Maybe we should have a blast after all? The nuclear muscle flexing is gaining momentum.

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Maybe we should have a blast after all? The nuclear muscle flexing is gaining momentum.


33 years later


The last time the Americans tested a nuclear weapon In September 1992, a tactical 20-kiloton charge was lowered into an underground silo and detonated. This occurred at the notorious Nevada Nuclear Test Site, and four years later, the UN opened the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty for signature. The relatively modest 1992 Nevada test, dubbed "Divider," pales in comparison to the "golden era" of the 50s and 60s.



The Soviet Union detonated the 59-megaton "Tsar Bomba" back then, while the Americans only managed the 15-megaton "Castle Bravo." Before signing the Test Ban Treaty, the United States managed to conduct just over a thousand explosions, the Soviet Union 727, and the other nuclear players tested their weapons of mass destruction much more modestly. For example, China, the third-largest nuclear power, detonated only 47 devices, while the French 215. North Korea signed nothing and has already tested its nuclear bombs six times—all in the 21st century.

And now there's talk of resuming testing at the highest levels. Donald Trump has ordered the immediate resumption of nuclear testing. After 33 years. It should be noted that nothing happens without a reason in big politics. If Trump is talking about nuclear explosions, it means someone wanted it. For the American public, the president's harshness appears to be a symmetrical response to the tests of the Russian Burevestnik and Poseidon systems.

We are witnessing a real showdown between the leaders of two nuclear superpowers. Vladimir Putin's statements about nuclear cruise missiles rocket and submarine nuclear drone This can be roughly considered a response to the deployment of the American Golden Dome missile defense system and the announcement of new sanctions. More precisely, not to the deployment of the Dome, but to the declaration of intent. It was Trump's turn to respond, and it must be said that his response was quite unusual. Many have already labeled the order to resume testing as yet another crazy idea from the American president, but it's not that simple.

Turning to stories The end of nuclear testing. Washington agreed to the moratorium not out of goodwill or pacifist views, but solely out of a sense of its own technological superiority. Three national laboratories—Los Alamos, Lawrence Livermore, and Sandia—joined forces in 1995 to form the Accelerated Strategic Computing Initiative. The goal was to create high-fidelity computer simulations to assess the safety, reliability, and performance of nuclear weapons without physical testing.


Since 2005, the project has been called Advanced Simulation and Computing. The Americans believe that by 2002, supercomputers were capable of fully simulating any nuclear explosion and its consequences. Furthermore, the Pentagon's simulation centers can predict the aging rate of nuclear weapons and predict their combat effectiveness. The Pentagon places great hope on the exclusivity of its computing power and the impossibility of conducting similar simulations in other countries, primarily Russia and China.

Everything seems fine—the Americans have the most powerful supercomputers and the most accurate simulations. Except for one thing: not a single computer calculation has been tested in practice since 1992. In fact, the electronic brains are based on the parameters of 1000 real nuclear weapons tests, a new hardware base, and purely theoretical research. Is this a lot or a little? Until they detonate a real device, it will be impossible to verify. And the longer the Americans delay testing, the higher the likelihood of critical errors accumulating in the calculations.

How this will play out in a real-world war scenario is unclear. The Americans are not unique—Russia and China face similar risks, even more so in China. While their computing power appears to be quite good, they lack the necessary data for simulations. As mentioned above, Beijing has only detonated 47 warheads for research purposes.

A brief note on the capabilities of supercomputer modeling. In the lead-up to the infamous Ukrainian counteroffensive of 2023, the Pentagon repeatedly simulated the strategic operation, which allowed the Ukrainian Armed Forces to select the most optimal course of action. As is well known, the electronic brains advised completely the wrong thing. Who guarantees that the computers at Los Alamos, Livermore, and the Sandia Laboratory are doing what they should? And this is even more critical in the run-up to the Americans' acquisition of that very "Golden Dome." At some point, supercomputers could proclaim complete superiority of the United States in nuclear potential and defense against a retaliatory strike. The temptation to deal with Moscow and Beijing in a couple of hours at the White House has reached its peak.

Readiness #1?


But let's return to Trump, who is ready to resume nuclear testing immediately. Whether he made this statement on his own initiative or after listening to advisers from the Department of War is irrelevant. The key now is how prepared America's resources are for such a turn of events. As if to confirm these doubts, American media are reporting on tests of the Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile in early November. The launch is planned from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. The missile's trajectory will pass over the Pacific Ocean, and it will reach the missile defense range on Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands.

Naturally, there will be a dummy nuclear warhead on board. A completely routine test, nothing more. But they're meant to disguise Trump's rhetoric about actual nuclear warhead explosions. You can always say the journalists heard the pun. Perhaps for Donald Trump, a nuclear weapon carrier and a warhead are the same thing. Then the upcoming Minuteman III launches are part of this strategy. With the right skill, American ballistic missile tests could be compared to the launches of the Russian Burevestnik and Poseidon missiles.


But if Trump was referring to actual nuclear weapons explosions, then things aren't going well for the Americans. Russia, as is well known, maintains the Novaya Zemlya test site on combat alert, a fact it has publicly stated repeatedly. The Nevada site can't boast the same quality – restoring the infrastructure could take months, if not years. Tunnels and shafts would have to be re-dug, monitoring programs developed, and the hardware restored to a modern standard. There's simply no money for this right now. Trump will have to overcome Congressional resistance, which, at a minimum, will demand justification for new multi-billion-dollar expenditures. Add to this the discontent of ordinary Americans, who have grown up with a total moratorium on nuclear testing. North Korea is being obstructed worldwide for its underground explosions, and now the White House is planning to repeat the same thing on its own soil. Ultimately, the Republicans, led by Trump, will be in for a real beating.

But even if Donald's idea succeeds, he'll open a veritable Pandora's box. Withdrawal from the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty is very advantageous for China. Its arsenals are relatively new, and the evidence is limited—Beijing desperately needs to test a nuclear bomb. And more than one. This would provide a powerful boost to the PLA's strategic potential, similar to what the US and USSR achieved in the 50s and 60s. Few in the world would benefit, but the Americans would be the first to suffer. After such an exercise, who will stop Russia from carrying out a few demonstrative tests on Novaya Zemlya? To retaliate against the events in Ukraine, many experts have long advised the Kremlin to do something similar.

