Trump, 60 Minutes and Fact checking
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The agency swept Jackson Oswalt's home for radiation in 2018 after he became the youngest person to achieve nuclear fusion.
Let's break down the real science behind Netflix's new movie "A House of Dynamite," which imagines a nuclear attack on the U.S.
Korea JoongAng Daily on MSN
Joint fact sheet's delay hints at Korea-U.S. divisions over nuclear submarines
Seoul and Washington are engaged in last-minute negotiations over the wording of the “joint fact sheet” summarizing the outcome of the Korea-U.S. summit in Gyeongju, North Gyeongsang, particularly on clauses related to nuclear-powered submarines.
Michela Tindera So to recap, this is a company with no customers and no contracts, and . . . Jamie Smyth At the minute the company has generated zero revenue, yet it is currently one of the highest-valued pre-revenue companies listed in the US. And that makes people nervous.
For more than 30 years, major nuclear powers have refrained from testing nuclear bombs. But that streak may soon be over as Russia and the U.S. conduct missile tests and threaten to resume explosions of the most powerful weapons ever devised.
President Donald Trump announced this past week what could prove to be a stunning shift in American nuclear policy. He said in Truth Social post that “because of other countries testing
Russia's Burevestnik missile test and Netflix's A House of Dynamite share an unsettling focus on nuclear escalation, raising questions about how closely fiction reflects today's geopolitical tensions.
Experts with the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists in Chicago analyze the risks, both as they’re depicted in the movie and in the real world.
In late October 2025, a rumor swirled online ( archived, archived, archived) that U.S. President Donald Trump announced he had instructed the Department of Defense to resume testing nuclear weapons — something the country hadn't done since 1992. Dozens of Snopes readers also searched the site for verification of the rumor.