• ValiantDust@feddit.org
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    18 days ago

    There are far right extremists on the rise in Germany as well. The question you should ask yourself is: Do you want to risk an AfD-lead, Putin-loving, EU- and NATO-critic government being in control of those nuclear weapons?

  • cabbage@piefed.social
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    18 days ago

    This comment section seems to assume that just because the cold war never went nuclear, it never could have. It also seems to forget the stress of living under constant threat of nuclear war.

    We need to get rid of nukes, not build new ones. One of our core projects as humanity should be to get rid of nuclear weapons. Our failure to do so is the fault of the Americans as much as the Russians, if not more. You guys sure love your bombs.

    So to answer the question: Nah, fuck that.

    • ImplyingImplications@lemmy.ca
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      18 days ago

      Thank you. It makes me lose hope for the future of humanity everytime I read comments saying we should remake the mistakes of our past. If we had nukes in 1914, the world would have ended because the Archduke of Austria was shot.

      The Archduke of Austria, a title that doesn’t exist anymore, was the heir to rule Austria-Hungary, a country that doesn’t exist anymore. He was killed by a Bosnian because he didn’t like being a part of Austria-Hungary. Bosnia would later become a part of Yugoslavia, a country that doesn’t exist anymore. How many nukes would have been launched to save these meaningless titles and borders?

      • sith@lemmy.zipOP
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        17 days ago

        Well, my guess is that there wouldn’t have been a WW1 if nukes were present. Also, there wouldn’t have been a WW1 (as we know it) if pre-war leaders had known it would be a trench war of attrition.

        Also, WW3 would probably have been a reality if nukes weren’t present.

    • sith@lemmy.zipOP
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      18 days ago

      But what should one do if one has a neighbor who constantly threatens with nuclear annihilation and who doesn’t respect anyone who’s not also a nuclear power? Just give in? I feel that we’re no longer in a Nash equilibrium.

      • cabbage@piefed.social
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        18 days ago

        Build up defence, and a plausible threat using other less awful weapons.

        Nuclear threatens the civil population. Despots like Putin might not even care all that much about that. What we need is targeted weapons and intelligence. Putin should expect that, if he launches a nuke, it might not mean that Moscow will be transformed to ashes, but we’ll take out him and his crooks with targeted strikes wherever they may hide.

        The Russians have a history of burning their cities to the ground, and of sacrificing their population for strategic reasons. Targeting the civilian population is pointless. We can do a lot better with targeted strikes, and with modern technology it should be possible.

        • BaroqueInMind@lemmy.one
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          18 days ago

          It’s hard to launch a precision counter-strike when your adversary has the capability and quantity of nukes to not only completely overwhelm your air defense systems, but own enough nukes to accept a loss of 80% of them and still have enough going through every layer of your countries defenses to destroy you and the entire rest of the world 6 times over.

          • cabbage@piefed.social
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            18 days ago

            Considering this is the problem, I struggle to believe “more nukes” is the solution. No matter how much American political realists enjoy jerking off to their doomsday scenarios.

            • BaroqueInMind@lemmy.one
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              18 days ago

              Cool, but no county is going to say “let’s build just one nuke for deterrence and stop there”.

              Also, after witnessing what happened in Libya and Ukraine, no country is going to say “no nukes needed, let’s dismantle what we have, we’re a sovereign and secure country”.

              Pandora’s Box is opened and you all are living in a fucking fantasy world where no bullies exist or will never come to exist in the future.

        • SomeAmateur@sh.itjust.works
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          17 days ago

          With your request in mind I ran the comment through ChatGPT, just for you. Enjoy!

          Codec Transmission: Solid Snake & Nastasha Romanenko


          Snake: [static crackles, the screen flickers to life, Snake’s voice low, gruff]
          “Romanenko, I’ve been scanning through this comment section… It seems like everyone’s forgetting the bigger picture. They think just because the Cold War didn’t go nuclear, it was all just a close call that never could have happened.”

