VIENNA -- The United States and Russia have both recently threatened to resume nuclear testing, alarming the

international community and jeopardizing a global norm against such tests.

Experts say these threats from the world’s two largest nuclear powers put pressure on nonproliferation efforts and

endanger global peace and security.

“Because of other countries’ testing programs, I have instructed the Department of War to start testing our Nuclear

Weapons on an equal basis,” U.S. President Donald Trump said in a post on his Truth Social site at the end of October.

“That process will begin immediately.”

Moscow quickly responded.

Russian President Vladimir Putin told his Security Council that should the U.S. or any signatory to the Comprehensive

Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty conduct nuclear weapons tests, “Russia would be under obligation to take reciprocal measures.”

Here’s is a look at what a resumption of nuclear testing could mean.

Concerns about the negative effects of nuclear weapon tests grew in the 1950s when the U.S. and the Soviet Union carried

out multiple powerful atomic tests in the atmosphere. As a result, a limited nuclear test ban treaty was negotiated that

prohibited such tests but underground tests were still permitted.

Renewed international efforts to ban all nuclear tests resulted in the start of negotiations for a comprehensive treaty

in 1994, culminating in its adoption by the U.N. General Assembly in 1996.

With 187 states having signed the treaty and 178 having ratified it, most experts believe the treaty has established a

norm against atomic testing — even without formally entering into force.

For the treaty to officially take effect, 44 specific states — listed in an annex to the treaty — must ratify it. Nine

of them have not yet done so.

China, Egypt, Iran, Israel and the U.S. signed but didn’t ratify it. India, North Korea and Pakistan neither signed nor

ratified the treaty. Russia signed and ratified the treaty but revoked its ratification in 2023, saying the imbalance

between its ratification and U.S. failure to do so was “unacceptable in the current international situation.”

Alongside the treaty, the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization was established in Vienna. It runs a global

monitoring network to detect nuclear tests worldwide, operating 307 monitoring stations, using seismic, hydroacoustic,

infrasound and radionuclide technologies.

The organization is financed mainly through assessed contributions by its member states. Its budget for 2025 is more

than $139 million.

Daryl Kimball, executive director of the Arms Control Association in Washington, said that a resumption of U.S. atomic

tests would “open the door for states with less nuclear testing experience to conduct full-scale tests that could help

them perfect smaller, lighter warhead designs.”

This would “decrease U.S. and international security,” he said.

Joseph Rodgers, fellow at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies, said that states such as

China or India stand to profit from a resumption of nuclear tests.

“It makes more sense for them to test” than it does for the U.S. or Russia, the two states who have conducted most

atomic tests to date, Rodgers said.

The U.S. conducted its last nuclear test in 1992. Since 1996, only 10 nuclear tests have been conducted by three

countries: India, Pakistan and North Korea. None of them have signed or ratified the treaty

The vast majority of nuclear tests — approximately 2,000 — occurred before 1996, mostly by the U.S. and Soviet Union.

Given the uncertainty around Trump’s announcement and the potential for escalation of tensions around the issue, the

test ban treaty organization could play a role in resolving the situation.

Rodgers said that the treaty organization is primarily a scientific one and should focus on providing scientific data to

the international community.

But Kimball disagrees, suggesting the organization's Executive Secretary Robert Floyd could “take the initiative and

bring together” officials from the U.S. and other countries to help resolve some uncertainties, such as what type of

nuclear tests the U.S. president was referring to in his statement.

Floyd told The Associated Press that in the current situation, he believes his organization’s main role is providing

“confidence to states” that they would know if a nuclear weapon explosion occurred “anywhere, anytime.”

The organization's monitoring network successfully detected all six atomic tests conducted by North Korea between 2006

and 2017, he said.

The White House has so far not clarified what kind of tests Trump meant and what other countries he was referring to in

his statement. U.S. Energy Secretary Chris Wright said the new tests would not include nuclear explosions.

Nuclear test explosions banned under the treaty are so-called supercritical tests, where fissile material is compressed

to start a self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction that creates an explosion.

These tests produce a nuclear yield — the amount of energy released, which defines a weapon’s destructive power. The

treaty bans any nuclear explosion with a yield, following a zero yield standard.

In contrast, subcritical nuclear experiments, the ones Wright was referring to, produce no self-sustaining chain

reaction and no explosion. Nuclear weapon states, including the U.S., conduct these experiments routinely without

violating the treaty.

Kimball says hydronuclear tests with extremely small yields conducted underground in metal chambers are “undetectable”

by the organization's monitoring system.

“So that creates what I would say is a verification gap regarding this particular type of extremely low yield

explosion,” he said.

When the organization's monitoring system was established in the 1990s, it was designed to detect nuclear explosions of

1 kiloton (1,000 tons of TNT). Floyd said the system actually performs better, detecting explosions below 1 kiloton, at

500 tons of TNT.

The nuclear bomb dropped on Hiroshima by the U.S. was approximately 15 kilotons.

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