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Daniel Davis Deep Dive Merch: Etsy store https://www.etsy.com/shop/DanielDavis... The discussion centers on President Trump’s comments about nuclear weapons and testing, and the expert analysis that follows. Summary: Trump claimed the U.S. has more nuclear weapons than Russia and that Russia and China are testing nuclear weapons, suggesting the U.S. may need to test as well. He also said he favors denuclearization and mentioned possible talks with Russia and China. Experts criticized Trump’s statements as factually incorrect: Russia, not the U.S., has the largest nuclear arsenal. Neither Russia nor China has tested nuclear weapons since the 1990s (Russia’s last in 1990, China’s in 1996, and the U.S. in 1992). Current Russian tests involve nuclear-propelled systems, not actual nuclear warheads. Analysts expressed concern that Trump’s rhetoric could escalate tensions or lead to unnecessary nuclear testing, which scientists say isn’t needed—America’s nuclear arsenal is already reliable. They noted the New START treaty between the U.S. and Russia is expiring soon, and while Trump claims discussions with Russia are happening, the U.S. has resisted extending arms control agreements that Russia wants to renew. Going forward, experts emphasized that meaningful arms control must include China, which is expanding its arsenal (about 600 warheads) but still far below the U.S. (~3,700) and Russia (~4,300). They questioned China’s buildup, noting that after a certain point, more warheads don’t enhance deterrence—once second-strike capability is assured, additional weapons add little strategic value. The broader conclusion: talk of new nuclear testing or missile defense systems (“Golden Dome”) is largely futile and wasteful since no defense can stop a full-scale nuclear exchange. Experts argued that responsible great-power behavior should focus on facts, restraint, and stable arms control, not impulsive statements or arms-race rhetoric.