          Nastasha: [calm and measured, her voice cutting through the static]
          “Snake, you’re absolutely right. The assumption that the nuclear threat was just a matter of chance and never a real possibility… It’s dangerous. It underestimates the tension, the fear, the sheer madness that gripped the world for decades. The fear of waking up to a flash of light and knowing the world was about to change forever.”

          Snake: [scoffs, a bitter chuckle escaping him]
          “Yeah. I don’t think people really get it. All those years, the Cold War didn’t end with a handshake. It ended with a quiet sigh of relief. But we all knew it was a coin toss. Heads, we survive. Tails, we’re vaporized.”

          Nastasha: [her voice hardens, as though drawing from memories of a time she’d rather forget]
          “Exactly. Imagine living with that over your head every day. The dread, the constant knowing that at any moment, the world could be wiped out in a flash, and it wouldn’t be your fault. You’d just be collateral damage. It’s as if the people who lived in that time were somehow made of stronger stuff, able to endure the unimaginable.”

          Snake: [leans back, folding his arms across his chest as if in thought]
          “I get what you’re saying, but there’s something that bugs me about this mindset—about the idea that because we made it out without a nuclear apocalypse, we’re somehow immune. Like we can just sit back and let the next generation think it was all a fairy tale. A close call, but nothing more.”

          Nastasha: [sharp inhale, her tone biting with the weight of history]
          “It’s not just a fairy tale, Snake. It’s a horrific reality that nearly became true. The weapons we developed were so powerful, so incomprehensible, that they could’ve ended everything, in an instant. The logic of deterrence kept the world balanced on a knife’s edge, but it could’ve just as easily tipped over. One wrong move, one miscalculation… and the world as we know it would’ve been gone.”

          Snake: [pauses, his voice low and almost whispering]
          “Yeah… and it wasn’t just the Soviets or the Americans. It was the whole world playing Russian roulette. Everyone was in on it. The whole damn planet was holding its breath for decades.”

          Nastasha: [nodding, but there’s an edge to her words now]
          “Of course, and let’s not forget—our failure to get rid of nuclear weapons isn’t just a product of rivalry or ideological differences. It’s the failure of humanity as a whole to look at the bigger picture. Instead, both sides clung to these weapons, clung to the idea that the power to destroy could somehow be the power to control. But it’s an illusion. A dangerous one.”

          Snake: [his voice tinged with frustration, rubbing his temple]
          “You’re not wrong. The Russians. The Americans. They’re all guilty. The U.S. has always had an unhealthy obsession with their bombs. It’s like they think the more they have, the safer they are. But what do we really have to show for it? More weapons? More power? More destruction?”

          Nastasha: [quiet but firm]
          “Snake, the reason we haven’t gotten rid of nuclear weapons is simple—fear. Fear that without them, we would be vulnerable. But the truth is, we’re already vulnerable. The real danger isn’t the lack of nukes, but the presence of them. A single mistake, a single reckless decision, and we’re all gone.”

          Snake: [grits his teeth, anger simmering beneath his calm tone]
          “Yeah, that’s the real kicker, Romanenko. People still want to build more. They want to keep creating newer, deadlier weapons, thinking that if they have the biggest bomb, they’ll be the ones in control. But all they’re really doing is inviting disaster. It’s not just about power, it’s about stupidity. We’re playing with fire, and everyone’s too afraid to put the damn match down.”

          Nastasha: [her voice steady, but her words carry a weight of truth]
          “It’s the same cycle, Snake. We see it in history, over and over again. Nations too proud, too stubborn to let go of what they think gives them an advantage, even if it’s ultimately self-destructive. The American and Russian leaders, they’re no different than the ones before them. They think they can control something as uncontrollable as nuclear weapons. They think their arsenal gives them strength, when in fact, it only guarantees our eventual downfall.”

          Snake: [pauses for a moment, thinking hard, voice quiet but resolute]
          “So what do we do? How do we fix it? The world’s not going to just wake up one day and throw its bombs away. This isn’t a utopia. It’s a battlefield, always has been.”

