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Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 24 Sep 2012 20:12
by gunjur
Turkey to build 3 nuclear power plants by 2023
Turkey presently has no nuclear power plants. However, in August 2006, the Turkish Government announced its plan to have three nuclear power plants with total capacity of 4,500 MWe. The lack of human resource and infrastructure support are the biggest obstacles of Turkey's nuclear strategy
Turkish Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Taner Yildiz said Turkey was in negotiation with countries such as China, Japan, South Korea and Canada to construct a nuclear power plant in Turkey's Black Sea province of Sinop.
A Russian state nuclear company is expected to begin constructing Akkuyu plant in 2013 with the construction of four nuclear reactors with a total capacity of 4,800 megawatts.

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 26 Sep 2012 03:06
by Prem
Nuclear Testing 1945 - 1998 Complete Video
[youtube]WAnqRQg-W0k&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 30 Sep 2012 10:15
by Austin
Share of nuclear power in Russia to grow up to 27 prc by 2030
By 2030 the share of nuclear power generation in Russia is expected to grow by 25-27 percent.

According to Rosatom Head Sergei Kiriyenko, “the construction of new nuclear generating capacities should match the growth of demand for electricity.”

In the next 15 years, Rosatom plans to build 28 to 36 nuclear reactors, Kiriyenko said.

“It is not reasonable to extend the service life of some reactors [in Russia], especially of those from the previous generation,” he explained.

Currently operating RBMK reactors need to be replaced at the Leningrad, Smolensk and Kursk nuclear power plants. The current share of nuclear power in Russia’s energy production is about 16.5 percent.

Kiriyenko said earlier that atomic energy should be safe for people and affordable for everyone.

In his opinion, “There is no alternative to atomic energy and it will develop by all means.”

However he believes that it should be “absolutely safe” and this will require “changes to international legislation”.

The civil nuclear energy sector is living through a period of “renaissance”, he said.

“We have heard of revival in the nuclear energy industry for several years. But these words are taken in a special way today because they have passed the test of crisis,” Kiriyenko said.

“Leading politicians are talking about the revival of nuclear energy again. And, most importantly, nuclear energy development programmes have not been changed in any of the countries that have announced them,” he said. “It will be impossible to ensure energy security for sustainable development in the world and at the same time its environmental security in the next several decades without developing nuclear energy.”

“This means that the number of nuclear power plants under construction and the number of countries making decisions on the development of nuclear energy will continue growing every day,” Kiriyenko said.

Rosatom is planning to construct seven or eight floating nuclear power plants by 2015. After many years of promoting the idea, Rosatom approved construction of a nuclear power plant on a barge to supply power and heat to isolated coastal towns. The contract to build the first unit was given to the Sevmash shipyard in May 2006, but in August 2008 Rosatom cancelled the contract and transferred construction to the Baltiysky Zavod shipyard in St Petersburg.

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 02 Oct 2012 11:29
by Austin

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 02 Oct 2012 13:48
by chaanakya
Nuclear plant construction to resume in Japan
A Japanese power company says it will resume the construction of a nuclear power plant. This is the first such move in the country since last year's nuclear accident at Fukushima.

President Masayoshi Kitamura of the Electric Power Development Company, or J-Power, announced the decision on the Ohma plant in Aomori Prefecture on Monday.

Kitamura told a special session of the Ohma town assembly that his company decided to restart the project because of the government's recent clarification of its stance on uncompleted nuclear plants.

The assembly members welcomed the decision.

J-Power also dispatched officials to Hakodate City in Hokkaido to explain the decision. The city is located about 20 kilometers from the plant and is against the project.

Hakodate Mayor Toshiki Kudo told the officials that his city will never accept the decision, because the Ohma project received government approval based on criteria set before the Fukushima accident.

Kudo told reporters that the city will take legal action to stop the project.

J-Power began building the plant in 2008 but stopped after the Fukushima accident. The facility is nearly 40 percent complete.

