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The News That Matters about the Nuclear Industry Fukushima Chernobyl Mayak Three Mile Island Atomic Testing Radiation Isotope

This week in nuclear-related non corporate news

Theme of the week. The World Cup football is nearly over – perhaps now we’ll get some real news. Lots of media reassures us that the wondrous FIFA religious ceremony will not be affected by wildfire smoke.  But nuclear facilities will be.

Some bits of good news  – 

The UN’s Sustainable Development Goals, treated like failures, have changed billions of lives.

The UK (finally) ratified the high seas treaty.  Children are overwhelmingly positive for the future, says survey

TOP STORIES.

Ministry of Ddefence (MoD) finally admits ‘extensive’ human radiation experiments on nuclear test veterans. 
The Killing Machines -Governments and Technology 
Obsessing Over Efficient Death. 
Israel And The United States Are Merging Their Militaries. Here’s Why. 

The Men Who Own the War Now Run It.
Warming Europe complicates France’s bet on nuclear power . Europe’s Nuclear Plants Can’t Beat the Heat 
Nuclear Power is Now Trump Power…What Could Go Wrong?

From the archives – A 90 million gallon nuclear tragedy

Climate. Norwegian rocks to protect Sizewell B on Suffolk coast. The European holiday destinations where 50ºC summers could become the norm. UK has ‘no future’ if it fails to act on ecosystem collapse threatening national security.

Noel’s notes. The global small nuclear reactor bandwagon is led by Britain- It ought to fail, but will it?

AUSTRALIA. 

NUCLEAR-RELATED ITEMS

CLIMATE. France Cuts 6.4 GW of Nuclear Power as Heatwave Grips the Country.

Atomic rivers. The (Un)sustainability of nuclear power in an age of climate change

France temporarily shuts down three nuclear reactors over heatwave.

Nuclear power reactor forced to shut down due to extreme 28C heat.

Heatwave: EDF will once again shut down nuclear reactors – ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/2026/07/15/3-b1-heatwave-edf-will-once-again-shut-down-nuclear-reactors/

EDF will spend nearly 9 billion euros to adapt to climate change – ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/2026/07/16/3-b1-edf-will-spend-nearly-9-billion-euros-to-adapt-to-climate-change/

Climate Change – It’s only a matter of time… 

ECONOMICS.

Nuclear Commercial Shipping Still Fails The Business Case.

‘Sip your coffee while watching the sunrise’: How Israel is colonizing the West Bank by selling Palestinian land to Jewish Americans.

Bangladesh’s Nuclear Power Play Is a Test for Emerging Economies.

Insuring Small Modular Nuclear Reactors.

Holtec bets big on small nuclear reactors in its IPO filing.

Grant to support expansion of TRISO-X nuclear fuel campus.

Nuclear costs crowd out key defence priorities in UK investment plan, say SDR authors.

Great British Energy appoints Amentum and Cavendish in £360M SMR deal.

Government U turn as Sizewell B is to  get a fixed-price government contract -ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/2026/07/15/3-b1-government-u-turn-as-sizewell-b-is-to-get-a-fixed-price-government-contract/

Nuclear power costs billions- Here are seven better ways to use that money – Martin Roche- ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/2026/07/14/3-b1-nuclear-power-costs-billions-here-are-seven-better-ways-to-use-that-money-martin-roche/

EDUCATION. What do you need to know to run a nuclear power plant

ENERGY. Two Geothermal Bets Are Starting to Undercut Nuclear on Cost

ENVIRONMENT. Federal government proposes to lessen nuclear reactor environmental reviews. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Targets Faster Nuclear Licensing With  National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)Streamlining Proposal.

What is it like living near the site of a new nuclear power station? 

ETHICS and RELIGION. The Killing Machines -Governments and Technology Obsessing Over Efficient Death.

What ceasefire? People still being killed and Gaza still under siege

HISTORY ‘They used axes to spare the ammo’: How modern Ukraine’s Nazi heroes massacred Poles during WWII How Israel planned the Gaza genocide decades ago. 250 Years of a Country and What Have We Learned? – The nuclear industrial complex creation catastrophe. 
INDIGENOUS ISSUES. Saugeen Ojibway Nation Says It Was Shut Out of Canada’s Nuclear Strategy 
LEGAL. No, Israel Does Not Have ‘A Right To Exist’. Fearing Justice: Rubio Gets Bolshie About the International Criminal Court (ICC). 
MEDIA Thirteen films that are essential to understanding the nuclear age. Iran aside, don’t ignore Trump’s war crimes in the Caribbean, Venezuela and Somalia. Walt Zlotow – Chicago Tribune misleads its readership with Bob Kustra’s imaginary commentary ‘What Ronald Reagan would do today for the people of Ukraine
OPPOSITION to NUCLEAR . TELL Nuclear Regulatory Commission: Don’t weaken radiation standards. How Fear of Nuclear Armageddon Leads Me to Protest. PICTURE Activists protest outside Pioneer Park nuclear event -ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/2026/07/19/1-b1-activists-protest-outside-pioneer-park-nuclear-event/

POLITICS.

POLITICS INTERNATIONAL and DIPLOMACY.

Europe is Teetering on the Brink. Support Without a Seat at the Table: Poland’s Costly Alignment with Ukraine. A Sustainable Peace in Ukraine: Diplomacy, Neutrality, and the Limits of the Current Order.

Jeffrey Sachs: We’re Led by the Most Incompetent Leaders Imaginable.

Walt Zlotow -All hail Marco Rubio, Potentate of Venezuela.

