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Trump orders war department to immediately start testing US nuclear weapons

Exclusive Trump orders war department to immediately start testing US nuclear weapons
US President Donald Trump arrives to meet with soldiers and servicemen at the USS George Washington at the US Navy's Yokosuka base in Yokosuka, south of Tokyo, on Oct. 28, 2025. (AP Photo)
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Updated 19 sec ago

Trump orders war department to immediately start testing US nuclear weapons

Trump orders war department to immediately start testing US nuclear weapons
  • Says the US cannot sit idly by while other nuclear powers, notably Russia and China,have testing programs
  • The US last tested a nuclear weapon in 1992, after which it signed theComprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty

US President Donald Trump, ahead of his meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Thursday, said he has instructed the Department of Defense to immediately resume testing nuclear weapons on an “equal basis” with other nuclear powers.
“Because of other countries testing programs, I have instructed the Department of War to start testing our Nuclear Weapons on an equal basis. That process will begin immediately,” Trump said on Truth Social, ahead of the meeting with Xi in South Korea.
“Russia is second, and China is a distant third, but will be even within 5 years,” Trump noted.
President Vladimir Putin said on Wednesday Russia had successfully tested a Poseidon nuclear-powered super torpedo that military analysts say is capable of devastating coastal regions by triggering vast radioactive ocean swells.

As Trump has toughened both his rhetoric and his stance on Russia, Putin has publicly flexed his nuclear muscles with the test of a new Burevestnik cruise missile on October 21 and nuclear launch drills on October 22.
The United States last tested a nuclear weapon in 1992.
Tests provide evidence of what any new nuclear weapon will do — and whether older weapons still work.
Apart from providing technical data, such a test would be seen in Russia and China as a deliberate assertion of US strategic power.

IN NUMBERS

• 1,032nuclear weapons tests conducted by the US between 1945 and 1992

• 715tests by the Soviet Union (now Russia) from 1949 and 1990

• 210tests by France between 1960 and 199e

• 45tests by Britain between 1952 and 1991

• 45 tests by Chinafrom 1964 and 1996

• 1 test carried out by India in 1974

The United States opened the nuclear era in July 1945 with the test of a 20-kiloton atomic bomb at Alamogordo, New Mexico, and then dropped atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945 to end World War Two.

According to the , more than 2,000 nuclear tests were carried out all over the world from 1945 until 1996, when theComprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty(CTBT) was opened for signature.
Since then, only 10 nuclear tests had been conducted, two each by rival neighbors India and Pakistanin 1998, and the rest by North Koreain 2006, 2009, 2013, 2016, and 2017.


Exit poll suggests centrists win Dutch vote, beating far right

Exit poll suggests centrists win Dutch vote, beating far right
Updated 18 min ago

Exit poll suggests centrists win Dutch vote, beating far right

Exit poll suggests centrists win Dutch vote, beating far right
  • The centrist D66 party led by Rob Jetten was projected to win 27 seats out of 150 in parliament, ahead of Wilders and his far-right PVV Freedom Party with 25 seats, according to the Ipsos poll

