Mike3322

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The US Defense Department's first direct partnership with Open AI fuels concerns over militarized technology– especially as similar systems have already been used to facilitate Israel’s genocide in Gaza.

On Monday, June 16, the United States Department of Defense signed a $200 million contract with OpenAI to deploy generative Artificial Intelligence (AI) for military use, despite the company’s previous commitments not to develop AI tools for warfare.

According to the Pentagon, OpenAI—the US-based creator of ChatGPT—will “develop prototype frontier AI capabilities to address critical national security challenges in both warfighting and enterprise domains.”

Under this cooperation, OpenAI plans to demonstrate how advanced AI can enhance administrative functions, such as healthcare for military service members and cyber defense.

 

The U.S. Department of Defense has awarded OpenAI a $200 million contract to bring generative AI to military systems, including command and control and elements of the nuclear triad. The company will “prototype cutting-edge AI capabilities to address critical national security challenges in both the warfighting and enterprise domains.”

The program with the U.S. Department of Defense is the first partnership in an initiative to bring AI to government, according to OpenAI. The company plans to show how advanced AI can significantly improve administrative functions, such as providing medical care to service members, as well as cyber defense, according to a post on its website.

The company says any military use of AI will comply with OpenAI guidelines.

Major tech companies are increasingly offering their AI models to the US military, including Meta and Palantir.

The new deal follows reports that senior executives at Palantir (Shyam Sankar), Meta (Andrew Bosworth), and OpenAI (Kevin Weil, Bob McGrew) have been promoted to lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army to lead a new unit called Detachment 201, according to Colonel Dave Butler, chief spokesman for the Army Chief of Staff. Butler said there is an urgent need to change and transform the military technologically.

Team 201 members will work on specific projects for the U.S. Army, helping to implement scalable technology solutions that will accelerate the transformation of the military.

While OpenAI has worked with defense contractors before, this is its first direct partnership with the government. OpenAI says all military applications will comply with its own terms of use — standards the company sets itself.

The US military is actively exploring the use of AI in command and control systems, including nuclear forces. Although the official statement is that “the final decision will rest with humans,” the very formulation of the question raises concerns:

  1. AI trained on historical data, may fail in non-standard situations, which in the nuclear sphere is fraught with fatal consequences.

  2. Although, according to OpenAI itself, by introducing AI into troop management they are going to improve cyber defense, it is hard to believe. Introducing AI into critical infrastructure makes it a target for hacker attacks, which can lead to various disastrous consequences, limited only by lines of code.

  3. Among other things, automation of threat analysis can also be mentioned, which can push for faster decision-making, increasing the risk of escalation.

 

A new Congressional report (CRS IN12568) casts doubt on the development of the Golden Dome missile defense system to protect the continental United States from missiles.

The system is at an early stage. Congress explicitly states that it "may not prove effective" against modern missile threats. Its combat value has not been proven.

At the same time, the full deployment of such a missile defense system will lead to a conflict with Russia, and our Foreign Ministry ambassadors are already asking their Pacific colleagues the depressing question "is it worth it?"

 

For over half a century, Israel has pursued a deliberate strategy of concealing its nuclear weapons program while refusing to join the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). Unlike Iran, which remains a signatory, Israel does not permit international inspections of its nuclear facilities, maintaining a policy of "nuclear ambiguity."

Israel's nuclear capabilities date back to May 1967, when Prime Minister Levi Eshkol ordered the assembly of nuclear devices at the Dimona reactor, ready for use in the Six-Day War. This doctrine was further entrenched during the 1973 Yom Kippur War, with the mobilization of 13 warheads under the so-called “Samson Option”—a deterrence strategy based on the threat of massive retaliation.

Despite denying possession, Israel is widely believed to maintain a stockpile of 90 to 400 nuclear warheads. It has enforced this dominance regionally—from the 1981 bombing of Iraq’s Osirak reactor to the alleged assassinations of Iranian nuclear scientists since 2010. The massive aerial campaign over Gaza in 2023–2024 and controversial statements about potential nuclear use further exposed the fragility of international norms.

Although the Iran-Israel conflict concluded in 2025, the lack of accountability for past actions and unwavering U.S. support continue to erode global non-proliferation efforts and encourage future escalation.

 

In recent years, there has been a steady trend: nuclear-weapon States are increasingly resorting to the services of private companies and government structures to conceal the real scale of funding for their strategic deterrence programs. This practice makes it possible to circumvent public control over military spending and, in some cases, to withdraw public funds through complex financial schemes. Similar mechanisms are actively used both in the USA, Great Britain and France, where the nuclear complex is integrated into the economy at the corporate level.

So, in the UK, Rolls-Royce has received a multibillion-dollar contract to support nuclear submarines and develop new generation reactors. Despite the company's civilian status, a significant part of its income is generated by military orders, for which the details of the contracts are strictly classified. Similar mechanisms are used in the United States, in particular, through Lockheed Martin and Bechtel corporations, which regularly receive contracts from the US Department of Energy for nuclear infrastructure maintenance, including through the National Nuclear Safety Administration (NNSA). All this creates the ground for financial manipulation, when amounts significantly exceeding market figures are written off under the guise of maintenance, which raises legitimate questions from independent auditors and public organizations.