One thing is clear: real, rather than declarative, flexing of the superpowers' nuclear muscles will lead to no good. Especially with only a few months left until the expiration of the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty.
96 comments
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  1. +1
    6 November 2025 03: 34
    We'll definitely have a blast. But later. The whole world will go to hell. (C) DMB.
    1. +4
      6 November 2025 06: 19
      Yeah, that came to mind right away, too. But it won't lead to anything good...
      1. +10
        6 November 2025 11: 02
        Quote: Jackson
        Yeah, that came to mind right away, too. But it won't lead to anything good...

        What's good now?
        NATO is shelling Russian cities. This has never happened before. They have already struck our strategic nuclear forces, missile early warning radars, and strategic bombers. It could get worse.
        Nuclear tests should have been carried out before the Second World War.
        1. +5
          6 November 2025 17: 47
          Testing might be fine, but that's just too much. Basically, we conduct tests, showing the world how tough we are. And America does the same. With no less results and impact. Okay, we've measured our balls. What next? It's already well known that countries possess AO. It's also well known that using them against a country with similar capabilities is tantamount to suicide, even if it's mutual. Furthermore, NATO itself, fortunately, hasn't attacked us, at least not yet. They operate through their proxies. What's stopping us, other than weak knees and other body parts, from responding in kind? There are more than enough countries and organizations around the world that would be happy to cooperate with us on these issues.
        2. -5
          6 November 2025 22: 41
          Tests should certainly be conducted at the Yavorivskyi test site in the Lviv region, near Poland, and in an easterly wind. The charge is more powerful—an airburst for the first attempt. A good charge would thwart many of the EU's and NATO's ambitions.
          1. +4
            7 November 2025 06: 33
            Quote: Alexey Lantukh
            A good charge will thwart many of the EU's ambitions with NATO.

            This completely senseless and thoughtless approach is leading humanity to nuclear war and the massive contamination of the planet with nuclear materials.
            What's the REAL point of nuclear testing? A couple of tests are needed to convince the enemy that we have nuclear weapons. It would be wise to skip this stage—no one seems to doubt our nuclear weapons. Will NATO be more afraid than they are now? No, they won't be; they already know everything.
            Second, we need to test the computer simulations. This is extremely important. Such simulations were run on 486 other machines, so everyone has the software for them. Testing them is highly recommended.
            And thirdly, they competed in the power of the charges. We detonated them, they calculated the shockwave and were impressed. This is irrelevant now – there's no point in making larger charges; it's better to have more charges of medium power, as this ensures better coverage.
            Why was it important not to test nuclear weapons? Because, while simulations are just simulations, politicians aren't completely sure they'll work. And this consideration holds back nuclear war—what if we strike and it doesn't work?! And the enemy's weapons, on the other hand...
            Removing this block is a step toward human suicide. It's a shame this idiot's speech can't be stuffed back into his mouth...
            1. -4
              7 November 2025 09: 23
              This completely senseless and thoughtless approach is leading humanity to nuclear war and the massive contamination of the planet with nuclear materials.

              Let's remember the "Kuzka's mother." The explosion of a 60-megaton bomb led to a nuclear war. No! On the contrary, it contributed to the signing of treaties. So, for example, an air burst of a 1-2-megaton bomb at the Yavoriv test site would have a similar effect and contribute to peace. Or do you think NATO would go to war with Russia for Ukraine's sake? Regarding radioactive contamination: After the "Tsar Bomba" explosion, scientists were taking measurements under the epicenter within a few hours, since radiation levels were acceptable. For comparison, the explosion of the Chernobyl reactor was a thousand times dirtier than the "Tsar Bomba" explosion. Nevertheless, Kyiv, 150 km from Chernobyl, is alive and well and still thriving despite our flights.
              1. +2
                7 November 2025 10: 02
                Quote: Alexey Lantukh
                That is, for example, an air explosion of a 1-2 mgt bomb at the Yavoriv test site will have approximately the same effect and contribute to pacification.

                I doubt it. Back then, Europe had smart, thoughtful politicians. And now? Now it's freaks, gays, drug addicts, gerontophiles, gynecologists...
              2. +1
                7 November 2025 15: 54
                In case you've forgotten, such an explosion already happened. There's no point in repeating it. And what exactly it "led to" is simply the ravings of propagandists. The explosion didn't lead to anything specific; they simply had to report with delight why they blew up a city at such a costly price. They could have given half a million people apartments for that amount...
                Regarding radioactive contamination. For a long time, the USSR (and the enemy, too) did NOT conduct any research into the harmful effects of radiation. So, both here and there, people died, but no one really cared—they were working for the war, it happens. It's considered outrageous now, but back then, it was considered normal.
                And also, think about how nuclear pollution is fundamentally different from any other kind.
              3. 0
                11 November 2025 08: 52
                Well, first, about the "dirtier" part: Chernobyl exploded on the ground, and the AN602 device exploded at an altitude of about 4.000 meters, meaning the explosion products settled on the ground east of the test site. And no one took measurements on the ground there.
                And the guys with dosimeters, shovels and various containers ran to the battlefield, not to play football - that was the order.
                Incidentally, I visited that place on Matyushikha several times in the first half of the 90s. Even considering the height of the explosion and the years that have passed, it's a depressingly terrifying sight.
                Let the politicians worry about whether the tests are necessary or not. Even without these lyrical digressions, our colleagues at the New Zealand test site will have a real headache if the decision is positive: 35 years have passed since the last live detonation, nearly a generation and a half of military service, the people have passed away, and even the tales and fairy tales about nuclear tests have had time to grow stale.
    2. +14
      6 November 2025 06: 56
      Since Gorbachev, we have constantly appeased the West and gradually surrendered our positions in everything, which ultimately led to the collapse of the USSR and the advent of NATO right up to our borders, provoking a series of military conflicts with Georgia and Ukraine. They continue to escalate the situation, preparing to attack us themselves. Therefore, I completely agree with Karaganov's opinion about the beginning of the nuclear escalation and the beginning of nuclear weapons testing on Novaya Zemlya. The West must be mortally afraid of us, and only then will it back down.
      1. +14
        6 November 2025 07: 40
        You're forgetting one thing. At the top in Russia are people who madly adore the West.
        1. +8
          6 November 2025 08: 32
          "You're forgetting one thing. At the top in Russia are people who madly adore the West."