Trump Says Iran Deal Is “Over,” Signals More US Strikes Are Likely Coming, 

RADIATION. Radiation Protection –analysis of NRC proposals. Challenging New York Time’s Suggestion That We Should Stop Worrying and Love Radiation Trump Administration Scrapping Nuclear Energy Rules Requiring Plants to Keep Radiation Levels “As Low as Reasonably Achievable” 
SAFETY. ‘At risk of horrific contamination’: The Soviet nuclear submarine wreck that is a ‘ticking time bomb’. Incidents. Satellite images show damage inside Iran’s Bushehr nuclear power plant. World warned of ‘nuclear apocalypse’ after drone kills nuclear plant engineer in Ukraine Mysterious drones spotted flying over nuclear power plant. No radiation leak after ‘contamination’ events at Africa’s only nuclear plant, regulator says. 
SECRETS and LIES. The West Won’t Punish The Settlements: its Two-State Solution Was Always a Sham. Trump claimed Iran’s nuclear sites were ‘obliterated’ – Now another is in his sights. Iran Accuses Kushner, Witkoff of Pursuing Profits Over Peace in Diplomatic Talks. 2009 quake may have prompted data rigging by central Japan nuclear operator 
SPACE. EXPLORATION, WEAPONS. Eight NATO allies to create new satellite mega-constellation. Corporations Lead U.S. Militarization of Space.
SPINBUSTER
The false promise of nuclear power. It’s Not Terrorism When We Do It. 
TECHNOLOGY. BEC showcases nuclear powered A.I data centre, Pioneer Park (and Radiation Free Lakeland protestors were there in opposition) AI and the absurdity of nuclear deterrence. 
WASTES. Uranium-Chomping Bacteria Found In Bowels Of Mine That Once Supplied Soviet Nuclear Weapons. Cumbrian environmental groups quit GDF nuclear waste talks . Ed Milliband to decide on Cumbrian nuclear waste plan. Canada’s Federal Government in Disarray Over Nuclear Waste Project Assessment . Decommissioning. Ukraine draft law on Chernobyl decommissioning to 2036 approved. 

WAR and CONFLICT.

WEAPONS and WEAPONS SALES . Autonomous Weapons: The Wave of the Future in Military Conflicts Worldwide.

Faslane set for £15bn upgrade to ‘future-proof it for war-fighting’.

Why is Britain spending huge amounts on nuclear militarism? . ALSO AT https://nuclear-news.net/2026/07/17/3-b1-why-is-britain-investing-huge-amounts-in-nuclear-militarism/

US industrial base is becoming stronger for wartime production, study finds.

A Budget of the Pentagon, By the Congress and For the War Profiteers.

Dennis Kucinich Warns Congress Is Quietly Merging the U.S. and Israeli War Machines.

America’s AI War Has No Civilian Stop Rule.

North Korea vows boost to nuclear buildup, military intelligence. 

July 19, 2026 Posted by | Weekly Newsletter | Leave a comment

Israel And The United States Are Merging Their Militaries. Here’s Why.

“From aid to partnership”, the US and Israel are set to become even more united in genocide

While the initial bill, the “United States-Israel FUTURES Act,” failed as a standalone bill, the core provisions have been included in the NDAA. This aims to “expand and accelerate bilateral defense technology research, development, testing, evaluation, integration, and industrial cooperation”  between the US and Israel, led by an “executive agent” decided by the US Defense Secretary.

This merger would integrate the United States and Israeli occupation militarily, including “data fusion”, “network integration”, research and development, weapons and bio-manufacturing, and collaboration with AI, cyber, and quantum machine learning technologies. While the Israeli occupation forces and US military are already deeply connected and share many of their genocidal tactics, this represents a significant entanglement of the two most belligerent and murderous militaries in the world.

Nuvpreet Kalra, July 15, 2026, https://scheerpost.com/2026/07/15/israel-and-the-united-states-are-merging-their-militaries-heres-why/

In June 2026, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu wrote to Republican Representative Marlin Stutzman of California, saying that “the time has now arrived [for Israel] to move from aid recipient to partner” with the United States. Yesterday, on Fox News, Netanyahu again repeated the proposal to move “from aid to partnership“.

What Netanyahu proclaims is at the core of the proposed “United States-Israel Defense Technology Cooperation Initiative”, which has been included in a section of the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that seeks to push the Pentagon budget to $1.5 trillion in 2027. This proposal to the annual military policy bill aims to essentially merge the Israeli and the US militaries.

This new integration differs from the way the US engages with its other allies. While NATO countries and partners share a degree of military integration with global weapons supply chains, intelligence sharing, military bases, and more, this removes the limitations in existence for military cooperation. Already, the US war drive through NATO has impacts across society beyond what might be recognised as purely military-related, given the military-industrial complex and integration of the US military in all aspects of life. In this case, the merger will deepen ruptures across the political, social, and economic system as the United States moves closer to its proxy. The main beneficiaries of this will be the weapons companies that profited immensely from and have made Israel’s genocide in Gaza possible, as they enter into new seamless contracts.

Israel is increasingly viewed across the world, and within the United States, as a pariah state. In the US, 60% of adults have an unfavourable view of Israel.  This push to further integrate with Israel puts the US on the line in an attempt to ensure the continuation and longevity of the settler colonial project. By entrenching the US military with Israel’s own, it provides a layer of protection that goes even further than the impunity that has given Israel full rein to commit a holocaust in Gaza and further colonisation of the occupied West Bank. This integration will mean that Israel is given unfettered support to carry out its genocidal trajectory for the total colonisation of Palestine, inhibiting any future presidents from changing this relationship, if that were to ever occur.

This is the US empire defending itself, as the zionist state becomes isolated, by trying to make its proxy appear more robust and independent, while maintaining its unbreakable connection to the core. This is a clear response to the massive movements that have erupted across the world for nearly three years in opposing Israel’s genocide and the role of countries in facilitating it. The US is, in a way, absorbing Israel to provide the legitimacy being chipped away at internationally and domestically, ending the narrative opposition to unlimited foreign aid to Israel, which has garnered bipartisan support.

Israel is occupying at least 60% of Gaza. Palestinians are being pushed into a shrinking concentration camp, where they are bombed every single day and refused aid during what is described as a ceasefire. For US taxpayers, this merger would put even more of our money into funding this horrific genocide.

This NDAA is dangerous. Through the US-Israeli integration, it would facilitate more deadly technology, more weapons for genocide, and make it nearly impossible to sever support for Israel by the US. Through the $1.5 trillion Pentagon budget, it would funnel money out of welfare into more war and violence across the world. For the sake of humanity, we have to dismantle this apparatus of death that is the US empire, which is in a perpetual, ever-growing state of war to maintain its system of exploitation and plunder.

Nuvpreet Kalra is CODEPINK’s digital content producer. She completed a Bachelor’s in politics and sociology at the University of Cambridge, and an MA in Internet Equalities at the University of the Arts London. As a student, she was part of movements to divest and decolonize, as well as anti-racist and anti-imperialist groups. Nuvpreet joined CODEPINK as an intern in 2023 and now produces digital and social media content. In England, she organizes with groups for Palestinian liberation, abolition, and anti-imperialism.

While the initial bill, the “United States-Israel FUTURES Act,” failed as a standalone bill, the core provisions have been included in the NDAA. This aims to “expand and accelerate bilateral defense technology research, development, testing, evaluation, integration, and industrial cooperation”  between the US and Israel, led by an “executive agent” decided by the US Defense Secretary.

