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Trump tweets to begin the nuclear arms race - for the first time in decades
Donald Trump stunned nuclear experts Thursday by proclaiming in a tweet that the U.S. should "expand its nuclear capability," something no president has called for in decades.
While President Barack Obama has proposed a $500 billion plan to modernize the aging U.S. nuclear triad, no mainstream voices are arguing to increase the numbers of nuclear weapons beyond the 4,500 the U.S. currently possesses, several experts told NBC News.
"The thrust of U.S. nuclear policy for decades now has been to trim the fat off the U.S. nuclear arsenal," said James Acton, co-director of the Nuclear Policy Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. "At a certain point, you are just making the rubble bounce higher."
Trump tweeted, "The United States must greatly strengthen and expand its nuclear capability until such time as the world comes to its senses regarding nukes."
"Can a tweet start an arms race? This one may just have done that," said Joseph Cirincione, president of Ploughshares Fund, a global security foundation.
Trump spokesman Jason Miller said in a statement to NBC News that "President-elect Trump was referring to the threat of nuclear proliferation and the critical need to prevent it — particularly to and among terrorist organizations and unstable and rogue regimes. He has also emphasized the need to improve and modernize our deterrent capability as a vital way to pursue peace through strength."
Miller did not respond to a follow-up question asking whether that meant Trump was not, in fact, calling for more nuclear weapons.
Trump campaign manager and soon-to-be White House counselor Kellyanne Conway later Thursday said on MSNBC's The Rachel Show that the president-elect was "not trying to change policy" but rather putting rogue nations "on notice."
The U.S. can deliver nukes by bomber, intercontinental missile and submarine — the three legs of the so-called nuclear triad. Under Obama, the Pentagon has been moving forward with a hugely expensive program to modernize many aspects of the aging weapons and delivery systems.
Some experts question whether the U.S. needs all legs of the triad anymore. One who has raised that issue is James Mattis, the retired Marine general who is Trump's choice for defense chief.
"You should ask, 'Is it time to reduce the triad to a diad, removing the land-based missiles?'" he told the Senate Armed Services Committee in January 2015, as the AP reported earlier this month.
Keith Payne, a former Defense Department official and longtime nuclear expert, argues that modernization is badly overdue. But even Payne doesn't argue for expanding the number of nuclear weapons or launchers, he told NBC News in an interview. He declined to say whether he was advising the Trump team.
Acton called Trump's tweet unprecedented, not only for its content, but for the notion that a president-elect would make a pronouncement about something so sensitive as nuclear weapons policy over a medium as casual as Twitter.
"Nuclear policy is not made on the hoof," he said. "Because of the extraordinary implications, it is always the result of serious interagency review and careful deliberations. Allies are consulted, presidential statements pored over, words checked and double checked, crafted and re-crafted."
But Trump doesn't appear to do business that way.
"I have no doubt in my mind that Trump's Twitter feed is monitored extremely closely by foreign governments and that this will cause significant heartache," Acton said.
White House Slams Trump's Nuclear Proposal as 'Catastrophic"
Trump Confused About Nukes?
Trump's comments during the campaign raised questions about the depth of his understanding of U.S. nuclear capabilities — and of nuclear weapons in general.
In a debate, Trump agreed with moderator Lester Holt of NBC News that nuclear weapons are of paramount importance to the U.S. — but then called for more nations to join the nuclear club.
He ruled out a "first strike," but he also revealed a willingness to use nukes and a misunderstanding of the high-stakes balancing act the nuclear superpowers have pursued for decades.
"I think that once the nuclear alternative happens, it's over," Trump said, referring to the use of nuclear weapons. "At the same time, we have to be prepared. I can't take anything off the table. Because you look at some of these countries, you look at North Korea, we're doing nothing there."
Trump also seemed confused about the terminology. He responded to a question from Holt about "first use" with a statement about a "first strike."
"First strike" refers to a nuclear power initiating nuclear combat and landing the first blow against a nuclear rival, while "first use" is an unofficial U.S. prohibition on the use of nuclear weapons against enemies who don't have nuclear capability.
During the Republican primaries in December 2015, Trump appeared not to know what the nuclear triad was, dodging a question about it from conservative commentator Hugh Hewitt.
Trump also provoked unease during the campaign when he suggested that non-nuclear powers such as Japan, South Korea and Saudi Arabia could be allowed to develop nuclear weapons, contradicting decades of bipartisan U.S. policy consensus.
Fracking in North Dakota near live nuclear missles
The us military has voiced concern about oil rigs, including machinery, gas burners and hazardous waste near all of its live missile silos in ND, some illegally within the 1200 ft easement limits around each launch site. not to mention the seismic exploration (re: fracturing the ground) which threaten to set off vibration warning systems.
The nuclear warheads are the LGM-30G Minuteman III series, with a range of up to 8,000 miles at 15,000 mph. Each carries an explosive yield of 170 kilotons of TNT that can be delivered anywhere in range within 30 minutes, with tens of times the destructive force of the atomic bombs dropped in World War II.
One-third of the 150 missiles in North Dakota are in the Bakken oil field. All of them are under the command of the Minot Air Force Base 91st Missile Wing.\
Not only are the oil rigs a problem, the rail lines carrying the highly flammable fracked oil (more unstable than reg crude) in substandard tanker cars (because we haven’t upgraded our rolling stock or infrastructure) literally run right by the missile silos.
as one commentor put it, why worry about foreign terror when we are willing to blow ourselves up - over oil we don’t need as the US currently has an oil glut.
http://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show