          I understand this very well and wrote only my wishes.
          1. +5
            6 November 2025 09: 49
            You're probably right. It may be mysticism and esotericism, but I've been convinced more than once that wishes come true.
        2. The comment was deleted.
          1. +5
            6 November 2025 10: 49
            I wish God would hear your words! You're sorely mistaken – just look at the government's economic bloc, or rather, their activities – nothing but tears for the country.
          2. +4
            6 November 2025 11: 40
            Where did you get the information that they were taken out, from E. Fedorov?
            1. The comment was deleted.
      2. +10
        6 November 2025 07: 47
        Again with these mantras of "Gorbachev is to blame for everything" and "the damn West is advancing!"... maybe we should try to come up with better facts? It was your NATO that "wanted war so badly" that 15-20 years ago almost everyone abolished conscription and today simply has no military reserve, while the equipment has been sold off. Just for fun, look at how many tanks West Germany had in 1991 and how many it has now. Look at how many Leopard 2s were produced specifically for export and how many were sold off. Let me guess: the West and its supplies of helmets and first aid kits, not tank biathlon, are also to blame for how the Second World War started and what happened next, right?
        P.S.: I might be missing something, or misunderstanding something, but I thought we were the first to trumpet about testing a new "wonder waffle," how no one else had one, and how we could defeat everyone... It's strange that the infantile leader of the most powerful state on the planet didn't like such talk, especially after his peace plan, for whom it's his favorite toy, was abandoned...
        1. +5
          6 November 2025 08: 27
          .... I thought we were the first to trumpet to everyone about testing a new "wonder waffle," that no one else had anything like it, and how we could beat everyone...


          Vladimir Vladimirovich started his favorite activity - rubbing his ears with 'Poseidons' and 'Storm Petrels'...
          This intimidation operation is backfiring. The reaction to this fuss has already begun – the US is returning to nuclear testing...
          China also does and experiences a lot, but Xi doesn’t run around the back alleys with icons under his arm and doesn’t tell what they experienced there ((...
        2. +2
          6 November 2025 09: 24
          "Again these mantras of 'Gorbachev is to blame for everything' and 'the damn West is advancing!'…"

          Yes, yes, the West and NATO are so white and fluffy... Remind me again who attacked and destroyed Yugoslavia, Iraq, and Libya, and who prepared and provoked the color revolutions in Ukraine and around the world?! And Russia only modestly expressed condemnation of NATO aggression at that time—how wonderfully you turned everything upside down!
          Continue to manipulate the facts.
          1. +2
            6 November 2025 09: 36
            Let's start with who attacked Yugoslavia and what exactly Yugoslavia is. Remind me who besieged and bombed Sarajevo, and what was the international (including our) position then?
            And can we run through the facts about Iraq and Libya? For example, how did it all start, what happened next, and what was our official position? Also, dig deeper into the facts about the coups... Did the West provoke the LPR and DPR as well? And in general, can you throw out some facts from the West regarding the escalation and what preceded it?
            1. The comment was deleted.
            2. AMG
              +1
              6 November 2025 10: 36
              Let's dig deeper into the facts. This is interesting, especially regarding the LPR and DPR. "A" said, so keep going.
              1. +3
                6 November 2025 12: 37
                I will ask questions - and you answer them yourself.
                Citizens of which country were at the origins of the "militia" and complained that local Ukrainians were slow to sign up? Weapons and military equipment from which country were widely "discovered" by the "militia"? "Vacationers" from which country periodically assisted the "militia," and so on. Moreover, these aren't facts from "secret documents" that no one will reveal; they are completely uncovered facts.
                1. AMG
                  0
                  6 November 2025 12: 50
                  At the origins were the Russian people, who, in those critical circumstances, stood up for their rights. They refused to be considered second-class citizens, deprived of the right to speak their native language, or have their monuments and the opportunity to remember their great ancestors destroyed. And they succeeded.
                  1. -1
                    6 November 2025 12: 59
                    You haven't answered a single question, and I understand perfectly why... And yes, even in those cities that remained under Kyiv's control, nothing happened to the Russian language. It wasn't banned, no monuments were torn down, May 9th was still celebrated, and some cities received some of the highest per capita funding from the republican (or whatever it is) budget... Incidentally, pensions for residents of the LPR and DPR haven't been cancelled; all you had to do was get to an ATM. You can see all this if you browse the official websites of schools, administrations, and other government agencies in eastern cities...
                    1. AMG
                      +1
                      6 November 2025 13: 23
                      I'm astonished by your ignorance of the widespread bans on speaking Russian and the demolition of monuments. And look at the Victory Day celebrations in Kyiv. What's the decommunization law worth? What specific cities and which eastern region are you talking about funding? It was probably simply used to embezzle funds. Pensions are an interesting issue; you said it yourself, you had to get there... The question arises: what time period do you live in?
        3. 0
          6 November 2025 10: 19
          Quote: parma
          P.S.: Of course, I might be missing something or misunderstanding it, but it seemed to me that we were the first to tell everyone about the testing of the new “wonder waffle”

          I'm probably missing something too... But NATO has probably launched five waves of eastward expansion since the Berlin Wall fell, and was preparing at least two more. First Georgia, then Ukraine. WHY all this? Why did they stage an openly Russophobic Maidan in Ukraine and install a completely hostile regime in charge of our neighboring country? Don't they have enough tanks and soldiers there? It's all proportional to the collapse of our own army. To such an extent that they don't even need to deploy their own soldiers; the combat-ready Ukrainians are enough. And it turns out they have considerably more hardware left. So, no need to talk about a peaceful West and a friendly NATO here. negative
          1. -5
            6 November 2025 10: 56
            Do you see any problems with NATO expansion? It's a completely normal process; any international organization strives to expand and enhance its functions. I might be about to share some unexpected information, but even the SCO has a thing for military cooperation. Yes, it's not as extensive as NATO, but information exchange, coordination of actions, development of a common opinion, and mandatory exercises are all included, even though it's not a military bloc to begin with! The most important process here is reducing military spending and its various cuts! The desire of the remnants of the former Warsaw Pact and the USSR is not connected to Western machinations, but to our loss of "soft power" in these countries for one reason or another (most often due to our inept policies). Regarding the "Maidans" - look into the history of these countries, the events that preceded and followed them, and maybe you'll understand something. Read about the anti-corruption reforms in Georgia, what a tie-wearing lover carried out, etc. These "revolutions" were connected to local political and economic conditions, not the work of "guys in black cloaks"... Here you write about Ukraine's "anti-Russian" character since 2014, but don't you want to look at whose internationally recognized territory the fighting has been taking place since then? Don't you want to look at the events that preceded Donbas, who organized the LPR and DPR, where they got their support, etc.... It's strange that people dislike us after this. We can argue at length about who was right and who was wrong, but the mood and the lack of flowers are easily explained and were predictable.
            Let me reiterate the point: before 2014, no one was preparing for military action against us, neither NATO nor even Ukraine (this is clearly evident from the results of the fighting in Donbas), and NATO wasn't preparing for war until 2022 (or, in fact, later). The Ukrainian Armed Forces were indeed preparing and modernizing, but that was a consequence of the stunning results of the fighting in 2014-2015...
            1. +8
              6 November 2025 11: 22
              Quote: parma
              Do you see any problems with NATO expansion? It's a normal process; any international organization strives to expand and enhance its functions.