This merger would integrate the United States and Israeli occupation militarily, including “data fusion”, “network integration”, research and development, weapons and bio-manufacturing, and collaboration with AI, cyber, and quantum machine learning technologies. While the Israeli occupation forces and US military are already deeply connected and share many of their genocidal tactics, this represents a significant entanglement of the two most belligerent and murderous militaries in the world.

While the initial bill, the “United States-Israel FUTURES Act,” failed as a standalone bill, the core provisions have been included in the NDAA. This aims to “expand and accelerate bilateral defense technology research, development, testing, evaluation, integration, and industrial cooperation”  between the US and Israel, led by an “executive agent” decided by the US Defense Secretary.

This merger would integrate the United States and Israeli occupation militarily, including “data fusion”, “network integration”, research and development, weapons and bio-manufacturing, and collaboration with AI, cyber, and quantum machine learning technologies. While the Israeli occupation forces and US military are already deeply connected and share many of their genocidal tactics, this represents a significant entanglement of the two most belligerent and murderous militaries in the world.

July 19, 2026 Posted by | Israel, politics international, USA, weapons and war | Leave a comment

Radiation Protection -analysis of NRC proposals

the US NRC is under pressure to weaken its current standards at a time when the scientific
evidence suggests these need to be tightened.

Tony Webb, July 2026.

Current standards under threat
Operating under a Directive from US President Donald Trump the US Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) proposes to weaken its current radiation protection standards – at a time when
the scientific evidence suggests these existing standards underestimate the risks faced by workers
and the public – and need to be significantly tightened. Unions, public health and environment
groups around the world are pressing governments, international and national protection agencies
to resist pressure from the USA to follow suit – and are calling for a comprehensive review the
evidence leading to increased worker and public protection.

In May 2025 US President Trump issued a Directive to the NRC to revise all its current regulations
and specifically those relating to radiation protection. It called for the NRC to abandon the
fundamental principle that underpins standards worldwide that there is no threshold or ‘safe’ level
of exposure to Ionising radiation. Any dose however small can be the one that triggers what are
known as ‘stochastic’ health effects that emerge over time from damage to individual cells in the
body – damage that is inadequately repaired and where the cells go on to reproduce in in
this damaged form, later manifesting as cancers, genetic, or other health damage. Some
other effects such as skin damage are called ‘deterministic’. A minimum or ‘threshold’ level
of exposure is required, and the severity of the damage increases with the level of exposure.
The severity of stochastic health effects is independent of the dose received – you either get
is or you don’t but the risk-probability that you do increases with the dose received over
your lifetime exposure.

Following from this principle that there is no safe level radiation standards required that all
exposures be kept ‘as low as reasonably achievable’ – known as the ALARA principle. . The
Presidential directive specifically instructed the NRC to reconsider this principle. It also required
review of the legal dose-limits for the amount of non-naturally occurring radiation that workers and
the public can be exposed to in any year. These annual dose limits have been set by national
standards agencies based mainly on international reviews of studies of Japanese survivors of the
bombing of the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. These survivors who received relatively
large doses over a short time period. The level of damage to their health, notably their rates of
cancer has been tracked over time and used to estimate the probabilistic risk of stochastic damage
from lower doses spread over longer time periods using a ‘Linear No-Threshold’ (LNT) model –
essentially based on the no safe level principle. The risk estimates have been revised over time as
evidence emerged for higher cancer rates among the survivors and revision of the estimates of
doses they received that might have caused these cancers.

More recently large scale studies of nuclear plant workers in France the UK and USA – known as the
INWORKS studies (with more accurate measures of doses received and health effects compared to
non-exposed workers) have shown that the estimates used to set the current standards significantly
under-estimate the risk, and that the risk at low doses – over longer time periods may be
proportionately greater than the LNT model estimates suggest. These studies also show significantly
elevated levels or cardio-vascular diseases such as heart damage and strokes, and other worker
studies show elevated levels of dementia associated with radiation exposure. Together these
studies suggest there is an urgent need to comprehensively review the evidence of risks on which
the current national and international standards are based – particularly worker dose limits . In
addition recent meta analyses of cancer rates in large populations living close to nuclear power plants in Europe and the USA show that there is a significant general increase the closer people live
to these facilities particularly affecting the young and the elderly. These suggest the need to review
the standards that set dose-limits for public exposures alongside those reviewing expsore of
workers.


In short, the US NRC is under pressure to weaken its current standards at a time when the scientific
evidence suggests these need to be tightened.

The NRC proposals
Following the May 2025 Presidential Directive, the NRC has now, after several delays, released its
proposed revision of the standards. It clearly faced a dilemma as adopting the President’s suggested
changes would mean reversing its earlier 1991 decision that specifically rejected these same
proposals requested by industry lobbyists. In essence the 179-page proposal document (open for
45-days for comments) offers its reasoned judgements on the three key aspects of the review: the
LNT model, the ALARA principle and the occupational and public exposure limits.


To its credit the NRC retains the LNT as the basis for assessing risks at lower doses than those
received by Japanese bomb survivors. Hardly surprising as to have rejected this would have flown in
the face of international scientific pinion worldwide and its own 1991 decision. It does give some
credence the highly contested ‘Hormesis’ model based on limited studies suggesting that there may
be positive effects on health at low doses due to the capacity for cellular repair but ultimately
concludes that there is no scientific consensus that would support this or any other alternative to
the LNT model.

Unfortunately, proposes abandoning the ALARA principle arguing that it is subject to ‘excessive
subjectivity that leads to overly conservative assessments’ for managing exposures below the the
occupational and public dose limits. It is clearly identified as a burden on the nuclear industry – and
thus an impediment to the policy of reducing barriers to its development and operation. In its
place the NRC proposes ‘operating principles’ for managing doses below the legally enforceable
limits. Above (and perhaps only above) an expected dose of 100 mrem (1 MSv) per year – the limit
for public exposure – employees would need to be given ‘radiation worker training’. Above (and
again perhaps only above) an expected dose of 500 mrem (5 mSv) /year). i.e., at 10% of the
regulated exposure limit, employers would be required to monitor individual workers exposures. It
further suggests a cost-benefit approach for reducing exposures indicating that it would be
appropriate for employers to spend up to $5,200 (in 2014 US $) to avert each rem of occupational
exposure. If a radiation protection measure were more costly than that, the licensee would have an
acceptable cost-justified basis for not implementing the measure and instead accruing the dose as
long as that dose was within the regulatory dose limits.