THE HAGUE: Dutch voters appeared to have rejected far-right leader Geert Wilders in favor of a centrist party, an exit poll suggested Wednesday, after a cliffhanger election closely watched in Europe where extremists are gaining ground.
The centrist D66 party led by Rob Jetten was projected to win 27 seats out of 150 in parliament, ahead of Wilders and his far-right PVV Freedom Party with 25 seats, according to the Ipsos poll.
If confirmed, the result would put Jetten, 38, in pole position to become the country’s youngest and first openly gay prime minister, subject to coalition talks.
D66 supporters exploded with joy at their election party in Leiden, waving Dutch and European flags. “We’ve done it,” said a jubilant Jetten.
“This is a historic election result because we’ve shown not only to the Netherlands but also to the world that it is possible to beat populist and extreme-right movements,” Jetten told reporters.
Exit polls in the Netherlands are generally accurate but the seats could change as actual votes are counted and the margin of error is two seats.
The center-right liberal VVD party was predicted to win 23 seats, with the left-wing Green/Labour bloc expected to gain 20.
With far-right parties topping the polls in Britain, France, and Germany, the Dutch election was seen as a bellwether of the strength of the far right in Europe.
If the exit poll results are confirmed, the PVV lost 12 seats compared to its stunning 2023 election win.
“The Dutch election really mirrors trends across Western Europe,” Sarah de Lange, Professor of Dutch Politics at Leiden University, told AFP before the exit poll.
Even before the vote, Wilders was virtually certain not to be prime minister, as all other parties had ruled out joining a coalition with him.
The 62-year-old firebrand, sometimes known as the “Dutch Trump,” had collapsed the previous government, complaining progress was too slow to achieve “the strictest asylum policy ever.”
“The voter has spoken. We had hoped for a different outcome but we stuck to our guns,” said the anti-Islam, anti-immigration, Wilders on social media.
When the result is finalized, there will be a prolonged period of haggling between the parties to see who wants to work with whom, a process that could take months.
The fragmented Dutch political system means no party can reach the 76 seats needed to govern alone, so consensus and coalition-building are essential.
“It will certainly take time for the Netherlands to reach stability and a new coalition,” De Lange told AFP.
“The parties are ideologically very, very diverse, which will make compromising very challenging.”

- ‘Heart of Europe’ -

Millions of Dutch people cast their votes in a variety of locations including zoos, football stadiums, and windmills.
They had a bewildering range of 27 parties to choose from, meaning each voter had to grapple with a huge A3 sheet of paper listing the candidates.
The main issues were immigration and a housing crisis that especially affects young people in the densely populated country.
Jetten shot up the polls in the final days of the campaign thanks to strong media performances and an optimistic message.
“I want to bring the Netherlands back to the heart of Europe because without European cooperation, we are nowhere,” he told AFP after casting his vote in The Hague.
Frans Timmermans, an experienced former European Commission vice president, threw in the towel after a disappointing result for his left-wing bloc.
“With pain in my heart, I step down as your party leader,” the 64-year-old told supporters.

- ‘Not that aggressive’ -

Violence and disinformation marred the campaign in the European Union’s fifth-largest economy and major global exporter.
Demonstrators against shelters for asylum-seekers clashed with police in several cities, and violence erupted at an anti-immigration protest in The Hague last month.
Until a new government is formed, outgoing Prime Minister Dick Schoof will run the country — reluctantly. “I wouldn’t wish it on you,” he told one MP in parliament.
“If you accept this job, you know that it will end someday,” Schoof told AFP after casting his vote.
Voters appeared to yearn for a return to less polarizing politics.
“I think society should be more positive and less negative,” Bart Paalman, a 53-year-old baker, told AFP, as he cast his vote at the Anne Frank House, converted into a polling station for election day.
“I’m voting for a party who’s not that aggressive.”


Trump and China’s Xi are meeting in South Korea to try to roll back months of trade tensions

Trump and China’s Xi are meeting in South Korea to try to roll back months of trade tensions
Updated 27 min 41 sec ago

Trump and China’s Xi are meeting in South Korea to try to roll back months of trade tensions

Trump and China’s Xi are meeting in South Korea to try to roll back months of trade tensions
  • Trump’s aggressive use of tariffs since returning to the White House for a second term combined with China’s retaliatory limits on exports of rare earth elements have given the meeting newfound urgency