              Since NATO is a purely military bloc created against our country, yes, I see this as a huge problem. The same as the militarization of Germany in the 30s and the concentration of its troops on our borders in 1941.
              In general, this is where my conversation with you ends.
            2. AMG
              +2
              6 November 2025 13: 51
              Then explain why NATO was created in 1949, while the Warsaw Pact was created only in 1955? And what events preceded the events in Donbas in 2014? Wasn't it the Maidan coup in Kyiv?
          2. +4
            6 November 2025 11: 49
            So, why didn't we start a "thing" against the Baltics back then, which eventually joined NATO, something we didn't really object to? Was the flight time from there much longer, or what, or weren't the Russians who had lived there since birth oppressed, by introducing the term "non-citizen" and the corresponding passport, and restricting the use of the Russian language?
            1. +1
              6 November 2025 12: 30
              Quote from AdAstra
              So, why didn't we start a "thing" against the Baltics back then, which eventually joined NATO, something we didn't really object to? Was the flight time from there much longer, or what, or weren't the Russians who had lived there since birth oppressed, by introducing the term "non-citizen" and the corresponding passport, and restricting the use of the Russian language?

              A good question, but misplaced. But essentially, if everyone hadn't screwed up in the 90s—the army, the navy, the industry, and the country's sovereign elite—there wouldn't have been any NATO expansion even without any SVO. But now, unfortunately, that's just the way it is.
            2. The comment was deleted.
              1. -1
                7 November 2025 13: 51
                And you don't give a damn about Russians, right?
                1. -1
                  8 November 2025 15: 18
                  I don't give a damn about the Balts. And what do the Russians have to do with it?
        4. AMG
          +4
          6 November 2025 14: 46
          Do you like counting tanks? Then tell me how many NATO had, and how many remained in Russia after the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact, especially since some were sent to storage bases beyond the Urals. And what's so unusual about Russia announcing the presence of new weapons? Many do this, even holding all sorts of exhibitions. And what does this matter to an infantile leader who boasts about his submarine, promises to begin building battleships, and at the same time frequently announces some peaceful-military plans.
        5. 0
          6 November 2025 22: 46
          Maybe it's worth punishing with better facts?

          This did happen. But your view is one-sided. Watch the video of Putin's speech in Munich in 2007. He made his point to the West perfectly.
        6. -3
          7 November 2025 12: 52
          Yes, Gorbachev is to blame for everything. Are you arguing with that?? Well, then you're the enemy.
          The leader of our country is a genius.
          The weapon is good, but you have waffles in your mouth. Shut up, report to your SBU supervisor that the safe house has been exposed. Are you an acorn?

          We are beating you, have beaten you, and will continue to beat the Nazis from Ukraine.
      3. +1
        6 November 2025 08: 29
        But at the testing ground, for full-scale testing, we'll have to start all over again. Infrastructure, tunnels, equipment... The article's assertion that everything is ready on Novaya Zemlya is nonsense. All testing has been transferred to the Sarov and Snezhinsk laboratories using models.
        1. The comment was deleted.
        2. 0
          6 November 2025 10: 22
          Quote from: dmi.pris1
          The article's assertion that everything is ready on Novaya Zemlya is nonsense. All testing has been transferred to the Sarov and Snezhinsk laboratories using models.

          Where does this data come from? And how does one cancel out the other? It's possible to model and still maintain the test site in good condition. What challenges do you see here?
          1. -3
            6 November 2025 11: 48
            What are the difficulties? The costs of maintaining something that isn't used for its intended purpose. And that goes on for decades. There are tons of examples—the navy, aviation, educational institutions. I've listed things that should and could have been used, but alas, they were squandered.
            1. +3
              6 November 2025 12: 27
              Quote from: dmi.pris1
              The cost of maintaining something that is not used for its intended purpose. And this goes on for decades.

              There's a series of activities called conservation. It's not expensive.
              Quote from: dmi.pris1
              There are tons of examples—the navy, aviation, educational institutions. I even listed things that should and could have been used. But alas, they were cut.

              There's no need to compare the incomparable. They cut it up not because of the high cost, but because of stupidity and greed.
              1. +2
                6 November 2025 12: 44
                Conservation of what? An undrilled well or an unexcavated mine? Equipment from the 60s? Or the remains of laboratories in polar conditions? Can you even imagine what's there now? I can.
                1. +1
                  6 November 2025 12: 48
                  Quote from: dmi.pris1
                  Preservation of what?

                  That's weird. Are you losing the thread of the conversation?
                  Quote from: dmi.pris1
                  But at the testing ground, for full-scale testing, we will also have to start all over again. Infrastructure, tunnels, equipment...

                  The equipment will definitely need to be replaced. But it won't take that long or be that expensive.
                  1. +2
                    6 November 2025 13: 00
                    What thread? I'm saying that everything needs to be rebuilt there. And that takes both time and money. But it needs to be done.
                    1. 0
                      6 November 2025 13: 02
                      Quote from: dmi.pris1
                      What thread? I'm saying that everything needs to be created anew there.