The occupational dose limit is however further weakened by allowing exposures up to double the 5
rem (50 mSv) annual limit. Previously employers could apply for ‘planned special exposures’ for
situations needing higher worker-doses. These are no re-badged as ‘occupational dose limit
extensions’ (DLEs) permitting male workers (female workers are excluded) to receiving a dose of up
to 10 rem (100 mSV) in any year provided these do not result in the worker’s five-year average
exceeding the 5 rem (50mSv) annual limit – i.e. a total over any five year period of 25 rem (250 mSv).

These proposals will leave US workers facing permitted exposures greater than recommended by
international bodies and adopted by most national standards-setting agencies where the targeted
annual limit is 20mSv with exceptional exposures permitted up to 50 mSv provided these do not
exceed 20 mSv averaged over any five-year period. This 20 mSv annual averaging standard has been
in place since 1991 but was never adopted in the USA which retains the earlier 5 rem (50 mSv) annual limit. As indicated above the scientific evidence now calls for a revision of the stochastic
health damage risk estimates and a further tightening of the standards rather than their relaxation
as proposed by the NRC. Indeed it is notable that nowhere in the NRC proposals is here any mention
of, let alone critical review of the peer reviewed INWORKS studies.


The NRC does reject the Presidential Directive’s suggestion that the public exposure limit be raised
to 500 mrem (5 mSv). it leaves it at 100 mrem (1 mSv) in line with the international norm though it
does propose relaxing the emissions standards for radiation and radioactive material from nuclear
facilities from the existing 10 mrem to 25 mem. Again, these proposed relaxations come at a time
when the evidence suggests higher risks to the public living close to such plants and that a tightening
of existing standards is warranted. And again, nowhere does the NRC mention let alone critique this
evidence for increased health risks for populations living close to nuclear facilities.

International Opposition to the US NRC proposals
The NRC proposals are currently open for comments with a final decision on the revised regulations
due by the end of 2026. While any revised radiation protection standards will initially apply only to
the USA there are implications for radiation protection in other countries. Pressure on international
and national standards bodies can be expected. As well as the civil nuclear program it is expected
that the revised standards will apply to US based military facilities. Whether these US, or other
countries’ standards will apply to US military facilities and to any jointly owned civilian enterprises
based in other countries may be in doubt. In Australia for example a Naval Nuclear Powered
Submarine Safety Regulator (ANNPSR) has been created to oversee construction, operation,
maintenance, decommissioning and radioactive waste management from the UK, US (AUKUS)
nuclear submarine program. This new regulator reports to the Department of Defence and is
separate from the existing regulator, the Australian Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety Agency
(ARPANSA) which reports to the Department of Health. How these regulators will collaborate, and
which standards will prevail is yet to be determined.

In Australia, as in other countries, notably the USA, Canada, coalitions bringing together the
concerns of trade unions, public health organisations and environment groups are campaigning for
rejection of the US NRC led proposals that would weaken current radiation protection standards
and for a comprehensive review of the scientific evidence that now strongly suggests the risks to
health of workers and the public are greater that when standards were last revised – now some 25
years ago – and need to be revised and significantly tightened.

July 19, 2026 Posted by | radiation, USA | Leave a comment

Trump’s New Iran Strikes Are Turning Failure Into a Wider Disaster

This is how an unsuccessful campaign becomes permanent policy. Iranian retaliation justifies American escalation; American escalation produces further retaliation; and the resulting insecurity is presented as proof that restraint would be dangerous. War becomes both the cause of the crisis and the proposed solution.

The President’s renewed strikes will not make Iran easier to coerce. They will make America weaker.

by Brian Hudson | Jul 13, 2026 , https://original.antiwar.com/brian_hudson/2026/07/12/trumps-new-iran-strikes-are-turning-failure-into-a-wider-disaster/

The easiest mistake in war is to confuse the ability to strike again with proof that the previous strike worked. Donald Trump is making that mistake in Iran. The latest U.S. attacks may destroy more military assets and infrastructure, but they do not answer the political question that has haunted this war from the beginning: what outcome is all this destruction supposed to produce?

The Trump administration launched the initial campaign claiming that it would curb Iran’s nuclear program and break the military power behind what Washington described as Tehran’s regional threat. Months later, Iran has not surrendered, the nuclear dispute remains unresolved, and the Strait of Hormuz has become an even more dangerous center of confrontation. The United States is still negotiating through intermediaries over shipping and other unresolved issues. Trump says talks can continue even as he declares the ceasefire over and orders new attacks. This is not a strategy approaching success. It is a strategy using escalation to avoid confronting its own failure.

That pattern is the central danger. Each time force fails to produce the promised political result, the administration treats the failure not as evidence that its strategy is wrong, but as evidence that it has not used enough force. The inability of the initial campaign to compel Iran becomes the justification for another round. If that round also fails, its failure can authorize the next. The strategy becomes almost impossible to disprove because every setback is reclassified as unfinished business.

Iran has suffered enormous damage. The opening attacks killed senior political and military figures, while the wider campaign struck thousands of targets and degraded military capabilities. Yet destruction did not translate into political compliance. Even the scale of the funeral ceremonies for the Iranian leader assassinated in the opening U.S.-Israeli strikes, while not proof of national unanimity, showed that foreign bombardment had not produced the easy collapse in political authority some advocates of war expected.

Supporters of escalation will say Washington simply stopped too soon. Iran was weakened but not weakened enough, and more punishment will eventually force Tehran to concede. But this logic turns every failure into a reason to repeat the policy that caused it. If bombing does not secure surrender, bomb more. If retaliation follows, strike harder. If negotiations remain necessary, claim that diplomacy works only because the bombs created leverage.

Damage, however, is not leverage unless it moves the opponent toward the outcome being demanded. The initial campaign changed the arena of bargaining without resolving the conflict. Hormuz, not the nuclear file, has become Iran’s most powerful instrument of pressure. Tehran now treats control over the waterway as its strongest strategic card. Washington went to war in the name of eliminating Iranian leverage. Instead, it helped elevate a maritime chokepoint through which the equivalent of about one-fifth of global oil and petroleum-product consumption passed before the war into the central battlefield of the relationship.

