‘Who will blink first?’ Is nuclear war between Russia and the US possible? | RT

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Originally Posted by Taichiliberal View Post
Speak for yourself, kid. I say all those who "just have to get it over with" should be locked into a football stadium with baseball bats at night....turn out the lights and let them have at it. Meanwhile, the rest of us learn to share and be nice to each other.
That sharing and being nice to each other is theoretically desirable but totally contrary to the true nature of humanity. And this applies even more so to Americans who have no solidarity domestically.

Americans are like two brothers who constantly bicker and fight. Just don't be the outsider who tries to get in between them!
 
Quit your fucking dissenting and babbling and face the fact that Japan had no intentions of surrendering until the second bomb was dropped. NOT sorry if that fact disturbs you. Carry on...

That is not true. The negotiations were going on for some time. Japan's cities were being carpet bombed and one after another were being destroyed. Ike was dead against the use of Nukes.
 
The U.S. actually accidentally dropped 4 nukes in Spain after a mid air collision between a nuclear armed U.S. B52 bomber and its refuelling tanker:
Palomares Anniversary: That Time the US Dropped 4 Nukes on Spain | ABC News

Fortunately, none of them detonated their nuclear payloads. However, "the conventional high explosives on two of the bombs did detonate, essentially turning those weapons into dirty bombs that blasted plutonium radiation across the countryside."

yep and we scraped the earth where they landed and took the soil to America. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...ive-site-49-years-after-palomares-plane-crash
 
The U.S. actually accidentally dropped 4 nukes in Spain after a mid air collision between a nuclear armed U.S. B52 bomber and its refuelling tanker:
Palomares Anniversary: That Time the US Dropped 4 Nukes on Spain | ABC News

Fortunately, none of them detonated their nuclear payloads. However, "the conventional high explosives on two of the bombs did detonate, essentially turning those weapons into dirty bombs that blasted plutonium radiation across the countryside."

yep and we scraped the earth where they landed and took the soil to America. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...ive-site-49-years-after-palomares-plane-crash

Not enough of it apparently. From your article:

**
Nearly 50 years after a US air force B-52 bomber carrying nuclear weapons crashed in Palomares in south-east Spain, Washington has finally agreed to clean up the radioactive contamination that resulted from the crash.

The US secretary of state, John Kerry, and the Spanish foreign minister, José Manuel García-Margallo, signed an agreement in Madrid on Monday to clean up the site and “store the contaminated earth at a suitable location in the United States”.

**

One might think that this would mean that it's now been done. However, Trump apparently didn't want to follow through with the Obama Administration's agreement:

**
In November 2018, the daily newspaper El Pais reported, however, that the Trump administration did not feel bound by the deal made under the Obama administration.
**

Source:
Palomares, Spain : Accident involving nuclear weapons | nuclear-risks.org

Based on an article just a few months ago, it looks like the problem is still ongoing:
Palomares clean-up not the responsibility of Spain’s Nuclear Safety Council | euroweeklynews.com

A U.S. air force veteran filed a class action lawsuit due to the U.S. government's failure to pay for his disabilities that resulted from his cleanup of the crash site:
Half a century after Palomares nuclear accident, a glimpse of justice | elpais.com

From the article:

**
Skaar has a list of 40 veterans who were with him at the time and whom he hopes to include in a class action suit. Two of his acquaintances died of cancer five years after returning to the United States.
**


Looks like Skaar finally got some justice this year for himself and other veterans involved in the cleanup:
56 Years Later, Palomares Veterans Win VA Recognition of Radiation Exposure | yale.edu


I just found out this wasn't the only time that the U.S. lost nukes as well:
7 times the military lost nukes — and 4 times it never found them | businessinsider.com
 
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Originally Posted by Taichiliberal View Post
Americans are like two brothers who constantly bicker and fight. Just don't be the outsider who tries to get in between them!

That's certainly an optimistic viewpoint.
Perhaps having been an only child, I don't know how to act like a brother.

Yeah, to a degree it is. But look at the history: WWII - Truman personally was a bigot, but desegregated the Armed forces. Vietnam reflecting the changing times at home.
 
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