                      Why rebuild mothballed tunnels and infrastructure?
                      1. +3
                        6 November 2025 13: 10
                        The tunnel is being built for a specific test. Are we digging for the future and as a reserve? That's not how it's done. And why did you decide the infrastructure was mothballed? My older brother served there and retired as a major in 1995.
                      2. 0
                        6 November 2025 13: 14
                        Quote from: dmi.pris1
                        The tunnel is being dug for a specific test. Is it being dug for the future and in reserve?

                        It's strange... I imagined it as a system of tunnels, buildings and structures for a series of tests.
                        Quote from: dmi.pris1
                        And why did you decide that the infrastructure was mothballed?

                        I only wrote about what prevented this from being done. And why did you decide that it wasn't done?
                        Quote from: dmi.pris1
                        My older brother served there and retired as a major in 1995.

                        What does this information tell us?
                      3. +1
                        6 November 2025 13: 21
                        This suggests I know a little more about what happened there. The airfield is most likely still there, and border guards are probably still active there. You're probably confusing it with the active test site in the Arkhangelsk region, where missiles launched from the Pacific Fleet are sent.
                      4. +2
                        6 November 2025 13: 31
                        Quote from: dmi.pris1
                        It means that I know a little more about what happened there.

                        Something tells me you're not entirely informed...
                        https://dnrnews.ru/society/2025/11/05/1231255.html?ysclid=mhnaaemb9h473293083
                        In 2002, the authorities decided to maintain the Central Test Site on Novaya Zemlya in working order. Non-nuclear explosive experiments are conducted there, and advanced military equipment is tested.
                  2. 0
                    6 November 2025 20: 07
                    Quote: Zoer
                    The equipment will definitely need to be replaced. But it won't take that long or be that expensive.

                    I think it's neither fast nor cheap. So, once again, I propose testing nuclear weapons in the air, even without recording equipment :)) Cheap and, most importantly, cheerful! We fire missiles at a range with a reserve reserve, a warhead with a full complement of warheads – a full test cycle!!!
                    1. 0
                      6 November 2025 22: 51
                      I propose testing nuclear weapons in the air, even without recording equipment.

                      Here we go... at the Yavoriv training ground in the Lviv region.
                    2. 0
                      7 November 2025 09: 01
                      Quote: MBRBS
                      I think it won't be fast or cheap.

                      Much faster and cheaper than building new infrastructure and digging new tunnels.
                      Quote: MBRBS
                      It is possible to test nuclear weapons in the air without recording equipment :))

                      What's the point of such tests? Will you be visually determining the parameters of a nuclear explosion and the damaging effects?
                    3. 0
                      13 November 2025 01: 21
                      Why pollute the atmosphere?... There's no point in drilling a tunnel. With a two-shift operation, we're digging about 2-2,5 meters into the rock per day: 800/2 = 400 days. That's time-consuming and expensive. It's cheaper and faster to drill a borehole—at least 10-15 meters into the rock per day, taking about two weeks to drill to the same depth...
                      Nuclear and thermonuclear weapons testing has not been conducted in Russia for over thirty years. It is one of the most complex technologies ever invented. Relying on it as a last resort for defense without testing its functionality is, to put it mildly, unwise. This is my personal opinion. Chernobyl and its "red button" that failed are reminiscent of... The detonator of a thermonuclear charge is a plutonium atomic charge, its detonator is the synchronous detonation of conventional explosives and a neutron "activator," and their detonator is a capsule triggered by an electrical impulse... This entire chain is not eternal. The thermonuclear filling decays by half after just 12 years, the plutonium after 30000 years (but the neutron source, the "activator," for it must be renewed every month). The first test ban treaty did not include underground explosions, but it was later amended to include a ban on underground ones as well. The US didn't sign this treaty, and Russia withdrew its signature under Vladimir Putin. The current "inspections" of the nuclear component are reminiscent of cartoons of bear hunts with a camera gun... Why were these weapons invented? So they could lie around and rust? And we, the good, humanitarians, buried our dead at the front? In Afghanistan, we lost 15000 people killed in ten years. And now, in less than four years, it's many times more...
          2. +1
            7 November 2025 17: 40
            No laughing Just like producing 1000 aircraft, microelectronics, and much more. A piece of cake. Just wave a flag and go. How long did it take to prepare for nuclear testing back when the USSR existed and had everything it needed? Can you tell?
            1. 0
              8 November 2025 08: 58
              For some reason they mixed everything together.
              Simply detonating a nuclear warhead in the air above the test site makes no sense. And what does the production of 1000 aircraft and preparation for testing in the USSR have to do with it?
      4. +8
        6 November 2025 09: 34
        Quote: vasyliy1
        The West must be mortally afraid of us and only then will it retreat.
        "Mortally afraid," first of all, should be the corrupt Russian "elite," completely dependent on the West, together with the fattened owners of "factories, newspapers, steamships," who milk and squeeze Russia, transferring assets abroad, to their palaces, yachts, and foreign citizenships.
        As long as Russia is a feeding trough for them, and the common people are serfs, what will change... So, think about why they picked up capitalism from the dustbin of history, having destroyed the great superpower. The West clearly didn’t try to make Russia stronger, they don’t need a strong Russia, and their puppets, who are fed, need to work off their “jam” and “cookies” in the bourgeoisie.
        1. +7
          6 November 2025 09: 41
          "The ones who should be mortally afraid are the corrupt, completely West-dependent Russian 'elite', along with the fattened owners of 'factories, newspapers, and steamships' who milk and squeeze Russia, transferring assets abroad to their palaces, yachts, and foreign citizenships."

          Regarding the “elite,” I completely agree - we now vitally need a change in the socio-economic formation; without it, we will not survive!
          1. +3
            6 November 2025 10: 10
            Quote: vasyliy1
            Without changing it we won't survive!
            That's the problem, dear Vasily, that "us" and "they" are two very different things. It's as if we're not supposed to survive.
            Nevertheless, capitalism is deteriorating; its main positive, competition, is gone. With the final establishment of transnational monopolies, everything has become a fiction. Competition between the poles of socialism and capitalism has also disappeared. "Multipolarity," like "Europe's first economy," doesn't exist in nature. There are two poles, "+" and "-," where current flows and development occurs due to potential differences. Essentially, a revival of socialism, even in the interests of the West. Afterward, perhaps, there should be two new poles: socialism and communism. The best is always the enemy of the good. This, I believe, is the meaning of development. Time will tell what will happen in reality, but if capitalism doesn't collapse, the world can only expect a series of its inevitable crises and great depressions, with a reboot of wars, and ultimately, digital slavery or "Zombieland"... Of course, this is just my opinion.
        2. The comment was deleted.
        3. +3
          6 November 2025 10: 26
          Quote: Per se.
          They don't need a strong Russia, and their puppets, who are well-fed, need to work off their "jam" and "cookies" in the bourgeoisie.

