Service · Fresh Air · Full Disclosure · Here … nuclear weapons. U.N. sanctions related to Iran’s ballistic …

Russian TV Host Says Putin Already Has ‘Basis to Start a Nuclear War’ – Newsweek

Newsweek

He added: “You say that everything is going according to plan. Pardon me, but the Nazi troops have invaded the territory of the Kursk region. This isn …

India has a new nuclear-capable ballistic missile submarine. But can it catch up with China?

CNN

… all times. Nuclear-powered submarines are complex machines. When things break and need repairing, or just when regular maintenance is needed, the …

Nuclear Power

NEWS

As Biden deliberates, Ukraine’s nuclear plants are increasingly at risk – Politico.eu

Politico.eu

The risk of Ukraine losing the war this winter has pushed Washington and London to reconsider how Kyiv uses Western-supplied long-range missiles, …

The mistaken conventional wisdom about nuclear energy – Pearls and Irritations

Pearls and Irritations

Are nuclear energy risks routinely, colossally overstated creating fear resulting at least in part responsible for its high cost?

Robot begins removing Fukushima nuclear plant’s melted fuel – VOA News

VOA News

Nuclear fuel in the reactor cores melted after the magnitude 9.0 earthquake and tsunami in March 2011 caused the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant’s …

Nuclear Power Emergencies

NEWS

United States Radiation Emergency Medicine Market By Application 2024-2031 – news

meramandsaur.in

In the industrial sector, these systems are used to monitor radiation levels in nuclear power plants, manufacturing facilities dealing with …

Nuclear War

NEWS

Alarm in UK and US over possible Iran-Russia nuclear deal | Keir Starmer – The Guardian

The Guardian

… nuclear bomb. British sources indicated that concerns were aired about … war. Last week in London, Blinken said that US intelligence had …

Putin Aide’s Direct Nuclear War Warning To West, Cites Kursk & Long-Range Weapons …

YouTube

In a chilling warning to the West, Putin’s aide Dmitry Medvedev stated that Russia’s patience with Ukraine’s long-range missile strikes is wearing …

Will Korea be swallowed up in the surging risk of nuclear war?

hani.co.kr

What distinguishes this new US nuclear strategy from the Cold War era is the shift in the primary threat from Russia to China. The strategy also …

Nuclear War Threats

NEWS

As Biden deliberates, Ukraine’s nuclear plants are increasingly at risk – Politico

Politico

But Ukrainian officials argue that such blood-curdling nuclear threats — among the most explicit since the Cold War — are empty, and that each and …

UK foreign minister Lammy plays down Putin threats – France 24

France 24

UK foreign minister Lammy plays down Putin threats. London (AFP) – UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of ” …

Putin Aide’s Direct Nuclear War Warning To West, Cites Kursk & Long-Range Weapons …

YouTube

NATO In Panic After Putin’s On-Camera Threat Of Direct War? UK PM’s 1st Reaction After Missile Move. Hindustan Times New 301K views · 3:48.

Yellowstone Caldera

NEWS

Earth’s supervolcanoes are waking up. Here’s what that means for the planet

BBC Science Focus

Yellowstone has erupted three times in the last 2.1 million years, most recently 640,000 years ago, and each time has left a caldera dwarfing that …

Mag. 4.5 earthquake – 118 km east of Kyzyl, Respublika Tyva, Russia, on Sunday, Sep 15 …

Volcano Discovery

List and interactive map of current and past earthquakes near Yellowstone volcano. … Bromo is one of Indonesia’s most visited volcanoes. It is the …

Mag. 2.2 quake – 12 km S of Fern Forest, Hawaii, on Saturday, Sep 14, 2024, at 09:53 pm …

Volcano Discovery

Yellowstone quakes · Yellowstone quakes · Latest earthquakes under Yellowstone volcano. List and interactive map of current and past earthquakes near …

LLAW’s All Things Nuclear #750, Saturday, (09/14/2024)

“End Nuclear Insanity Before Nuclear Insanity Ends Humanity”

Lloyd A. Williams-Pendergraft

Sep 14, 2024

1

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Dmitry Medvedev

Former Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev

LLAW’s NUCLEAR VIEWS, ISSUES & COMMENTS, Saturday, (09/14/2024)

Following up from the past two days of conjecture, here we have the first responses from Russia about the American and NATO consideration of allowing military movement into Russia (including the US as a member and an ally of other NATO countries) threatening Moscow.