The confrontation in the strait is therefore evidence that the initial campaign failed according to its own declared logic. Washington presented the reopening of Hormuz as proof of success. Yet commercial shipping remains exposed, tanker traffic has slowed, Iran continues to assert authority over passage, and the United States is again using force to impose the access it claimed had already been secured. A victory that must be repeatedly recreated through bombing is not a durable victory. It is an unstable military arrangement waiting for the next incident.

The deeper problem is that Trump has no visible theory of how escalation ends. Is the objective a nuclear agreement, unconditional access through Hormuz, the destruction of Iran’s conventional military capacity, regime change, or punishment for attacks on shipping? Each goal would require a different strategy and political settlement. The administration’s shifting objectives obscure how little the bombing has accomplished. Ambiguity allows every new strike to be described as necessary while preventing the public from judging whether the war has succeeded.

This is how an unsuccessful campaign becomes permanent policy. Iranian retaliation justifies American escalation; American escalation produces further retaliation; and the resulting insecurity is presented as proof that restraint would be dangerous. War becomes both the cause of the crisis and the proposed solution.

The military cost is already substantial. The initial campaign consumed advanced U.S. munitions at a rate that exposed the limits of the industrial base. The Center for Strategic and International Studies estimated that the United States may have used more than half of its prewar inventory in four of seven key systems, with one to four years required to rebuild those stocks. Each new round narrows future choices, increases competition among theaters and allies, and turns scarce production capacity into fuel for a war without a defined endpoint.

A serious “America First” policy would treat this as a warning. It would ask whether another missile fired at Iran makes the United States safer or merely postpones the moment when Washington must negotiate. Trump instead treats the act of striking as its own strategic justification. Firepower substitutes for political purpose, even as escalation depletes military readiness and deepens dependence on the diplomacy the administration publicly derides.

The economic costs follow the same pattern. Hormuz connects energy prices, shipping, insurance, manufacturing, agriculture, and household expenses. Oil prices fell when diplomacy appeared to reduce the risk of disruption and rose again when U.S.-Iran fighting resumed. That volatility is not incidental. It is one of the principal ways the war transfers its costs to people far from the battlefield.

A sustained campaign would raise insurance and freight costs, unsettle investment, and increase pressure on fuel-dependent industries and food production. The burden would fall on workers whose jobs depend on stable trade, families already struggling with prices, and communities repeatedly told that housing, health care, schools, and infrastructure are unaffordable. A government cannot plausibly claim to put Americans first while exposing them to a preventable energy shock and treating public resources as an inexhaustible reserve for escalation.

The regional political cost is equally serious. U.S. operations depend on Gulf states for bases, logistical support, and access. Yet those states absorb the immediate danger when Iran retaliates. The more Washington turns their territory into infrastructure for an open-ended conflict, the stronger their incentive becomes to hedge and seek arrangements that reduce their exposure. Trump’s escalation risks weakening the very network of relationships on which American power in the region depends.

Restraint is not surrender. It is the recognition that force without a political theory of success becomes an expensive ritual. Before any further attack, the administration should state its objective, explain how military action will achieve it, define the conditions for ending operations, identify the risks of retaliation, and provide the legal authority for widening the war. Congress should demand those answers rather than allowing a failed campaign to expand through presidential momentum.

The initial campaign proved that Iran could be damaged without becoming politically compliant. The renewed strikes are proving something more dangerous: Trump is prepared to weaken American military readiness, economic stability, regional relationships, and democratic accountability rather than acknowledge that bombing did not produce the settlement he promised. The responsible course is to use the remaining diplomatic channel to reduce escalation and negotiate the unresolved issues. Otherwise, every failure will become the excuse for another attack, and the United States will turn a failed strategy into a permanent war.

Brian Hudson is a political analyst and independent journalist. His work has appeared in publications including Common Dreams and other independent news outlets.

July 19, 2026 Posted by | Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Time for all US service personnel in Middle East to disobey illegal Trump orders to wage criminal war on Iran

The men and women carrying out these illegal orders from war criminal Trump and his unhinged defense Secretary Pete Hegseth dishonor their uniform. They are not serving their country. They are serving the war criminals that should be in the dock at The Hague,

 Walt Zlotow  West Suburban Peace Coalition  Glen Ellyn IL, 19 July 26

Eight months ago, six US Congresspersons, all former military or intelligence community members, issued a video urging current service members to disobey illegal orders that might be issued by President Donald Trump’s administration.

They stated “threats to our Constitution are coming from right here at home,” and repeatedly urged the military to “refuse illegal orders.” “No one has to carry out orders that violate the law, or our Constitution. Know that we have your back… don’t give up the ship.” They did not specify the illegal orders referred to but it was assumed they were Trump’s illegal orders for service personnel to obliterate little unarmed boats in the Caribbean imagined to be bringing drugs into the Homeland. 

But the six didn’t have current military personnel backs. The six shut up when none of the other 529 congresspersons joined them in doing the principled thing of demanding military not engage in Trump administration war crimes whether they be bombing little unarmed boats, bombing imagined bad guys in Somalia 75 times in 2026, killing over a hundred Venezuelans to snatch Venezuelan President Nicholas Maduro and his wife for a show trial in America.

Worst of all, the Silent Six remained mute when Trump ordered his war fighters to launch his criminal war on Iran that may plunge the world into recession if not depression. Every bomb, every missile they drop on Iran emanates from an illegal, indeed criminal order that kills mostly civilians in America’s lost cause to destroy Iran at the behest of Israel.

After 39 days of murderous bombing that killed thousands, Trump cried ‘uncle’ knowing he’d lost, forcing his negotiated a ceasefire. He thought he could salvage victory with a blockade of Iranian ports but that failed just as spectacularly.  So he ordered his war fighters to attack again, except this time their targets were civilian infrastructure, obvious war crimes to any war fighter with a functioning moral compass.

The men and women carrying out these illegal orders from war criminal Trump and his unhinged defense Secretary Pete Hegseth dishonor their uniform. They are not serving their country. They are serving the war criminals that should be in the dock at The Hague, not in the White House and the Pentagon. And the phony Silent Six and their 529 fellow congresspersons doing nothing to end America’s criminal Iran war blowing up the Middle East, the world economy, possibly even unleashing nuclear weapons, are too busy scooping up Israel Lobby and US weapons makers’ money to advise military personnel to disobey illegal, criminal orders.

 We need a massive military personnel sit down strike in the Middle East to end this madness and bring Trump and Hegseth to justice.