BUSAN, South Korea: President Donald Trump is set to meet face-to-face with Chinese leader Xi Jinping on Thursday, a chance for the leaders of the world’s two largest economies to stabilize relations after months of turmoil over trade issues.
Trump’s aggressive use of tariffs since returning to the White House for a second term combined with China’s retaliatory limits on exports of rare earth elements have given the meeting newfound urgency. There is a mutual recognition that neither side wants to risk blowing up the world economy in ways that could jeopardize their own country’s fortunes.
In the days leading up to the meeting, US officials have signaled that Trump does not intend to make good on a recent threat to impose an additional 100 percent import tax on Chinese goods — and China has shown signs it is willing to relax its export controls on rare earths and also buy soybeans from America.
Trump went further aboard Air Force One on his way to South Korea, telling reporters he may reduce tariffs that he placed on China earlier this year related to its role in making fentanyl.
“I expect to be lowering that because I believe that they’re going to help us with the fentanyl situation,” Trump said, later adding, “The relationship with China is very good.”
Shortly before the meeting on Thursday, Trump posted on Truth Social that the meeting would be the “G2,” a recognition of America and China’s status as the world’s biggest economies. The Group of Seven and Group of 20 are other forums of industrialized nations.
The meeting is set to begin at 11 a.m. (10 p.m. ET) in Busan, South Korea, a port city about 76 kilometers (47 miles) south from Gyeongju, the main venue for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit.
At a dinner on Wednesday night with other APEC leaders, Trump was caught on a microphone saying the meeting with Xi would be “three, four hours” and he would then go home to Washington.
Officials from both countries met earlier this week in Kuala Lumpur to lay the groundwork for their leaders. Afterward, China’s top trade negotiator Li Chenggang said they had reached a “preliminary consensus,” a statement affirmed by US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent who said there was ” a very successful framework.”
The anticipated detente has given investors and businesses caught between the two nations a sense of relief. The US stock market has climbed on the hopes of a trade framework coming out of the meeting.
However cordial the rhetoric, Trump and Xi remain on a potential collision course as their countries vie to dominate manufacturing, develop emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence and shape world affairs such as the status of Russia’s war in Ukraine. Trump indicated that he did not plan to bring up issues such as the security of Taiwan with Xi.
“The proposed deal on the table fits the pattern we’ve seen all year: short-term stabilization dressed up as strategic progress,” said Craig Singleton, senior director of the China program at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies. “Both sides are managing volatility, calibrating just enough cooperation to avert crisis while the deeper rivalry endures.”
The US and China have each shown they believe they have levers to pressure the other, and the past year has demonstrated that tentative steps forward can be short-lived.
For Trump, that pressure comes from tariffs.
Right now, China had faced new tariffs this year totaling 30 percent, of which 20 percent has been tied to its role in fentanyl production. But the tariff rates have been volatile. In April, he announced plans to jack the rate on Chinese goods to 145 percent, only to abandon those plans as markets recoiled.
Then, on Oct. 10, Trump threatened a 100 percent import tax because of China’s rare earth restrictions.
Xi has his own chokehold on the world economy because China is the top producer and processor of the rare earth minerals needed to make fighter jets, robots, electric vehicles and other high-tech products.
China had tightened export restrictions on Oct. 9, repeating a cycle in which each nation jockeys for an edge only to back down after more trade talks.
What might also matter is what happens directly after their talks. Trump plans to return to Washington, while Xi plans to stay on in South Korea to meet with regional leaders during the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, which officially begins on Friday.
“Xi sees an opportunity to position China as a reliable partner and bolster bilateral and multilateral relations with countries frustrated by the US administration’s tariff policy,” said Jay Truesdale, a former State Department official who is CEO of TD International, a risk and intelligence advisory firm.


From beaches to ski slopes, photos show how cameras keep watch all over China

From beaches to ski slopes, photos show how cameras keep watch all over China
Updated 41 min 25 sec ago

From beaches to ski slopes, photos show how cameras keep watch all over China

From beaches to ski slopes, photos show how cameras keep watch all over China
  • Over the past few decades, the Chinese government has rolled out a series of high-tech surveillance projects aimed at bringing the entire country under watch, including “Sky Net” and the “Golden Shield”