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 07 Dec 2012 11:14
by wig
http://www.hindustantimes.com/world-new ... 69554.aspx

US conducts 'subcritical' nuclear test
The United States said on Thursday it has conducted a "subcritical" nuclear test at an underground site to study the behavior of nuclear materials without triggering an atomic explosion. The test, conducted on Wednesday in Nevada, aims to gather scientific data that will "provide crucial information to maintain the safety and effectiveness of the nation's nuclear weapons," the Energy Department said in a statement.

"Challenging subcritical experiments maintain our capabilities to ensure that we can support a safe, secure and effective stockpile without having to conduct underground testing," said National Nuclear Security Administration head Thomas D'Agostino.


Staff from the Nevada National Security Site, Los Alamos National Laboratory and Sandia National Laboratories conducted the experiment, known as Pollux.

It marked the 27th subcritical experiment to date. The last one, known as Barolo B, took place in February 2011.

Subcritical nuclear tests, which do not trigger a self-sustaining chain reaction that would create a nuclear explosion, examine how plutonium behaves when it is shocked by forces produced by chemical high explosives.

The United States halted underground nuclear tests in 1992. By then, it had conducted 1,032 tests since

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 07 Dec 2012 14:58
by vishvak
International, American and Indian nuclear activists are silent for reasons unexplainable.

A lot of chatter could appear in case Indians perform such actions.

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 09 Dec 2012 01:29
by Gerard


The National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) announced that Pollux, a subcritical experiment, was successfully conducted at its Nevada National Security Site (NNSS).

U.S. tests effectiveness of nuclear weapons at Nevada proving ground

Hydrodynamic Tests: Not to Scale
As far as we can gauge, scaled experiments are subcritical, core-punch, hydrodynamic tests designed to conduct experiments in an implosion geometry that is essentially identical to an actual warhead design, but reduced in size. Rather than a full-scale warhead with the plutonium replaced by other material, a one-third to one-half scale model is built that does use plutonium. At a half-scale size, only one-eighth of the plutonium in an actual warhead is required. The smaller amount of plutonium keeps the explosion from beginning a nuclear chain reaction. Eventually, NNSA wants to build scaled experiments to almost three-quarters (0.7) the size of a full primary.

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 22 Dec 2012 15:24
by Austin
New Russian reactor in the works
Russia has backed its ambitious nuclear energy expansion plans by successfully developing a new highly computerized pressurized-water reactor.
Dr Andrei Gagarinsky is a leading nuclear energy expert at the Moscow-based Kurchatov Institute:

"Apart from a high degree of computerization and cutting-edge post-Fukushima safety features, the VVER-TOI reactor boasts an enhanced capacity of 1,250 megawatts. In a short while, it will form the backbone of Russia’s nuclear electricity industry."

The new reactor system employs technology developed in Russia, Germany and France. Its operating software comes from an even broader variety of countries. It is also equipped with a Russian-developed device to capture molten nuclear fuel.

Dr Gagarinsky again:

"This device precludes damage to people’s health or the environment in the event of the worst possible accident at a nuclear plant, a core meltdown. The reactor also possesses a waterproof emergency cooling system, something that was so badly needed at the Fukushima plant."

Dr Alexander Pasechnik is an expert of the Energy Security Foundation:

"The new reactor is designed to withstand 8-magnitude seismic events and the impact of a falling airliner. Airline terrorism will not work, as far as the VVER-TOI is concerned."

Engineers and economists also say the new reactor is also likely to become a successful export item.

The first Russian plant to receive the VVER-TOI will be the nuclear power complex near Kursk.

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 01 Jan 2013 21:15
by chaanakya
http://www.japantoday.com/category/poli ... r-reactors
Abe supports building new nuclear reactors

Politics Jan. 01, 2013 - 02:10PM JST ( 34 )
Abe supports building new nuclear reactors Shinzo Abe inspects the emergency operation centre inside the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant on December 29, 2012 AFP

TOKYO —

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has voiced his willingness to build new nuclear reactors, reports said, despite widespread public opposition to nuclear energy since the Fukushima crisis.

During an interview with television network TBS, Abe said new reactors would be different from those at Fukushima that were crippled by the earthquake and tsunami of 2011, according to major news outlets.

“New reactors will be totally different from the ones built 40 years ago, those at the Fukushima Daiichi plant that caused the crisis,” Abe said in the interview, according to the Mainichi Shimbun daily.