July 19, 2026 Posted by | USA, weapons and war | Leave a comment

AI and the absurdity of nuclear deterrence

July 14, 2026, https://www.icanw.org/ai_and_nuclear_deterrence?utm_campaign=trinity_anniversary_2026&utm_medium=email&utm_source=ican

What if algorithms don’t feel fear? Nuclear deterrence isn’t a military capability. It’s a means of communication, intimidating the opponent’s mind, making them feel afraid. As AI edges into nuclear systems, it exposes the paradox at the heart of nuclear deterrence.

Artificial intelligence is changing how governments approach national security. It is reshaping intelligence analysis, early-warning systems, and military decision-making. Its growing role in the nuclear realm has sparked fears of a future in which machines decide to launch nuclear weapons.

That future is not here. No government or strategist is currently advocating that AI take charge of nuclear launch decisions. There is strong international agreement that these decisions must stay under human control.

But that misses the deeper issue. AI is already being woven into nuclear-related systems. AI is used in the military domain to identify missile launches, analyse sensor data, and model escalation. These integrations expose something that has always been true, nuclear deterrence has never been stable or responsible. The idea of  responsible management of a genocidal capability, has always been an illusion. Nuclear deterrence relies on fear, perception, and moral contradiction. Increasing the speed of automation in these systems does not offer stability, it makes them more dangerous.

The Creeping Integration of AI

Currently AI applications are built to assist human decision-makers, not replace them. They filter data, flag threats, and support commanders under extreme time pressure. But even when humans keep final authority, automation reshapes how decisions get made. It determines what information appears, how it gets prioritised, and how fast a response is expected.

As reaction times shrink, the risk of catastrophic miscalculation grows. In a crisis, machine-generated assessments add urgency. Humans must respond to systems they cannot fully understand or verify in real time. As more nuclear-armed states fold AI into their command, control, and intelligence networks, the risk of unpredictable interactions between competing automated systems rises. These systems are also vulnerable to hacking and hallucinating and other interference.

AI magnifies the central weakness of deterrence, that it depends on fragile assumptions about rationality, perception, and control.

The Myth of Rational Control

For decades, nuclear deterrence has been sold as rational management, a balance of terror held steady by calculated threats. In reality, it is psychological theatre. It works by trying to shape an adversary’s behaviour through fear and the threat of annihilation. The whole logic of deterrence lives in the human mind.

Artificial intelligence breaks that logic. Algorithms cannot be coerced, bluffed, or frightened into restraint. They can be manipulated, fed false data, deceived, or trained to fail. That is a serious problem in its own right. But it is a different problem. It is not the manipulation deterrence relies on: intimidating a population, or impressing a leader’s mind, through shows of nuclear force. Code has no psyche. It cannot be impressed by posturing.

We are not yet in an era of fully automated nuclear decision-making. But the trajectory is clear. As AI increasingly mediates how information is processed and framed, the psychological foundation of deterrence starts to erode. The more automation shapes perception, the less room remains for the human uncertainty that deterrence theory depends on.

Automation also sharpens the dangers already built into deterrence: overconfidence, misperception, and compressed decision-making. A commander who trusts an algorithm may act faster, or more decisively, than one who trusts their own judgment. The apparent gain in control is an illusion. AI accelerates the instability already built into the system.

Deterrence has survived on luck, not logic.

What AI reveals is not a new danger. It is an old one, made visible. Nuclear deterrence has never been rational, predictable, or safe. History shows this. Deterrence doctrine did not prevent nuclear war. Luck did, along with individual decisions to defy protocol and err on the side of caution. AI now strips away the myth of “strategic stability” and shows the system for what it is: a gamble with humanity’s survival.

Policy Implications

Keeping nuclear launch authority under human control is important, and widely supported. But human control alone cannot make nuclear weapons safe. Nuclear history is full of near-catastrophic accidents, long before AI entered the picture. Transparency about how AI is used in nuclear systems is urgently needed. International dialogue should continue including at the UN General Assembly.

The goal should not be to make deterrence “AI-proof.” It should be to confront the fact that deterrence has always been technically unmanageable, strategically overestimated, and morally indefensible. Its risks cannot be automated away, because they are built into the system itself.

AI does not offer a new path to stability. Even committed defenders of deterrence would concede that much. What it offers instead is a stark reminder: the stability deterrence promised was illusory from the start. The only reliable way to prevent nuclear catastrophe, AI-driven or human-driven, is to eliminate these weapons, in line with international law and humanitarian principles.

This is why the humanitarian argument at the heart of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) matters more, not less, in the age of AI. The catastrophic humanitarian consequences of nuclear detonation do not change because a machine helped trigger it. No AI system can contain radiation, feed a starving population after a nuclear famine, or undo the collapse of a climate. The case for prohibition was never about how a weapon might be launched. It was, and remains, about what happens after. States should treat AI integration not as a reason to modernise deterrence, but as further evidence that security strategies must rely less on nuclear weapons, not more. That means investing in disarmament, not automation; in verification and transparency, not faster decision cycles; and in the TPNW’s normative and legal framework as the route out of a system that was never under control to begin with.

AI makes visible what has always been true

Artificial intelligence does more than raise the risk of nuclear use. It acts as a mirror, reflecting the instability and moral absurdity of a system built on the threat of annihilation.

Deterrence operates in the adversary’s mind. Even its most faithful advocates must admit that its logic collapses the moment that mind becomes a machine. AI makes visible what has always been true: there can be no psychological deterrence without psychology, and no responsible way to manage weapons designed for mass extinction.

The response to the AI-nuclear weapons debate should not be new layers of technical control. It should be to question whether these weapons can ever be controlled at all. The danger is not only a future where machines decide to launch nuclear weapons. It is a present where anyone still can.

July 19, 2026 Posted by | technology, weapons and war | Leave a comment

Mysterious drones spotted flying over nuclear power plant

Sarah Hooper Metro. Live News Reporter, July 16, 2026

At least seven drones were spotted near Switzerland’s Gösgen nuclear power plant, sparking a large police response.

The mystery drones were spotted around 10.30pm yesterday and reported by a resident.

The safety of the power plant was not compromised during the incident, with the head of communications for the plant saying the threat posed by drones was ‘negligible’.

As is usually the case around power plants, a no-fly zone is in place around Gösgen.

It remains unclear who was behind the drones above the nuclear power plant this week.

Earlier this month, it was revealed that Russia launched hundreds of drones and covert UAVs across the UK and Europe from their shadow fleet, thought to be in preparation for a future conflict.

