Hem
Donald Trump ombord på presidentplanet under sin resa till Asien tidigare i veckan. (Mark Schiefelbein / AP)

Analyser: Trump verkar förvirrad om kärnvapnen

Donald Trump har beordrat nya tester av kärnvapen för första gången på 33 år, men verkar inte riktigt veta vad han pratar om. Det skriver The Atlantics Tom Nichols i en analys.

Inte minst går kärnvapnens funktionalitet att testa alldeles utmärkt utan att genomföra sprängningar, skriver han. Så sker också – och vapnen fungerar utmärkt.

”Det är ingen som överväger en attack mot USA med det vansinniga antagandet att svaret skulle bli ett regn av blindgångare.”

Macarena Vidal Liy skriver i El País att syftet mer troligt är att ”spänna musklerna inför sina rivaler”. Hon håller dock med om att Trumps uttalande är förvirrat.

Inte minst är det märkligt att han säger sig ha gett ordern till Pentagon, trots att det är energimyndigheten som förvarar och hanterar USA:s kärnvapen, skriver hon.

Läs mer

bakgrund
 
Kärnvapentester
Wikipedia (en)
Nuclear weapons tests are experiments carried out to determine the performance of nuclear weapons and the effects of their explosion. Over 2,000 nuclear weapons tests have been carried out since 1945. Nuclear testing is a sensitive political issue. Governments have often performed tests to signal strength. Because of their destruction and fallout, testing has seen opposition by civilians as well as governments, with international bans having been agreed on. Thousands of tests have been performed, with most in the second half of the 20th century. The first nuclear device was detonated as a test by the United States at the Trinity site in New Mexico on July 16, 1945, with a yield approximately equivalent to 20 kilotons of TNT. The first thermonuclear weapon technology test of an engineered device, codenamed Ivy Mike, was tested at the Enewetak Atoll in the Marshall Islands on November 1, 1952 (local date), also by the United States. The largest nuclear weapon ever tested was the Tsar Bomba of the Soviet Union at Novaya Zemlya on October 30, 1961, with the largest yield ever seen, an estimated 50–58 megatons. With the advent of nuclear technology and its increasingly global fallout an anti-nuclear movement formed and in 1963, three (UK, US, Soviet Union) of the then four nuclear states and many non-nuclear states signed the Limited Test Ban Treaty, pledging to refrain from testing nuclear weapons in the atmosphere, underwater, or in outer space. The treaty permitted underground nuclear testing. France continued atmospheric testing until 1974, and China continued until 1980. Neither has signed the treaty. Underground tests conducted by the Soviet Union continued until 1990, the United Kingdom until 1991, the United States until 1992, and both China and France until 1996. In signing the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty in 1996, these countries pledged to discontinue all nuclear testing; the treaty has not yet entered into force because of its failure to be ratified by eight countries. Non-signatories India and Pakistan last tested nuclear weapons in 1998. North Korea conducted nuclear tests in 2006, 2009, 2013, January 2016, September 2016 and 2017. The most recent confirmed nuclear test occurred in September 2017 in North Korea.

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