“We will be building them while earning the understanding of the public as to how different they are,” he was quoted by the Nikkei as saying.

It was the first time since Abe took office last Wednesday that he has voiced support for new construction, although his pro-business government had been widely expected to restart Japan’s stalled nuclear program.

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 26 Jan 2013 12:15
by wig
N. Korea likely to test fusion-boosted fission bomb able to reach U.S.
North Korea's next nuclear test could enable it to use a smaller, more sophisticated bomb mounted on a long-range ballistic missile to strike the U.S. mainland, Japanese government sources said.

Pyongyang will likely experiment with a fusion-boosted fission bomb in a "high-level" nuclear test it said would target the United States, according to the source
a fusion-boosted fission bomb induces nuclear fusion with slight nuclear fission, enabling more efficient nuclear fission. A fusion-boosted fission bomb can therefore be made about one-fourth the size of an ordinary nuclear bomb.

Either uranium or plutonium can be used to develop the bomb.

North Korea said Jan. 24 it will carry out a third nuclear test in opposition to a U.N. Security Council resolution condemning the launch of a long-range ballistic missile--that Pyongyang claimed to be a satellite--in December.

In a statement, the country's National Defense Commission said the "high-level" nuclear test, as well as the long-range rockets North Korea plans to fire, will be targeted at the United States, which it declares its enemy.

The Japanese government has concluded that North Korea is ready to test a fusion-boosted fission bomb, and sources said Pyongyang will be able to put it to practical use after a single test.

Japan has been monitoring North Korea's nuclear development program with the United States and other countries. It has analyzed nuclear-related materials North Korea has imported and nuclear-related facilities it has constructed or developed.

While North Korea's first nuclear test in 2006 resulted in an explosion equivalent to less than 1 kiloton of trinitrotoluene (TNT), the second test in 2009 generated an explosion of several kilotons.

In May 2010, North Korea also announced it had succeeded in achieving nuclear fusion.

According to Akihiro Kuroki, a managing director at the Institute of Energy Economics, Japan, a fusion-boosted fission bomb uses substantially smaller amounts of explosives and buffer materials than an ordinary nuclear bomb.

North Korea is believed to possess an atomic bomb similar to the one dropped on Nagasaki on Aug. 9, 1945, which weighed about five tons.

A successful test of a fusion-boosted fission bomb is expected to enable the reclusive communist country to reduce it to a little more than 1 ton.

North Korea is also developing an improved version of the Taepodong-2 long-range ballistic missile, which will be able to carry a nuclear bomb of between 800 kilograms and 1 ton.

North Korea is believed to have studied other countries' development of fusion-boosted fission bombs.

The United States first succeeded in testing an ordinary nuclear bomb in 1945 and is said to have developed a fusion-boosted fission bomb in 1956.
http://ajw.asahi.com/article/asia/korea ... 1301250058

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 28 Jan 2013 23:19
by Gerard

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 29 Jan 2013 23:33
by Amber G.
Meanwhile, a major milestone in construction of first AP1000 in China ( Sanmen nuclear power plant) - installation of the top of the containment vessel at unit 1.

USA also has AP1000 in plans. (New stories and some links for background)
http://www.indianexpress.com/news/china ... n/1066358/
http://www.world-nuclear-news.org/NN-Ch ... 01134.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sanmen_Nuc ... er_Station
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AP1000

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 30 Jan 2013 04:39
by Amber G.
Some may find it interesting ...Read the whole article ..
Do Animals in Chernobyl’s Fallout Zone Glow?

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 31 Jan 2013 22:31
by chaanakya
Watchdog to rule fault line beneath nuclear plant is active
A Nuclear Regulation Authority panel of experts has endorsed a draft report declaring that a geological fault line running directly beneath a reactor building at the Tsuruga nuclear power complex is probably still active, raising questions about the plant's future and why it was built there in the first place.

"It is likely an active fault and should be taken into account during anti-seismic planning," the report says.

The panel signed off on the draft Jan. 28 and is now expected to consult other specialists before releasing it formally.

NRA Chairman Shunichi Tanaka has said that in the circumstances safety checks on the affected reactor, the plant's No. 2 unit, cannot take place--and clearing those checks is a prerequisite before idled reactors can restart.