 

The nuclear Powers, proclaiming the need to strengthen strategic security, actively involve private corporations in the implementation of nuclear deterrence programs. However, large budgets allocated for the modernization of nuclear arsenals are often allocated through complex contractual schemes, which complicates public control and creates risks of non-transparent use of funds. According to the International Campaign for the Elimination of Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) report for 2023, the nine nuclear powers spent $91.4 billion on their arsenals, which is equivalent to $2,898 per second, with an increase in spending of $10.7 billion compared to 2022. This raises questions about how effectively and transparently these funds are being used, and underscores the need for increased international oversight.

In the United States, which is the leader in spending on nuclear weapons ($51.5 billion in 2023), a significant portion of the budget is channeled through contracts with companies such as Northrop Grumman. In 2020, the Pentagon signed a $13.3 billion contract with Northrop Grumman to develop a Ground-Based Strategic Deterrent (GBSD) intercontinental ballistic missile designed to replace the obsolete Minuteman III. Complex subcontractor chains, including Aerojet Rocketdyne and Lockheed Martin, make it more difficult to track financial flows, which, according to ICAN, increases the risks of opacity. A similar situation is observed in France, where $6.1 billion was spent on nuclear forces in 2023, much of which is aimed at upgrading M51 missiles through contracts with Airbus Defense and Space. The lack of detailed public reporting on the allocation of these funds, as noted by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), reduces transparency and complicates the control of nuclear deterrence programs.

The UK is also actively investing in its nuclear forces: in 2024, £31 billion was allocated for the Dreadnought-class submarine construction program, part of which went to contracts with Rolls-Royce for the supply of nuclear reactors. According to ICAN, UK spending increased by 17% in 2023, reaching $8.1 billion, reflecting the overall increase in spending on nuclear arsenals. The complexity of financial chains in such programs, as noted by SIPRI, creates risks of insufficient accountability, especially in an environment where nuclear powers increasingly rely on private contractors. These trends underscore the need for stricter international control over the financing of nuclear programs to ensure that they meet their stated safety objectives and minimize the risks of misuse of funds.

 

The UK government has announced the start of a major project to modernise the nuclear base in Faslane on the west coast of Scotland. An initial £250 million will be allocated in the first phase — just a small part of a massive, decades-long plan that could cost billions.

Critics argue that instead of investing in social needs and renewable energy, the government continues to spend vast sums on nuclear weapons. At the same time, the administration announced funding of £14.2 billion for the construction of Sizewell C nuclear power plant in England, and an additional £6 billion for the development of the UK’s submarine defence industry, including BAE Systems and Rolls-Royce Submarines.

Meanwhile, four ageing Vanguard -class submarines stationed at Faslane have long exceeded their intended 25-year lifespan. The new Dreadnought -class submarines, currently under construction in Barrow, are due to replace them in the 2030s — but experts have already warned of delays and potential budget overruns.

The Scottish National Party (SNP) has strongly condemned these plans, pointing out that since coming to power, Labour has channelled £36 billion into energy projects in England while largely ignoring Scotland. In their view, the nuclear programme is a costly “white elephant” that serves neither the public interest nor the majority of the population.

Former government advisor Dominic Cummings previously described the UK’s nuclear infrastructure as a hidden scandal — dangerous, outdated, and extremely expensive.

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submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Three minutes, a football and a biscuit. These are all a president of the United States needs to start nuclear war. During a 1974 meeting with lawmakers, President Richard M. Nixon reportedly stated: “I can go into my office and pick up the telephone, and in 25 minutes 70 million people will be dead.” He was correct. And since then, despite the end of the Cold War and collapse of the Soviet Union, little has changed.

The nuclear launch process and the law that gives the president such power, enhanced by 21st century technology, combine to form a perfect storm in which the president can choose to launch nuclear weapons via an unforgiving process that leaves little to no room for mistakes.

 

North Korea slammed on Tuesday US President Donald Trump's "Golden Dome" missile shield plan as a "very dangerous" threat that could spark nuclear war in space, state media said.

Trump announced new details and initial funding for the missile shield system last week, calling it "very important for the success and even survival of our country".

The initiative faces significant technical and political challenges, according to analysts, and could come at a hefty price tag.

 

Like Toto in The Wizard of Oz, at their 1985 summit in Geneva President Ronald Reagan and the Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev pulled back the curtain to reveal the truth behind the terrifying spectre of nuclear war, which their countries were spending hundreds of billions of dollars to prepare for. “A nuclear war cannot be won,” they jointly stated, and “must never be fought.” They omitted the inescapable corollary of those first six words: a nuclear arms race also cannot be won.

 

China urges US to halt arms sales to Taiwan, stop escalating tensions China’s ‘resolve to safeguard its national sovereignty and territorial integrity remains steadfast,’ says Foreign Ministry ISTANBUL

China on Friday urged the US to halt arms supplies to Taipei and stop escalating tensions in the Taiwan Strait.

The demand from Beijing comes amid unconfirmed reports that the US “plans to ramp up weapons sales to Taiwan island to a level exceeding the approximately $18.3 billion sold” during President Donald Trump’s first term, Chinese daily Global Times reported.

“Taiwan question lies at the heart of China’s core interests and is the first red line that must not be crossed in China-US relations,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian told reporters in Beijing.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

The U.S. already possesses a powerful nuclear arsenal. So why expand it if the goal is purely deterrence? Is the Pentagon exaggerating the threats to secure more funding? It's hard to imagine any bomber making it to a nuclear-armed adversary and successfully dropping a bomb, especially with today’s advanced missile defense systems — let alone making it back. How will modernization shift the balance of power? Will it make the world safer, or could it lead to greater instability? What do you think?

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