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The federal agency in charge of the nation's nuclear test site ordered the required time for preparations to drop from years to as few as six months. Nuclear experts saw the goal as unrealistic because testing equipment at the sprawling Nevada site had fallen into disrepair, or vanished. Even so, Project 2025, the 2023 right-wing blueprint for Mr. Trump's presidency, echoed the push for a quickening. It called on Washington to forego the lengthy period of preparation altogether and "move to immediate test readiness" in order to give the president "maximum flexibility in responding to adversary actions." The drumbeat continued in 2024 when Robert C. O'Brien, a former national security adviser to Mr. Trump, said in Foreign Affairs that Washington "must test new nuclear weapons for reliability and safety in the real world." But his core argument seemed less about a scientific need for explosive testing than about a political one — to demonstrate to rising and aggressive powers that the United States, which opened the nuclear age when it dropped two atomic weapons on Japan, remained prepared to use the ultimate weapon. Critics say a testing restart would incite a global arms race. They note that directors of the national labs in charge of the nation's atomic arsenal have repeatedly testified to Congress that the United States did not need to return to nuclear detonations. In lieu of testing, the United States now relies on top experts and machines at the nation's weapons labs to verify the lethality of the country's arsenal. Today the machines include room-size supercomputers, the world's most powerful X-ray machine and a system of lasers the size of a sports stadium. No other country has such an extensive array of nonnuclear testing tools.
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1 The federal agency in charge of the nation's nuclear test site ordered the required time for preparations to drop from years to as few as six months. 2 Nuclear experts saw the goal as unrealistic because testing equipment at the sprawling Nevada site had fallen into disrepair, or vanished. 3 Even so, Project 2025, the 2023 right-wing blueprint for Mr. Trump's presidency, echoed the push for a quickening. 4 It called on Washington to forego the lengthy period of preparation altogether and "move to immediate test readiness" in order to give the president "maximum flexibility in responding to adversary actions." 5 The drumbeat continued in 2024 when Robert C. O'Brien, a former national security adviser to Mr. Trump, said in Foreign Affairs that Washington "must test new nuclear weapons for reliability and safety in the real world." 6 But his core argument seemed less about a scientific need for explosive testing than about a political one — to demonstrate to rising and aggressive powers that the United States, which opened the nuclear age when it dropped two atomic weapons on Japan, remained prepared to use the ultimate weapon. 7 Critics say a testing restart would incite a global arms race. 8 They note that directors of the national labs in charge of the nation's atomic arsenal have repeatedly testified to Congress that the United States did not need to return to nuclear detonations. 9 In lieu of testing, the United States now relies on top experts and machines at the nation's weapons labs to verify the lethality of the country's arsenal. 10 Today the machines include room-size supercomputers, the world's most powerful X-ray machine and a system of lasers the size of a sports stadium. 11 No other country has such an extensive array of nonnuclear testing tools.