This means Japan Atomic Power Co., the plant operator, will likely be unable to request a restart and will be compelled to decommission the reactor unless it can prove that the fault in question--known as the D-1 fault--is not active after all.

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 31 Jan 2013 23:01
by chaanakya
US Sailors sue Japanese company over Fukushima radiation

I am sure some of the resident physicists would be able to knock some sense into these deadwoods.
SAN DIEGO — Eight U.S. sailors who were aboard the aircraft carrier Ronald Reagan off the Japanese coast during the Fukushima nuclear disaster last year have sued the company that owns the power plant, claiming they were harmed by radiation exposure.

The lawsuit, filed last week in San Diego federal court, accuses Tokyo Electric Power Co., or Tepco, with covering up how much radiation was being released during and after the March 11, 2011, disaster.

The U.S. government unwittingly sent the San Diego-based Ronald Reagan into dangerous levels of radiation as a result, states the lawsuit, filed Dec. 21 by Encinitas attorney Paul C. Garner.

The ship assisted with American humanitarian operations in the region after the catastrophic earthquake and tsunami struck Japan, killing thousands. The Fukushima nuclear power plant failed after the tsunami knocked out power to reactor pumps, causing a meltdown and release of radiation.

In addition to the Reagan, the United States sent the San Diego-based destroyer Preble and the cruiser Chancellorsville to help with relief operations off Honshu, Japan.

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 05 Feb 2013 07:22
by Gerard

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 07 Feb 2013 22:00
by Amber G.
While interesting stories about Fukushima radiation poisoning fish and cattle (For example see this story : Radioactive Cattle Found Near Fukushima :eek:) keep appearing in media (and also in brf :!), and according to this story from telegraph india dot com mothers in Kundakulam, 7000 km away from Fukushima, are fearful....

Here is another story about a "leading women" from CNN:

The woman powering Japan's nuclear hopes post-Fukushima
Tokyo Electric Power Company asks Lady Barbara Judge to help rebuild nuclear power post Fukushima ...
Lady Judge is a British-American lawyer and banker who led UK Atomic Energy Authority
...In 1980s, she was youngest ever commissioner of U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and first female director of British merchant bank
...It was fantastic, It was absolutely hope and enthusiasm, not despair. {Judge met TEPCO employees, some of whom had been on duty on the day of the accident}
And as a सत्यम एव जयते behind all those Fukushima radiation stories causing so much death and destruction, the following quote from Judge in the above story is interesting.
She said: "Approximately 20,000 lives were lost as a result of the earthquake and tsunami, but not one of those who died did so as a result of radiation. And radiation experts believe that no-one will die from radiation

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 08 Feb 2013 13:53
by chaanakya

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 08 Feb 2013 14:12
by chaanakya

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 08 Feb 2013 21:12
by chaanakya

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 11 Feb 2013 20:05
by Gerard

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 11 Feb 2013 23:17
by chaanakya

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 12 Feb 2013 18:59
by Gerard

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 13 Feb 2013 22:14
by Gerard
Constraints on burial depth and yield of the 25 May 2009 North Korean test from hydrodynamic simulations in a granite medium
Geophysical Research Letters
Volume 38, Issue 16, August 2011
Constrained by the hydrodynamic simulations, the DJ91 model indicates the minimum yield and DoB for the 25 May 2009 North Korean test is 5.7 kilotons and 375 m

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 16 Feb 2013 01:18
by Gerard
Exclusive: North Korea tells China of preparations for fresh nuclear test - source
North Korea has told its key ally, China, that it is prepared to stage one or even two more nuclear tests this year in an effort to force the United States into diplomatic talks, said a source with direct knowledge of the message.

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 27 Feb 2013 01:52
by Vayutuvan
OK guys. Don't shoot.

6 nuclear-waste tanks leaking at Hanford
At least six underground-storage tanks each holding tens of thousands of gallons of nuclear and chemical waste are leaking at the Hanford nuclear reservation, the nation’s most contaminated Cold War weapons-production facility.
<snip>
They (energy officials) were forced to conclude that a half-dozen of them had dropped in volume and were leaking anywhere from a few gallons to a few hundred gallons of radioactive material a year.