          Nastasha: [a long pause, the weight of her answer hanging in the air]
          “You’re right. There’s no magic solution. But we have to start somewhere. First, we acknowledge the truth—we need to get rid of these weapons. Not create new ones. Not stockpile them. We need to take the step forward, even if it’s one small step. A movement to dismantle nuclear arsenals, to make the world realize that we’re all in this together, and that no one is truly safe while these weapons exist. Humanity needs to look beyond the false comfort of nuclear deterrence and realize that there’s no real security in the threat of annihilation.”

          Snake: [shakes his head, his voice heavy, almost weary]
          “Yeah, maybe it starts with a conversation. But who’s going to listen, Romanenko? The powers that be? They don’t care about peace. They care about control. And as long as they hold the bombs, they’ll never let go.”

          Nastasha: [sighs softly, her tone almost a whisper]
          “Then it’s up to people like us, Snake. The ones who see the bigger picture. The ones who understand that the only way forward is to dismantle the legacy of destruction that we’ve built. We have to make the case, over and over again. It won’t be easy. But what else is left to do?”

          Snake: [his voice hardening, his eyes steely with resolve]
          “Then we fight. We don’t just stand by and let it happen. We keep pushing. One day, we’ll get through to them. And when that day comes, maybe, just maybe, we’ll see a world without nukes.”

          Nastasha: [calmly, with a hint of resolve]
          “That’s the only hope we have left. One step at a time. But we have to start somewhere.”

          Snake: [pauses, then responds with a finality, his voice resolute]
          “Yeah. And to answer your question, Romanenko? Nah, screw that. We’re not playing that game anymore.”


          [The codec flickers, the transmission cuts out, the screen turning to static once again.]

    • Carrolade@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      Obama made this a goal of his second term, and while he achieved some success, the relationship between the west and the other major nuclear powers has significantly worsened since then.

      It’s an admirable goal, but I’m not sure it’s going to be feasible any time in the near future.

    • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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      17 days ago

      If it ever goes nuclear, it doesn’t matter. You’re toast. So nukes keep aggressors like Russia, out of Ukraine (if they had not given up their nukes)

  • Chainweasel@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    Absolutely.
    There are two ways to make sure nuclear weapons are never used in war:

    1. No one has any nukes
    2. Everyone has nukes.

    #1 is never going to happen. The US, Russia, and China are for sure never ever giving up their nuclear weapons.
    So #2 it is, level the playing field and give everyone nuclear weapons. A nation is far less likely to use a nuclear weapon if they know they can and will get nuked back right away.

    • RegalPotoo@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      The MAD doctrine aims to make the intentional use of nukes in war unworkable, but in doing so makes their accidental use due to mishap, misunderstanding or miscommunication much more likely, and the more people that are party to the MAD doctrine the more likely accidents are.

      You don’t need to look very hard to find examples of cases where billions of people would have been killed if not for people choosing to ignore doctrine even when the information they had at hand said that they should use their weapons

      • Fedegenerate@lemmynsfw.com
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        18 days ago

        New MAD doctrine idea: all belligerents in any international conflict gets nuked. Thank you coming to my ted talk, I have a proof but it is too large to fit in the comments.

    • scarabic@lemmy.world
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      17 days ago

      2 only works with countries that have something to lose. Don’t assume that a deterrence strategy that works with other major powers is going to work with some small, hellish Islamist dictatorship.

  • Successful_Try543@feddit.org
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    18 days ago

    We already have nuclear participation with the US. In case NATO decides for mutual nuclear defense, the US nuclear bombs stored in Germany exclusively for German use would be attached to airplanes of the German Air Force to be deployed onto their targets.

    • sith@lemmy.zipOP
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      18 days ago

      And what if the orange man and his friend Putin differs?

          • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝@sopuli.xyz
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            18 days ago

            About the same thing as if the AfD does.

            We get fucked, my friend. And that’s why establishing a shared EU army to pass the nukes to would be good for everyone.

            • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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              17 days ago

              It’s funny, after the breakup of USSR there existed for a few years such an entity as “CIS armed forces”. It does not anymore because national governments want to control their own militaries.

              • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝@sopuli.xyz
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                17 days ago

                National governments don’t give a fuck about their own armies until they need them. Ironically, most CIS countries needed their armies to defend against Russia.