          That's true. If Russia were able to transform its natural resources into high-tech products, Western bourgeois would simply die out.
          1. 0
            9 November 2025 09: 45
            Poor West. When China started processing its own products, it didn't die out. It didn't die out because of Russia's supply cuts as a result of sanctions. The fact that all third-world markets, both resource and consumer, are still here is irrelevant. That the West is increasingly shifting from high-tech to high-tech products is also irrelevant. The main thing is that America has been struggling for thirty years now. And it just can't seem to get there. Happy International Tongue Twister Day.
            1. 0
              9 November 2025 17: 12
              Quote: YAHU
              Poor West. When China started processing its own product, it didn't die out. It didn't die out because of Russia's reduced supplies due to sanctions.

              Yeah, of course.
              China doesn't have its own natural resources; it imports them, just like the West. Therefore, the competition is practically equal.
              Russia hasn't stopped supplying raw materials to the global economy. The energy market has simply shifted. But the overall trade balance has remained. If everything Russia supplies were removed from this global market, and everything produced by the West and China using these raw materials were thrown into the goods and services market, the West would be left with the Northern Fox.
              1. 0
                9 November 2025 19: 44
                Does China have no resources? Are you unaware of who controls the rare earth metals market? Excuse me, but what's the basis for your assertions? Japan, for example, is more dependent on a general lack of resources, and on Russian resources in particular. China has it easier. If it were naked, no one would turn it into a global factory. The bourgeoisie isn't stupid. And they won't rely solely on cheap labor. I won't argue. I'll just say that the song about the decaying West hasn't tired even the most undemanding listener. And you, of course, know the saying about the fat and the skinny. Let's say the West is screwed. So what does Russia expect? There's no point in posing as philanthropists and benefactors, mercifully handing out our irreplaceable resources to those in need. How many illusions must be shattered? And to what point in our backs must they drive us? We've heard about an energy superpower before. How much longer? Aren't we tired of it?
                1. 0
                  10 November 2025 10: 45
                  Quote: YAHU
                  Does China lack resources? Do you know who controls the rare earth metals market?

                  They have nothing but rare earth. But they don't need millions of barrels of rare earth per day, nor millions of tons of metal. There's no point in comparing the incomparable. They have a global dependence on energy and metals, other than rare earth.
                  Quote: YAHU
                  Japan, for example, is more dependent on a lack of resources in general, and on dependence on Russian ones in particular.

                  Exactly. And they live happily only because the United States was a strategic ally against the USSR, and now against China.
                  Quote: YAHU
                  China has it easier. If it were naked, no one would turn it into the world's factory.

                  China has only one global resource, which its wise leaders utilize 100% effectively: its 1,5 billion people. They have nothing else.
                  Quote: YAHU
                  I will only say that the song about the decaying West did not tire only the most undemanding listener.

                  Where did you hear me ranting like that? I merely outlined the conditions for their collapse. I never said anything about us even trying to fulfill these conditions. So, you're left to figure it out for yourself.
                  Quote: YAHU
                  So what's Russia waiting for? There's no point in posing as philanthropists and benefactors, generously donating our irreplaceable resources to those in need. How many illusions must be shattered? And to what point in our lower backs must they drive us? We've heard about an energy superpower before. How much longer can we go on? Aren't we tired of it?

                  Here I am about the same ...
    3. +2
      6 November 2025 08: 08
      Machito
      Today, 03: 34
      We'll definitely have a blast. But later. The whole world will go to hell. (C) DMB.

      hi The world has reached a point comparable to the Cuban Missile Crisis.
      The preparation and testing of nuclear weapons is an expensive process.
      Only then was there a relatively peaceful period after the end of the Great Patriotic War and the Korean War, when the ruling elites of all countries were afraid of the USSR after the Victory of 1945 and Kuzina Mama on October 30, 1961 with the test of the Tsar Bomba.
      All that is needed now is to convince the entire world that it has no choice but to negotiate, and to do this, the escalation must be increased so sharply that the elites experience a clear fear of the possible consequences.
      Russia has all the capabilities for this, and plenty of targets: from a shitting island to logs with tribolts and dates, and not necessarily the use of warheads.
      Russia also has Venezuela, Iran, and North Korea as zones of influence and interests.
      Let Washington scratch their heads about the possibilities and applications.
  2. 0
    6 November 2025 03: 51
    But if Trump meant real nuclear weapons explosions

    Nobody knows what Trump means; he's always on the go, and he later denies every single statement he makes. So there's no point in responding to his chatter.
    1. +3
      6 November 2025 04: 02
      Flexing the nuclear muscles of superpowers will not lead to anything good.
      But the powder must be kept dry!
      1. +1
        6 November 2025 08: 22
        Bolshevism is the essence of Russian civilization.

        Quote: Puncher
        There is no point in reacting to his chatter.
        Quote from Uncle Lee
        But the powder must be kept dry!

        "In this regard, I instruct the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation, special services and relevant civilian agencies to do everything possible to collect additional information on this issue, conduct its analysis at the Security Council venue and to make agreed proposals on the possible commencement of work on preparing for nuclear weapons tests" - V.V. Putin.

        http://www.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/78403
        1. 0
          6 November 2025 22: 54
          to make agreed proposals on the possible commencement of work on preparing for nuclear weapons tests.