The International Institute of Strategic Studies issued a sobering report that found Vladimir Putin’s shadow fleet ships had sent drones to target airports, bases, and nuclear sites.

Among the sites affected by the spy drones were RAF Fairford, Feltwell, Lakenheath and Mildenhall, and dozens of sites across continental Europe………………………………. https://metro.co.uk/2026/07/16/seven-mystery-drones-swarm-european-nuclear-power-plant-29153061/

July 19, 2026 Posted by | safety, Switzerland | Leave a comment

Activists protest outside Pioneer Park nuclear event

 by Gareth Cavanagh

ACTIVISTS held a protest outside The Peddler in Whitehaven yesterday as nuclear sector figures shared their plans for ‘Pioneer Park’, an AI data centre powered by nuclear energy, with the public.

Land at Moorside, neighbouring Sellafield, has been central to new nuclear ambitions for a
number of years. There were once ambitions to develop a ‘clean energy hub’
on the land with a mix of energy-generation solutions, including a fleet of
small modular reactors (SMR).

Now named Pioneer Park, the proposal is to
develop an SMR site which will provide the energy for an ‘innovative’ AI
data centre. It is hoped the development will attract more than £12billion
in investment from business giants, provide a jobs boost and a space for
emerging industries to thrive.

But Radiation Free Lakeland, which protested
a consultation event about the proposals yesterday, argues that benefits of
the development would not outweigh the environmental impact, pointing out
the proximity of the land to the River Ehen as well as the village of
Beckermet.

Pioneer Park is set to be located on land at Moorside,
neighbouring Sellafield. The activist group said: “This area of green
fields and River Ehen Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) should be
a buffer zone between the sprawling Sellafield site and the surrounding
villages.”

They said that the nuclear industry is “using public money like
there is no tomorrow to try and make this buffer zone a further nuclear
sacrifice zone and AI data centre.”

A spokesperson for Pioneer Park’s
developers said that the site at Moorside “has been identified through
Government policy for nuclear power generation since 2011″. Their ambition
is “to build on west Cumbria’s internationally recognised strengths in
energy and engineering by bringing forward new nuclear development,
alongside complementary clean energy and technology projects, helping to
diversify the economy, support the ongoing decommissioning mission at
Sellafield, generate secure, low-carbon energy and create long-term
opportunities for local people.”

 Carlisle News & Star 15th July 2026, https://www.newsandstar.co.uk/news/26276371.activists-protest-outside-pioneer-park-nuclear-event/

July 19, 2026 Posted by | opposition to nuclear, UK | Leave a comment

US industrial base is becoming stronger for wartime production, study finds

By Michael Peck, 13 July 26, https://www.militarytimes.com/industry/techwatch/2026/07/13/us-industrial-base-is-becoming-stronger-for-wartime-production-study-finds/?utm_source=sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=c4-overmatch

As recent conflicts consume weapons at a ferocious rate, America’s defense industrial base is becoming more prepared to sustain a major war, according to a new report.

“The trends are moving in the right direction,” Jerry McGinn, who co-authored the study for the Center for Strategic and International Analysis think tank, told Defense News.

However, the study — described as a progress report on reforms to the defense manufacturing and acquisition system — still found numerous problems with ramping up and sustaining wartime production.

For example, “according to several measures — manufacturing lead times, critical munitions and materials stockpiles, and supply chain security — the U.S. industrial base has a long way to go to achieve resilience,” warned the analysis by CSIS’s Center for the Industrial Base.

CSIS did find measurable improvements since November 2025, when Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth vowed to “transform the entire acquisition system to operate on a wartime footing.”

Hegseth also promised to “inspire American industry to become a wartime industrial base that focuses on speed and volume.”

Most striking is the number of new companies in the defense field.

“Roughly 10,000 new firms have entered the market in the past two years and nontraditional companies received over $120 billion in contract obligations in FY 2025, adding competition and innovation to the sector,” CSIS noted. “Munitions contract obligations have risen 330 percent since FY 2010. Spurred by this increased demand and depleted inventories, the Pentagon is signing multiyear agreements with munitions producers and suppliers on a historic scale.”

The military is also responding to depleted stockpiles of expensive guided weapons that have been rapidly consumed by the Iran and Ukraine wars.

The Pentagon’s 2027 budget request for munitions allocated 49% to low-cost munitions — defined as costing less than $600,000 apiece — rising to 70% by 2031.

The U.S. is also strengthening its defense supply chain, such as “multiyear procurement agreements, direct-to-supplier investments, and leaner acquisition pathways,” as well as investing in defense companies such as L3Harris Missile Solutions, according to CSIS.

However, while this signals government commitment to defense production, it “also complicates competitive dynamics within the industry as new entrants and established suppliers alike seek to meet rapidly growing demand for munitions at scale.”

Also notable is federal investment in rare earths, which has seen production soar from 95 tons in 2022, to 8,900 tons in 2025. Nonetheless, “the erosion of domestic rare earth manufacturing capacity and the rise of Chinese control took decades to unfold, however, and it will take several years of enduring effort for the United States and its allies to build, scale, and sustain the production capacity of these key defense inputs.”

Exports of U.S. arms, or cooperative multinational projects such as the F-35 fighter, have also become a pillar of America’s defense industry. Foreign Military Sales, or FMS, have more than tripled, from less than $20 billion in 2015 to more than $80 billion in 2025.

The Trump administration wants to take this further with the “America First Arms Transfer Strategy,” launched in February 2026.

“The United States will use foreign purchases and capital to support domestic reindustrialization, expand production capacity, and improve the resilience of the United States defense industrial base,” the White House executive order declared.

Ultimately, the federal government can control defense production through the products it demands, the prices it is willing to pay, and the incentives it offers.

“It’s a monopsony,” McGinn said. “Government sets the market. Government can regulate the market. So, if the government wants different outcomes, it changes how it buys.”

July 19, 2026 Posted by | USA, weapons and war | Leave a comment

No radiation leak after ‘contamination’ events at Africa’s only nuclear plant, regulator says.


South Africa’s nuclear regulator said Thursday that no radioactive material
leaked into the environment during three recent “contamination” events
inside Africa´s only nuclear power station. The incidents involved
“elevated airborne radioactive contamination” inside the Koeberg Power
Station, on South Africa’s west coast, when there was a loss of power to
ventilation units during maintenance work, the National Nuclear Regulator
said, adding there was no danger to the public. It said the three separate
contamination events on June 30, July 2 and July 7 were contained inside
the station.