                EU countries can not wage wars against one other, armies or not, as everyone knows that the whole bloc’s economy would crash instantly as soon as we stopped trading. If German tanks rolled across France again, their crews would starve, as would the French defenders before they could kill each other.

                The only reasonable use for an army in modern Europe beyond imperialistic outings with the US to countries who deserve better is to defend against Russia (and maybe China).

        • BastingChemina@slrpnk.net
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          18 days ago

          France and the US are the only two NATO countries able to build nukes.

          Theoretically the UK are able to build nukes too but not without US support.

          • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝@sopuli.xyz
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            18 days ago

            The Montebello Islands disagree.

            You technically could build a nuke with enough enriched uranium. The recipe for a nuke is literally:

            • take half of the amount of the enriched uranium required
            • smash the other half into it
            • boom, Hiroshima.

            You need a particular kind of nuclear reactor to create the enriched uranium, though. But for example in Ukraine, the Chornobyl reactor was built exactly for that.

            That said, the US, the UK and France are the only three NATO countries allowed under international agreement to build nukes.

            • macarthur_park@lemmy.world
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              18 days ago

              You need a particular kind of nuclear reactor to create the enriched uranium

              *plutonium. Enriched uranium comes from taking natural uranium and enriching the content of a specific isotope (235U), typically with centrifuges, gaseous diffusion and/or magnetic separation in a synchrotron. The enriched uranium can be used in a weapon, or it can be used as fuel for a nuclear reactor to make 239Pu from 238U.

    • remon@ani.social
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      18 days ago

      Not sure what you mean by “for German use”. The US is very much in charge of every step of the use of shared nuclear weapons. Our pilots get to deliver them, that’s pretty much all of our involvement.

        • sith@lemmy.zipOP
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          18 days ago

          Good luck using them unless you’re allowed to. Might be an option if you have a couple of months. Though you would have to defend against two nuclear powers during that time.

          Also good luck using your US made jets and critical components.

          • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝@sopuli.xyz
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            18 days ago

            Yeah, I’m pretty sure if Germany and the US were on so bad terms that they wouldn’t be trading, Western civilization would just collapse. The NL of ASML fame is a very, very close German ally.

            • sith@lemmy.zipOP
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              18 days ago

              I believe that with the new US administration (and US popular opinion), one could go from good terms to bad over night. I would not trust that the US adhere to article 5 if things become serious for real. Why should they start a nuclear war just because their semi-friend forces itself upon a woke central European country? Things were completely different during the cold War.

              • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝@sopuli.xyz
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                18 days ago

                Oh, you’re thinking, what if the US invades Germany?

                So you see, there is one reason we keep the French around beyond baguettes and wine, it’s their ability to turn all major US cities into a radioactive wasteland regardless of what happens to the rest of the EU.

                And the French are willing to do that and are obligated to beyond NATO as well.

      • Kaboom@reddthat.com
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        18 days ago

        That’s how I know you’re European. America hates Russia. The cold war left generational trauma.

        You do not have to worry about America siding with Russia.

    • BastingChemina@slrpnk.net
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      18 days ago

      If Germany can’t use the bomb without the US approbation then Germany does not have a nuclear bomb.

      Germany does not have a credible deterrence.

    • RubberDuck@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      Why not? This is contingent on the US being an unreliable nuclear umbrella… And Germany deciding they will be part of the EU’s nuclear deterrence.

      • Jumi@lemmy.world
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        18 days ago

        I don’t like the idea being part of a country that could kill thousands or even millions of people at once.

        • Birch@sh.itjust.works
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          18 days ago

          Well, no, but I’d rather be in the position of the stick holder than the potential pointy end receiver.

          • cabbage@piefed.social
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            18 days ago

            Nuclear war is not a stick battle, it’s a knife fight. You’ll both end up bleeding out. Best thing you can do is to not participate.

            People should watch Doctor Strangelove as a fucking case study.

            • sith@lemmy.zipOP
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              18 days ago

              Best thing you can do is to not fucking participate.

              What if that’s not an option? It could for sure be rational for a violent actor to force it’s will on a non-voilent one. One only needs one rotten apple and the Nash equilibrium dissolves.