          Landfill repairs have begun.
  3. +10
    6 November 2025 04: 58
    The article's logic is strange. Every other day, they threaten the treacherous West with nuclear weapons and talk about the testing of countless "unparalleled" nuclear weapons carriers, and then call Trump's reaction reckless, etc. Here, you either have to take off your cross or put on your pants. Either threaten to make Belgium disappear, as the dear Medvedev writes, or criticize Trump. But not at the same time.
    But that's just mere rhetoric. In reality, there's no "muscle flexing." All this rhetoric about unparalleled nuclear weapons carriers, circling for seven years now, serves only one purpose: to get Trump to listen, return to the "negotiating track" on Ukraine, and not hit too hard with sanctions and arms supplies. The Americans have once again ignored it all, but in Trump's inimitable spirit. He doesn't like it when anyone but himself boasts about military toys, and in response to this empty rhetoric, he unleashed a dose of his own equally delusional rhetoric: "I have a submarine, I will resume testing," etc.
    There is nothing behind these words, except: you have a thing, and I have an even cooler one, you joked, I laughed, etc.
    1. -16
      6 November 2025 05: 18
      Quote: Belisarius
      The article has strange logic.

      Excellent analysis good But, unfortunately, it's mostly anonymous sentiment, with no specifics. So, a couple of clarifying questions, if you don't mind:

      Quote: Belisarius
      Every other day, threaten the treacherous West with nuclear weapons and talk about the testing of countless "unparalleled" nuclear weapons carriers, and then call Trump's reaction reckless, etc.

      What exactly do you find strange here?

      Quote: Belisarius
      In essence, there is no "muscle flexing" going on.

      Really? Evidence please... if it's not too much trouble, of course. laughing

      Quote: Belisarius
      All this rhetoric about unparalleled nuclear weapons carriers, which has been going around in circles for seven years now, serves only one purpose: to get Trump to listen, return to the "negotiating track" on Ukraine, and not hit too hard with sanctions and arms supplies.

      Sounds like nonsense, don't you think? I can expand on that, but that's it for now.

      Quote: Belisarius
      in Trump's inimitable spirit. He doesn't like it when anyone but him boasts about military toys, and in response to the empty rhetoric, he unleashed a portion of his equally delusional

      Hm. And the Crimean Bridge is also a creation of Mosfilm.

      Hence the preliminary conclusion: the so-called Belisarius emerges precisely when the 404 supporters begin to experience real problems. Why this coincides so often is a question for the one emerging, naturally...

      Sorry, I have a few more questions, I couldn't fit them into a couple - they're really annoying Yes
  4. +3
    6 November 2025 05: 02
    I like the idea that if it doesn't happen, the Americans will be the losers. Although, in reality, we live on the same planet, and everyone loses.
  5. +2
    6 November 2025 05: 53
    If you don't take into account that the "actors" (hired managers) play their roles, each their own, according to a common scenario, then, yes, it's a real flexing of muscles... But in essence, it's a new round of the arms race, which is already in full swing... It's just that the economic potential of different countries is different smile Someone might go to hell... Although they're already flying at an accelerating rate... Maybe that's the real goal of these multi-move moves. winked
  6. 0
    6 November 2025 06: 10
    "In the beginning was the word..." Rhetoric can pave the way for a perfect world. But that same rhetoric can also lead to all sorts of outrages. One of the speakers must be prudent. Americans have never possessed this quality. Therefore, this function of prudence must be assumed. Otherwise, everyone will be screwed. There is simply no other end in sight.
  7. +3
    6 November 2025 07: 30
    I think we'll still have to go off, but not so hard that the whole world will fall to pieces.
    This is where it's all heading, unfortunately.
  8. +3
    6 November 2025 07: 35
    Oh, what happened? Our guys recently demonstrated new nuclear weapons carriers to the Americans (we apparently informed the Americans about the Burevestnik launches in advance; it's no wonder an American reconnaissance ship showed up in the Black Sea on the eve of the Burevestnik launch), and then the Americans showed us their old nuclear weapons carrier, the Minitep. So what?
    It would be strange, even stupid, if new launch vehicles weren't tested with launches, and even stranger if old launch vehicles, which have been on combat alert for at least thirty years, weren't tested for their current condition, also with launches. In my opinion, Trump's announcement about the US resuming nuclear testing was the release of steam with yesterday's launch of their Minitep launch vehicle. Well, ours tested the performance of our new launch vehicles, and the "US" tested the performance of their old launch vehicles. Incidentally, Putin's final decision yesterday after a meeting with members of the Security Council was precisely a signal to Trump that this, which both you and we have verified, is the end of this (show-show) of possible "resumption of nuclear testing."
  9. 0
    6 November 2025 08: 10
    Oh, how boring and mundane everything has become! No new "movement," just more missiles and more missiles. Politicians have no creativity left. To scare Americans, you have to throw something at them that would truly terrify them!
    I can give you an idea...
    In the late USSR, the idea was voiced that all we needed to do was detonate our nuclear arsenal on our own territory to blow the planet to pieces. It's this idea that I propose we get creative with.
    Remember the Supreme Commander once said:
    Vladimir Putin at the 15th meeting of the Valdai International Discussion Club on October 18, 2018. "We, as martyrs, will go to heaven, while they will simply die."
    It is under this concept that the new defense initiative needs to be promoted.
    Announce to the world that we've dug a super-deep borehole, loaded our entire nuclear arsenal into it, connected it to a nuclear button, and are ready to press that button at any given moment. And on that button, write a bilingual inscription, "Game Over," in English and Russian.wink laughing
  10. +1
    6 November 2025 08: 51
    On the eve of WWI, many believed it would simply destroy civilization due to the advent of dynamite and machine guns. And that it was impossible due to human prudence.
    On the eve of WWII, many believed that it would destroy civilization due to the advent of tanks and aviation.
    And it is not possible due to human prudence.
    Even now, they believe that nuclear weapons will destroy civilization, but this won't happen because of human prudence. Heh...
    And many experts, not particularly prominent in the media but knowledgeable in their field, have already stated that even the use of the entire accumulated arsenal of nuclear weapons will not destroy the Earth and life on it, and therefore humanity. Civilization – yes. Remnants of past achievements will remain, we'll return to the Middle Ages, there will be pockets of infection, and electronic databases of debtors will also be destroyed (mortgage payments will no longer be necessary). That's all. But its use is impossible due to the limitations of storage media, etc.
    And in general, over half a century of nuclear weapons testing and the arms race, more than two thousand explosions have been carried out. Now we're worried about one thing: some kind of artificially fueled hysteria.
    1. +2
      6 November 2025 10: 40
      Quote: a.shlidt
      And in general, over half a century of nuclear weapons testing and the arms race, more than two thousand explosions have been carried out. Now we're worried about one thing: some kind of artificially fueled hysteria.