BEIJING: The Chinese government has blanketed the country with the world’s largest network of surveillance cameras.
Some cameras swivel, ensuring sweeping views of public squares. Others scan license plates of passing cars, allowing police to track vehicles in real-time. At night, cameras light up across China’s cities, shining lights down alleys and corners.
Over the past few decades, the Chinese government has rolled out a series of high-tech surveillance projects aimed at bringing the entire country under watch, including “Sky Net” and the “Golden Shield”.
The latest such project is called the “Xueliang Project,” or Sharp Eyes, a reference to a quote from Communist China’s founder, Mao Zedong, who once said “the people have sharp eyes” when urging them to root out neighbors opposed to socialist values.
AP investigations have found that American companies to a large degree designed and built China’s surveillance state, playing a far greater role in enabling human rights abuses than previously known. The US government repeatedly allowed and even actively helped American firms to sell technology to the Chinese police, government and surveillance companies, AP found.
The cameras studding China are knitted together in policing systems that allow authorities to track and control virtually anyone in the country, often targeting perceived threats to the state like dissidents, religious believers or ethnic minorities. Following directives from Beijing to ensure “100 percent coverage” in key public areas, authorities have installed facial-recognition cameras across the country, including in unlikely locations:
Ski slopes.
Beaches.
Remote country roads.
The Great Wall of China.
A slew of cameras greets visitors to Beijing, with a screen underneath announcing: “Amazing China travel starts here!”
At times, entire neighborhoods have been demolished and rebuilt in part to make it easier for cameras to keep watch. The historic quarter of Xinjiang’s ancient silk road city of Kashgar, once a maze-like warren of twisting alleys, was demolished and rebuilt with wider avenues and thousands of camera that light up at night.
China’s cities, roads and villages are now studded with more cameras than the rest of the world combined, analysts say — roughly one for every two people.
The goal is clear, according to authorities: Total surveillance in every corner of the country, with “no blind spots” to be found.
This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.


‘Quick reaction’ National Guard forces to be trained for civil disturbances by 2026, US officials say

‘Quick reaction’ National Guard forces to be trained for civil disturbances by 2026, US officials say
Updated 57 min 15 sec ago

‘Quick reaction’ National Guard forces to be trained for civil disturbances by 2026, US officials say

‘Quick reaction’ National Guard forces to be trained for civil disturbances by 2026, US officials say
  • President Donald Trump has increasingly embraced using the military to support his domestic agenda, including deploying troops to Democratic-led cities like Los Angeles; Portland, Oregon, and Washington, DC

WASHINGTON: The National Guard is planning to train hundreds of troops in each state to be part of a rapid-response force focused on civil disturbance missions by the start of next year, two US officials said on Wednesday. President Donald Trump has increasingly embraced using the military to support his domestic agenda, including deploying troops to Democratic-led cities like Los Angeles; Portland, Oregon, and Washington, D.C.
The latest move follows an executive order signed by Trump in August, which called for each state to have National Guard troops who could be quickly deployed for “quelling civil disturbances and ensuring the public safety and order.”
Two US officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said each state would be required to have such a force by the start of next year. Most of the states would be required to have 500 troops as a part of the force.
The specific date for the move was first reported by the Guardian, which cited a National Guard memo from October 8.
A Pentagon spokesperson did not immediately reply to a request for comment on Wednesday.
It is unclear how the force would be different from existing quick-reaction forces already available to each state.
According to the National Guard, each state already has a specially trained force that can take part in missions, including civil disturbance control.
The existing National Guard forces must be able to deploy up to 125 troops within eight hours and a follow-on force of up to 375 personnel within 24 hours. During a trip to Japan earlier this week, Trump told US troops he was prepared to send “more than the National Guard” into US cities if needed.
“We have cities that are troubled ... and we’re sending in our National Guard. And if we need more than the National Guard, we’ll send more than the National Guard because we’re going to have safe cities,” Trump said.


Ex-thief says he warned Louvre of security weaknesses around crown jewels

Ex-thief says he warned Louvre of security weaknesses around crown jewels
Updated 30 October 2025

Ex-thief says he warned Louvre of security weaknesses around crown jewels

Ex-thief says he warned Louvre of security weaknesses around crown jewels
  • David Desclos says heflagged the gallery’s windows in 2020when the Louvre invited him for its in-house podcast about a historic 1792 theft
  • “Through the windows — even from the roofs — there are plenty of ways in,”theformer bank robber recounted telling a senior official involved in the production