              • cabbage@piefed.social
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                18 days ago

                We should be hesitant to accept too many lessons from the American realist school of thought. Their great legacy is to narrowly steer clear of a nuclear holocaust, on several instances out of sheer luck, while repeatedly fucking up huge parts of the world beyond recognition.

                Somehow we celebrate this clown parade for the one disaster they nearly brought upon us, but we narrowly escaped. There’s no lessons to be learned from the Americans, except as a cautionary tale.

                Sure, MAD worked; we only came closer to our own extinction than we ever have in the process.

            • Kaboom@reddthat.com
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              18 days ago

              No, that’s not the case anymore. Modern anti-air missile systems can take care of nukes.

              It’s not a knife fight, it’s a “who can spend more money” fight to the death.

              • Skua@kbin.earth
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                18 days ago

                Anti-air systems are absolutely not built to handle ICBMs. The American Ground-Based Midcourse Defense, a dedicated anti-ICBM tool, is estimated to have a 50-50 success rate per counter-missile launched. They only have 44 of them. The Russian counterpart to it uses nukes to nuke the incoming nukes. Just shooting them down is not a solved problem.

  • UpperBroccoli@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    18 days ago

    We need guillotines, not nukes.

    “Our” leaders start wars, and the common people suffer. We are never asked if they want that shit, but are forced to participate and kill or be killed. Fuck that. Fuck those leaders. Let’s united against bad leaders and off with their heads!

    • leverage@lemdro.id
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      18 days ago

      Don’t discount the amount of common people that are totally onboard with killing everyone in another tribe. There have been plenty of times when leaders are the only reason diplomacy happens in the face of a bloodthirsty population, though certainly more common that war happens because leaders channel the energy of that bloodthirst as it is easier and the benefits (to themselves first, their tribe second) are thought to outweigh the risks. Look through history and you’ll see enough instances of leaders trying to keep the peace only to be killed by their bloodthirsty population and replaced by someone who will act.

      I wish we could all just get along, but so far the only effective deterrent in all of history has been the threat of destruction, either by a sufficiently powerful peace mongering leader, or MAD that nuclear weapons established. I suspect the next change in this dynamic, if MAD holds true, is some real AI that takes the reigns. It would be hard to rule break if we had an omniscient leader that could kill you within seconds.

  • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️@yiffit.net
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    17 days ago

    I don’t think anyone should have nukes. Not even my country. But since that’s never going to happen and the major deterrent to using nukes is if everyone has nukes, then maybe everyone* should have nukes.

    *Everyone except crazy psychos that don’t give a fuck about mutually assured destruction and would still use them. Germany isn’t such a country with such a power. At least not since 1945.

    • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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      17 days ago

      Any country can become such, but as you’ve said yourself - everyone having nukes is more realistic than nobody having nukes, and the “mass destruction” part can even have upsides.

    • RubberDuck@lemmy.world
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      18 days ago

      You don’t need many nowadays. They can be city killers all by themselves… a single satan 2 missile Russia is so desperate to get working would be able to wipe new York of the map…

      It would additionally require a few subs for second strike capability.

  • Atlusb@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    I guess the question would be connected with how europe is going to handle its combined military defense.

  • kingthrillgore@lemmy.ml
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    16 days ago

    Sadly, we are now at at point where nuclear weapons are the only effective deterrent against Russia. Ukraine surrendered the ones they had and we’re living the side effects. This sucks, man!

  • weker01@sh.itjust.works
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    18 days ago

    No, it’s illegal. We cannot do this because it’s illegal is I think the most German of answers.

    „Die Regierungen der Bundesrepublik Deutschland und der Deutschen Demokratischen Republik bekräftigen ihren Verzicht auf Herstellung und Besitz von und auf Verfügungsgewalt über atomare, biologische und chemische Waffen. Sie erklären, daß auch das vereinte Deutschland sich an diese Verpflichtungen halten wird. Insbesondere gelten die Rechte und Verpflichtungen aus dem Vertrag über die Nichtverbreitung von Kernwaffen vom 1. Juli 1968 für das vereinte Deutschland fort.“