The US is, at least for the moment, caught between a rock and a hard place in its ability to stay reserved, out of direct engagement in the Russia/Ukraine war as it has up to now, or to enter Russia with NATO weapons, possibly including long range missiles, and military personnel.

The question is: How close are we to a nuclear World War III? ~llaw

Former Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, issued a new nuclear response warning on Saturday stating that it would be a decision with “irreversible consequences.”

Amid the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war, tensions between North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) countries and the Kremlin have continued as NATO leaders have increasingly warned that direct conflict with Moscow is a realistic danger. This comes after Putin and senior Russian officials have repeatedly threatened nuclear escalation against Kyiv and its Western partners since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

In a Saturday Telegram post, Medvedev, deputy chairman of the Russian Security Council and former Russian president, spoke about a nuclear response and that it is a “hugely complex decision with irreversible consequences,” but warned that “you can only test someone’s patience for so long.”

“Yet, Russia has been patient. It is obvious that a nuclear response is a hugely complex decision with irreversible consequences. What arrogant Anglo-Saxon dimwits fail to admit, though, is that you can only test someone’s patience for so long,” Medvedev said.

He added: “It will turn out in the end that certain moderate Western analysts were right when they warned: ‘True, the Russians are not likely to use this response, although…it’s still a possibility. Besides, they may use new delivery vehicles with conventional payloads.’ And then—it’s over. A giant blot of molten-grey mass in the place where ‘the mother of Russian cities’ [historical name of Kiev] once stood. Holy s***, it’s impossible, but it happened…”

This comes as the United States and other Western countries have been providing Ukraine with military aid to defend itself against Russia. Earlier this year, the U.S. began supplying Ukraine with longer-range ATACMS (Army Tactical Missile System) missiles.

Ukraine has pressed hard for the U.S. and the United Kingdom to drop their prohibition on American ATACMS and British Storm Shadow missiles to be used to target Russian territory, amid concerns that their use would escalate the conflict.

Kyiv says it needs the long-range weapons to target air bases used by Russia’s warplanes that launch glide bombs against Ukraine often from deep inside Russian territory. Storm Shadow missiles with a range of around 150 miles have been used against Russian targets in occupied Ukrainian territory only.

Newsweek has reached out to the White House and the Russian Defense Ministry via email for comment.

Dmitry Medvedev
Dmitry Medvedev, Russia’s former president now serving as deputy chairman of the country’s Security Council, is seen in Volgograd on March 12. Medvedev, a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, issued a new nuclear… More YEKATERINA SHTUKINA/POOL/AFP/Getty Images

When asked if Washington would drop the restrictions, President Joe Biden said on Tuesday that his administration was “working that out now.”

However, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Wednesday that “most likely, of course, all these decisions have already been made,” by the West regarding dropping the prohibition on long-range weapons, the state news agency Tass reported.

“This can be assumed with a high degree of probability,” Peskov told Russian media. “At the moment, the media is simply conducting such an information campaign to formalize the decision that has already been made.”

If Ukraine were given permission to use weapons for strikes deep into Russia, Peskov said that Moscow would come up with “an appropriate response,” although he added “there is no need to expect some kind of response everywhere.”