PARIS: Days after thieves took just minutes to steal eight pieces of the French crown jewels from the Louvre, a former bank robber says he warned a museum official of glaring weaknesses — including jewel cases by streetside windows that were “a piece of cake” to attack.
David Desclos talks like what he was: a pro who knew how to make alarms go quiet. In an interview with The Associated Press on Tuesday just outside I.M. Pei’s glass pyramid, the reformed burglar said he flagged the gallery’s windows and nearby display cases years ago, after the Louvre invited him to the Apollo Gallery to weigh in for its 2020 in-house podcast about a historic 1792 theft.
“Have you seen those windows? They’re a piece of cake. You can imagine anything — people in disguise, slipping in through the windows,” he said, recounting that he told a senior official involved in the Louvre’s podcast production — not the museum director — about the risk. “Through the windows — even from the roofs — there are plenty of ways in.”
Then came Sunday’s heist. Authorities say two thieves in high-visibility jackets smashed through a window of the Apollo Gallery and used power tools to cut open cases. Eight crown-jewel items — valued in some reports at more than $100 million — disappeared in minutes. A ninth piece, Empress

 

Eugénie’s diamond-studded crown, was found on the ground outside the museum, damaged but salvageable. Two suspects have been arrested; others remain at large.
“Exactly what I had predicted,” Desclos said. “They came by the windows … they came, they took, and they left.”
Timing, he argues, was part of the trick. “Do it in broad daylight, at opening time — that disables the first alarm layer… You know you’ve got five to seven minutes before police arrive.”
A smash-and-grab is choreography, he says: rehearsal, a stopwatch, muscle memory.
Were display cases a weak spot?
High on his list of weak points is a 2019 overhaul of the Apollo Gallery display cases. Desclos — who has slicked back hair and a larger-than-life personality — says older display cases were designed so that, in an attack, treasures could drop to safety; newer ones without that feature left the artifacts vulnerable.
As he put it: “It’s incomprehensible they changed the cases to leave jewels within arm’s reach. You’re making it easier for burglars.”
The Louvre has pushed back on such criticism, saying the newer vitrines are more secure and meet modern standards.
And then there was one glaring soft spot. “When I saw that specific window, I thought: they’re crazy.”
Desclos says he raised those concerns with the Louvre official after the podcast recording and avoided spelling out vulnerabilities on air.
“I couldn’t say on the podcast, ‘Go burglarize.’ That would have given the idea to many others,” he told AP.
The Louvre did not immediately respond to AP’s request for comment. AP has listened to the podcast and verified Desclos’ presence on it but cannot immediately verify his account of warning a museum official.
An ex-con with a colorful story
If the messenger sounds improbable, so does his résumé. He grew up in Caen, Normandy, started stealing food as a child, moved on to department stores and banks, and specialized in neutralizing alarm systems. In the late 1990s, he says he and accomplices spent months tunneling through city sewers to reach a Société Générale bank vault at Christmas.
Incredibly, Desclos has reinvented himself as a stand-up comedian, performing a show titled ‘Hold-Up’ drawn from his past.
Desclos stresses that despite his notorious former career, he has no leads on the famous museum breach.
Security reckoning in Paris museums
Scrutiny of the heist is widening. Paris Police Chief Patrice Faure is scheduled to speak at the French Senate on Wednesday in a session on museum security and the broader threats highlighted by the theft.
The Louvre’s strains have been visible for months. In June, a spontaneous staff strike — including security personnel — forced the museum to close as workers protested unmanageable crowds, chronic understaffing and what one union representative called “untenable” conditions, leaving thousands of ticketed visitors under Pei’s pyramid.
As for the loot’s afterlife, Desclos drains the glamor fast. “There is 90— 95 percent chance the jewels will be dismantled and stone by stone put in block,” he said.
His prescription is blunt: vault the originals; show replicas. “The real ones should be at the Banque de France,” he said. French media report that after the heist, remaining crown-jewel pieces were moved to the central bank’s deep vaults, sitting near secure national gold reserves and Leonardo da Vinci’s notebooks.
“They should have listened,” Desclos said.