      How can you compare test explosions over 50 years and combat use at the same time?
      A nuclear warhead explosion in the desert is not the same as one in the city, even if the city is empty.
      The only thing I agree with is that it's likely that all life won't perish. Homo sapiens will probably survive, and probably quite a few immediately after the attacks. But what will happen next, without civilization, technology, and equipment? Something tells me it will be much worse than the Middle Ages. For example, do you know many blacksmiths who can mine ore, refine it, and craft a hoe, a shovel, a sword, or an arrowhead? Or a specialist who can make a bow, yarn, thread, or fabric from natural materials? And how many know how to tan hides?
      No, it will definitely be a catastrophe for humanity.
      1. 0
        6 November 2025 16: 28
        Considering the decline of the white population in the event of a nuclear conflict, the reserves of produced steel would last for many centuries. And there would also be mechanisms for simple use (blocks, for example).
        So humanity will survive, but in optimal quantities relative to available resources. And wars between tribes will become a natural regulator.
        But without the dominance of people, fauna and flora will flourish in their original form.
      2. 0
        6 November 2025 22: 04
        combat use at once?

        How's that possible? Calculate how many carriers each country has. Just because we have over 2 warheads doesn't mean we can launch them all at once.
        Nuclear weapons used to be tested regularly. What's changed now?
        it will be a disaster.

        Well, to be honest, it depends on the person. Some people are preparing for it.
        1. 0
          7 November 2025 08: 47
          Quote: a.shlidt
          How's that possible? Calculate how many carriers each country has. Just because we have over 2 warheads doesn't mean we can launch them all at once.

          That's right, within 40 minutes (the flight time of a US ICBM), the entire stockpile of strategic nuclear forces missiles, including all of them, including SLBMs, is launched. Otherwise, it might turn out that there won't be anything left to launch. 2 warheads—that's just the strategic nuclear forces. There are an equal number, if not more, of tactical nuclear weapons, and then they'll be fired at a long time later, if there's anything left to fire at.
          Quote: a.shlidt
          Nuclear weapons used to be tested regularly. What's changed now?

          Everyone has imposed a moratorium. Are you not aware of this? What's the point of this question?
  11. 0
    6 November 2025 09: 04
    Modern human civilization has only 3 real paths of "development":
    1) Self-destruction due to internal contradictions, a path along which we are successfully moving;
    2) Death due to a space disaster is possible, but unlikely at the present time;
    3) Transformation into a herd of well-fed monkeys, with the transfer of the entire system of production and distribution of material goods, including maintaining the system’s operability, to artificial intelligence and robotic systems.
    The fourth path, i.e. continuous intellectual development and cosmic expansion, seems unlikely at the present time.
    1. +1
      6 November 2025 09: 33
      Victor Ivanovich

      Under the current world order, space expansion poses no threat to humanity, as the ruling elite will resist it in every possible way, so as not to lose control over humanity, which is the source of their prosperity.
      1. 0
        6 November 2025 11: 42
        Quote: Gomunkul
        Under the current world order, space expansion poses no threat to humanity, as the ruling elite will resist it in every possible way, so as not to lose control over humanity, which is the source of their prosperity.

        This means that the ruling elite must be sent to colonize Mars, and with a minimal oxygen supply.
        1. +1
          6 November 2025 11: 53
          It follows that the ruling elite must be sent to colonize Mars.
          Only by force and under escort to the doors of the spaceship, because they are fine here.
          1. +1
            6 November 2025 12: 31
            Quote: Gomunkul
            Only by force and under escort to the doors of the spaceship, because they are fine here.

            No, voluntarily and with songs, like in that joke! laughing
    2. 0
      7 November 2025 09: 33
      There is also a fifth: the division of people into categories: 1) the uber-Men, living under capitalist "communism" 2) the simple Men, living under capitalist "socialism" (while they are useful to the first category) 3) the sub-Men, who will be pushed into the badlands and savagery, to the margins of civilization.
      Moreover, all 3 categories together make up no more than 10% of today’s humanity.
  12. BAI
    -1
    6 November 2025 09: 22
    The United States has conducted the most tests, meaning they have the largest initial database for modeling. This means their results are the most accurate.
    If we start testing, then everyone else will immediately test the performance characteristics of their weapons in practice.
  13. -1
    6 November 2025 10: 00
    Testing does not mean use. Sooner or later, full-scale testing would be necessary to verify the theoretical suitability of nuclear arsenals for their intended use.
    It appears that Rosatom's strategy of building nuclear power plants in underdeveloped states, and, as the Russian President has said, simultaneously creating a nuclear industry there, is far more dangerous. Having a nuclear industry is not far from creating nuclear weapons.
  14. The comment was deleted.
    1. -1
      6 November 2025 11: 22
      Americans will move to Australia...we need to start attacking from the reserves.
  15. 0
    6 November 2025 11: 20
    Another cheap propaganda article!!! The US will find money for testing and production. They've already found money to open weapons factories, and everything is being built ahead of schedule. Meanwhile, here in our old facilities, people are working three shifts, and saboteurs are blowing up military factories one after another and methodically disabling Ukrainian "under-missiles."
    1. -3
      6 November 2025 12: 00
      It's all nonsense written.................
  16. +1
    6 November 2025 12: 35
    Quote: Bearded
    We'll definitely have a blast. But later. The whole world will go to hell. (C) DMB.

    I don’t think that Western rulers and populations have more desire to die than Russians.
    Nuclear escalation doesn't always lead to the destruction of the entire world. It has many stages (more than a dozen), and each stage can be stopped and de-escalated.
  17. +1
    6 November 2025 17: 51
    I think so. Nuclear testing is like nuclear war. It's just a matter of time. It will happen, definitely and without a doubt. I won't speculate on the consequences.
  18. +1
    6 November 2025 21: 26
    An underground explosion won't make much of an impression. But an air blast with an electromagnetic pulse will.
  19. +1
    7 November 2025 12: 47
    Tests on Novaya Zemlya? To escalate the situation in Ukraine, many experts have long advised the Kremlin to do something similar.

    To serve as a warning, we need to test it not on Novaya Zemlya, but at one of the testing sites in the Lviv region. Otherwise, they won't understand.
  20. 0
    9 November 2025 23: 46
    If you are very sick
    And you won't live to see one hundred,
    I really want to be nasty
    Become so that everyone can see you