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There are 7 categories, with the latest addition, (#7) being a Friday weekly roundup of IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) global nuclear news stories. Also included is a bonus non-nuclear category for news about the Yellowstone caldera and other volcanic and caldera activity around the world that play an important role in humanity’s lives. The feature categories provide articles and information about ‘all things nuclear’ for you to pick from, usually with up to 3 links with headlines concerning the most important media stories in each category, but sometimes fewer and occasionally even none (especially so with the Yellowstone Caldera). The Categories are listed below in their usual order:

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TODAY’S NUCLEAR WORLD’S NEWS, Saturday, (09/14/2024)

All Things Nuclear

NEWS

Putin Ally Issues New Nuclear Warning: ‘Irreversible Consequences’ – Newsweek

Newsweek

Trump Conviction in Georgia Can ‘Only’ Be Stopped By 2 Things—Ex-Prosecutor … all these decisions have already been made,” by the West …

Iran says it launched a satellite under program criticized by West over missile fears

Nevada Public Radio

All Things · Culture · Food and Drink · The Guide · All Things · Culture · Food and … nuclear weapons. U.N. sanctions related to Iran’s ballistic …

Iran says it launched a satellite under program criticized by West over missile fears

WCMU Public Radio

All Things Considered · Destination Out · Fresh Air · Here and Now · Homespun … nuclear weapons. U.N. sanctions related to Iran’s ballistic missile …

Nuclear Power

NEWS

Scotland’s papers: Nuclear power call and NHS ‘faulty kit crisis’ – BBC

BBC

Scotland’s papers: Nuclear power call and NHS ‘faulty kit crisis’. Just now. Share. Share. The Scotsman. The Herald. Daily Record. Scottish Sun.

After Putin ‘Direct War’ Threat, Now Russia Openly Dares West At UNSC – YouTube

YouTube

‘NATO Against Nuclear Power‘: After Putin ‘Direct War’ Threat, Now Russia Openly Dares West At UNSC. 16 views · 3 minutes ago #NATO #West #US

Next-Gen Nuclear Power: Oracle’s Solution for Energy-Hungry AI | OilPrice.com

Oil Price

Oracle chairman Larry Ellison reveals the company’s plan to power future data centers with small modular nuclear reactors, highlighting the …

Nuclear Power Emergencies

NEWS

UN allocates $24 million emergency aid package for Lebanon | News.az

News.az

U.S. sanctions threaten the construction of a nuclear power plant …

Nuclear War

NEWS

United Nations Blasts West’s Long-Range Missile Move Against Russia; Issues Nuclear War Warning

YouTube

Stephane Dujarric, a spokesman for the UN Secretary General, made a big statement after the US and UK allowed Ukraine to use Western weapons to …

Putin’s options for Ukraine missiles response includes nuclear test, experts say | Reuters

Reuters

… nuclear strike on a NATO country. BRITISH BLOWBACK. In the case of Britain, Moscow was likely to declare that London had gone from a hybrid proxy war …

Putin Ally Issues New Nuclear Warning: ‘Irreversible Consequences’ – Newsweek

Newsweek

Amid the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war, tensions between North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) countries and the Kremlin have continued as NATO …

Nuclear War Threats

NEWS

Russia’s Medvedev Threatens Nuke Strike Would Turn Kyiv Into ‘Gray Spot’ On The Map

Radio Free Europe

Former Russian President and current Deputy Security Council Chairman Dmitry Medvedev has hiked Moscow’s threat of the nuclear option.

Biden and Starmer unite against Putin nuclear threat but delay crucial decision on missiles

The Independent

… war. The leaders met under the shadow of nuclear threats from Vladimir Putin and desperate demands from Volodymyr Zelensky, who wants to be …

What to know about North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme – Reuters

Reuters

North Korea says its arsenal of nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles to carry them are necessary to counter threats from the United States and its …

Yellowstone Caldera

NEWS

2.6 Quake 6 km N of Malibu, CA, Sep 13, 2024 04:34 pm (Los Angeles Time)

Volcano Discovery

Its vast caldera has an amazing moonscape and several active vents … Latest earthquakes under Yellowstone volcano. List and interactive map …