While the leaks pose no immediate health threat, “they are certainly levels that cause us concern and demand action,” Inslee said.
<snip>
Suzanne Dahl, who oversees Hanford’s tank-waste issues for the state, said it is too soon to say where, precisely, the radioactive material has gone, but that it would take many years for the waste to work its way to the groundwater that moves toward the Columbia River 5 miles away.

“Is it held up directly underneath the tank farms? Is it moving? It’s something we just don’t know at this point,” Dahl said. “We do know that there is 150 to 200 feet of dry soil between the tanks and the groundwater.”
A comment on slashdot from where I got the above link...
Reality is, it's likely that it's not the radioactivity that's most dangerous. The real issue is heavy metals and those things generally containing entire heavy end of periodic table. Stuff that is REALLY toxic.

Radioactivity from a little leak into a huge river is nonexistent in terms of danger. Toxic heavy metals on the other hands can poison a river even with fairly small presence.

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 13 Mar 2013 12:16
by Sanku
As mentioned before and expected, the US nuclear sector continues to flounder

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/ ... story.html

In U.S., nuclear energy loses momentum amid economic head winds, safety issues
Two years after the tsunami that crippled Japan’s Fukushima power complex, the U.S. nuclear industry is facing fundamental and far-reaching challenges to its own future.

Only five years ago, industry executives and leading politicians were talking about an American nuclear renaissance, hoping to add 20 or more reactors to the 104-unit U.S. nuclear fleet.


But today those companies are holding back in the face of falling natural gas prices and sluggish and uncertain electricity demand. Only five new plants are under construction, while at least that many are slated for permanent closure or shut down indefinitely over safety issues.
..........
A pair of reactors in Southern California are under scrutiny over whether a major contractor and a utility there concealed concerns about potential cracks in the tubes of a steam generator. And nuclear plants in Wisconsin and Florida are closing down because their owners said they cannot compete with less expensive natural-gas-fired electricity.
..........
Industry officials still make the case for nuclear as a domestic source of energy that does not emit greenhouse gases.. :mrgreen:
Goes over the pretty much same ground we have covered before on BRF. As usual, ahead of the curve. :mrgreen:

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 19 Mar 2013 07:39
by Gerard
Strategic U.S. bombers fly practice nuclear strikes in Korea
United States B-52 bombers carried out simulated nuclear bombing raids on North Korea as part of ongoing U.S.-South Korean military exercises, Pentagon officials said on Monday.

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 19 Mar 2013 09:25
by pankajs

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 19 Mar 2013 19:54
by RamaY
New nuclear power plant at Hinkley Point C is approved

I hope S.TN-vasis go to UK and protest this project by standing in English channel and by removing their shirts in front of Buckingham Palace. I recommend they stay back in UK because it is a secular nation and does not have Hindutva politics.

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 19 Mar 2013 20:02
by Lilo
RamaY ji,

I dont get why you are using (thereby creating) categories which do not exist ? that too related to some obscure news item in some second rate turdland ...

You could have simply used "PMANE guys" or something.

"S.TN vasi's" opposing nuclear power ?
Please Give us a Break

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 19 Mar 2013 21:51
by Sanku
The F-Word refuses to go away.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/worl ... 062948.cms

Cooling stops as Fukushima suffers power breakdown

NEW DELHI: Power supply at the stricken and dangerously radioactive Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant in north-eastern Japan remained disrupted on Tuesday, 15 hours after a blackout on Monday evening. This has caused the cooling systems of the spent fuel pools to stop functioning.

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 22 Mar 2013 05:09
by Vipul
US, China divided on India joining Nuclear Suppliers Group.

The United States and three other big powers this week argued for allowing nuclear-armed India into an atomic export control group, but China and several European states appeared doubtful about the move, diplomats said on Wednesday.

They said the divisions were in evidence during closed-door talks of the 46-nation Nuclear Suppliers Group on the sensitive issue of whether India could join and become the NSG's only member that is outside the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

The United States, France, Britain and Russia were among those which backed membership for India - Asia's third-largest economy - while smaller European states such as Ireland, the Netherlands and Switzerland had reservations, the envoys said.

