Nuclear Weapons
How the President Launches a Nuke
The Biscuit, the Football, and everything else that stands between the world and nuclear Armageddon.
How to Survive a Nuclear Bomb
If you’re not in the blast zone, it’s not the death sentence you think it is.
Looks Like North Korea Is Building a 'Christmas Gift' for the U.S. at its Long-Range Missile Site
Satellite images show North Korea building a structure associated with making or modifying intercontinental ballistic missiles.
5 Reasons Trump Should Be Way More Concerned About North Korea's Submarine Missile Launch
Successfully launching a missile from a sub takes North Korea a step closer to a solid-fuel ICBM that can strike the United States.
North Korea Nuke Talks Are Restarting This Week. Experts Are Not Hopeful of a Breakthrough
Trump's former National Security Advisor John Bolton says they're futile: Kim Jong-un "will never give up the nuclear weapons voluntarily."
North Korea Said It Wants to Restart Nuclear Talks. Then It Tested Two More Missiles.
North Korea's short-range arsenal doesn't cross Washington's red line, but the missiles could hit U.S. allies Japan and South Korea.
Radioactive Barges Are Killing the Vibe on This Russian Beach After Deadly Missile Blast
They landed near the mouth of the Verkhovka river, and have been sitting there with no official warning signs beyond a dirty red shirt stretched between two wooden poles, according local Russian media.
So, Here’s Why You Probably Don’t Want to Nuke a Hurricane
We can't believe we have to say this, but it's not a good idea.
What You Need to Know About Trump's Wild Weekend in North Korea
Meanwhile, the White House is reportedly ready to accept North Korea as a nuclear power, rather than demanding full denuclearization.
Kim Jong Un is rebuilding a rocket site — and sending a message to Trump
Days after a second summit with Trump, new satellite images suggest that North Korea is rebuilding a long-range rocket site.
The Trump-Kim lovefest is back in action
Donald Trump rekindled his love affair with Kim Jong Un during their second in-person meeting on Wednesday.
North Korea is making sure its nukes survive if the U.S. strikes
U.N. monitors reported they had observed “a consistent trend on the part of North Korea to disperse its assembly, storage and testing locations.”