China stressed the need for equal treatment in South Asia, an apparent reference to its ally Pakistan which is also outside the NPT and has also tested atomic bombs, they said. One diplomat said Japan also appeared lukewarm on the idea.

The tone of Monday's informal debate in Vienna suggested that the controversial issue will not be ready for a decision at the NSG's next annual plenary session, to be held in the Czech capital of Prague in June. NSG decisions are made by consensus.

"There are several countries in each camp. I'm not sure how it can be moved forward," one envoy said.

But another diplomat said that while "a number of countries have continued doubts" they did not categorically rule out that India, which has yet to apply, could eventually become a member.

The NSG - which includes the United States, Russia, China, European Union countries and some others - is a cartel that tries to ensure that civilian nuclear exports are not diverted for military purposes.

In 2010, Washington announced backing for India joining. But Pakistan - which has been trying to move closer to Asian powerhouse China as Islamabad's ties with Washington have suffered - has warned against allowing its rival into the NSG.

India and Pakistan - which have fought three wars - have both refused to sign the 189-nation NPT, which would oblige them to scrap nuclear weapons.

Close relations between China and Pakistan reflect a long-standing shared wariness of their common neighbour, India, and a desire to counter U.S. influence across the region.

Those for India joining say it is better if the country is inside than outside the NSG as it is already an advanced nuclear energy power and will in future become a significant exporter as well, one of the diplomats who attended the discussions said.

Those which are sceptical argue it could undermine the NPT, which is a cornerstone of global nuclear disarmament efforts."There are differences of opinion on allowing non-NPT members into the NSG," another diplomat said.

Mark Hibbs of the Carnegie Endowment think-tank said some "worried that India will use its voice to reverse the NSG's gears and loosen export controls, since India has not demonstrated a firm historical commitment" to its mission.

To receive civilian nuclear exports, nations that are not one of the five officially recognised atomic weapons states must usually place their nuclear activities under the safeguards of the International Atomic Energy Agency, NSG rules say.

When the United States sealed a nuclear supply deal with India in 2008 that China and others found questionable because Delhi is outside the NPT, Washington won an NSG waiver from that rule after contentious negotiations.

The landmark civilian nuclear cooperation agreement ended India's atomic isolation following its 1974 nuclear test and could mean billions of dollars in business for U.S. firms.India gained access to technology and fuel while it was allowed to continue its nuclear weapons programme.

Pakistan wants a similar civilian nuclear agreement with the United States to help meet its growing energy needs.But Washington is reluctant, largely because a Pakistani nuclear scientist, Abdul Qadeer Khan, admitted in 2004 to transferring nuclear secrets to North Korea, Iran and Iraq.

Nuclear expert Daryl Kimball said India wanted to join the NSG because of prestige but that this would undercut the group's ability to ensure that New Delhi respects the non-proliferation commitments it made to win support for the 2008 exemption.

"Those commitments included no further nuclear weapons testing, compliance with site-specific safeguards, and support for a fissile material production moratorium," said Kimball, of the Washington-based Arms Control Association.

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 29 Mar 2013 07:28
by Gerard
North Korea rocket units on standby to attack US bases
"He finally signed the plan on technical preparations of strategic rockets of the KPA, ordering them to be standby for fire so that they may strike any time the US mainland, its military bases in the operational theatres in the Pacific, including Hawaii and Guam, and those in South Korea," KCNA said.

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 29 Mar 2013 22:28
by Gerard

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 29 Mar 2013 22:31
by Austin
Hope US would stop provocating NoKo and NoKo stop acting stupid , the last thing we need there is war and NoKo being nuclear makes it all the more dangerous.

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 30 Mar 2013 00:15
by svinayak
Anybody seen the Hollywood movie where NK troops come and invade US mainland and take over a town in WA state

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 30 Mar 2013 09:15
by Gerard

Re: International Nuclear Watch & Discussion

Posted: 31 Mar 2013 12:03
by svinayak
Acharya wrote:Anybody seen the Hollywood movie where NK troops come and invade US mainland and take over a town in WA state
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olympus_Has_Fallen