Mirror 16th July 2026
https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/world-news/koeberg-nuclear-power-station-africa-37442154

July 19, 2026 Posted by | safety, South Africa | Leave a comment

July 22 deadline to comment on downgrade of impact assessment for nuclear projects | Canada’s Federal government pushing for power with a “nuclear fist” | Dates and Deadlines.

The Nuclear Fist: Five Federal Initiatives Pushing and Promoting Nuclear Power
There are currently five federal nuclear related initiatives / announcements: “Getting Major Projects Built in Canada – Discussion Paper on Proposed Legislative, Regulatory, and Policy Reforms” announced May 8th with the deadline now extended to July 22; the electricity strategy “Powering Canada Strong: A National Strategy for an Electrified Canadian Economy” which was announced May 14 with comment invited but no deadline; the Standing Committee on Natural Resources and the Environment electrification study with the deadline – and the study – now extended to mid-September; the Nuclear Energy Strategy for Canada announced June 22 with no comment invited and so no deadline for comment, and the June 24 announcement of the potential “listing” of the NWMO DGR under the Build Canada Act (aka Bill C-5), also no public comment period.

July 22nd Deadline to Comment on “Big Projects” Discussion Paper

The comment period will close on July 22nd on the federal government’s Discussion Paper Delivering on Big Projects in Canada. Released on May 8th, the discussion paper proposes that impact assessment of nuclear projects would be handed over to the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission.Visit Assessing-Nuclear-Risk.ca for more information including submissions by public interest groups, media coverage and contacts and updates.  Take one minute to send a message – the message tool is HERE.

July 19, 2026 Posted by | politics | Leave a comment

Fearing Justice: Rubio Gets Bolshie About the International Criminal Court (ICC)

15 July 2026 Dr Binoy Kampmark, https://theaimn.net/fearing-justice-rubio-gets-bolshie-about-the-icc/

Why are they so afraid? The Trump administration, pathologically obsessed about the exaggerated reach of the International Criminal Court, have decided to take to the barricades. In a July 13 media note released by a spokesperson for the US State Department, something akin to a declaration of war was made against the Hague-based tribunal.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio was getting bolshie about it, announcing “a sweeping campaign to dismantle the threat posed by [the court] to US sovereignty.” The effort promises to “feature a whole-of-government response to systematically disable the ICC’s ability to operate, target American servicemen or officials, or otherwise threaten American sovereignty.”

The late Henry Kissinger, who argued most stridently against the establishment of such a criminal court, would no doubt have approved. He, more than most, would have feared some eventual accounting for his own egregious crimes against international humanitarian law while serving the White House.

The alarmist tone of the announcement is palpable. The ICC was seeking “to become an unaccountable global arbiter – positioning itself above and beyond the nation state as a supranational enforcement arm of a globalist bureaucracy empowered to prosecute American servicemen and officials at will.” (This has a whiff of familiarity to it, given that the Department of Justice under Trump’s steering hand has been prosecuting, at will, individuals perceived to have wronged him in the past.)

The media release is filled with careless distortions and ugly inaccuracies, not least in the sovereignty it purports to understand and defend. The ICC, for instance, “claims authority to prosecute and even imprison American servicemen and officials operating on behalf of America’s national interest.” The body claims no explicit power to do so, given that jurisdiction is only exercisable over State Parties. The United States, in company with such states as Russia, China, India and Israel, have not appended their signatures to the Rome Statute.

It follows that no such threat is credible except in instances when the service personnel of such countries conduct war on the territory of a State Party. For that reason, arrest warrants have been issued against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyanu, his former Defence Minister Yoav Gallant, and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Even then, enforcing such warrants, as the record shows, remains patchy and vulnerable to the political and legal interpretations offered by member states.

US military personnel have, similarly, caught the eye of the ICC in 2020 for its activities in Afghanistan, though the subsequent investigation also focused on alleged crimes committed by the Taliban and Afghan government it replaced. It took only a year for the ICC to essentially abandon the American aspect of the investigation and focus, instead, on the alleged transgressions of the Taliban and the former Afghan government.

Rubio’s opinion piece in the Wall Street Journal is also cratered with an embarrassing inability to understand the role of a tribunal that has the support, however imperfect, of 125 member states. He regards the judges as hailing from “random countries”; the court and its allies as determined to seek “near-unlimited reach, empowered to override the courts and constitutions of the US and other sovereign states – and to prosecute and arrest our citizens.”

Failing to mention the shift in focus of the 2020 investigation into alleged infractions against international law in Afghanistan, he took grave exception to the remarks of the chief prosecutor, Fatou Bensouda, that American authorities had been tardy in conducting their own prosecutions. “In effect,” snorts Rubio, “Ms Bensouda was anointing herself the final judge of US military policy and the entire US justice system.” Hardly.

A somewhat hysterical note is struck in Rubio’s assessment of the court’s supporters. Like a sinister fifth column of operatives, the tribunal “is backed and run by a powerful network of leftist nongovernment organizations, smug globalists, and hostile Third World governments united by their enmity towards the US.” For the most part, the Secretary tries to make good the image of the American republic as a bullying, thuggish nation state indifferent to the strictures of law.

He cannot understand the fuss made about the extrajudicial murders of alleged “narcoterrorists” in Latin America and the Caribbean, the shoddy practices of the administration in deporting “violent criminals to El Salvador,” or that organisations might wish that “apparent war crimes” committed against Iran by the US might be investigated. “Independence is our birthright,” he pompously asserts. “We don’t intend to trade it for rule by a self-appointed priesthood of ‘international law.’” It was therefore incumbent that Washington work along with allies to “dismantle the ICC – brick by brick, if necessary.”

This dismantling effort seems hyperbolic. The Trump administration has already sought to blunt the court’s functions and hound its officials. Even before Rubio’s announcement, the administration has been aggressively seeking to stem the reach of the court and the effectiveness of its officials. On February 6, 2025, for instance, President Donald Trump issued Executive Order 14203, allowing the sanctioning of any person or organisation engaged in any efforts of the ICC “to investigate, arrest, detain, or prosecute a protected person without consent of that person’s country of nationality.”

Protected persons include, among others, current and former members of the US Armed Forces; current or former elected or appointed officials of US government; and any other person currently or formerly employed or working on behalf of the US government. The personnel of US allies also fall within the definition.

The sanctions listed in the order included the blocking of property and assets within the United States “as well as the suspension of entry into the United States of ICC officials, employees, and agents, as well as their immediate family members, as their entry into our Nation would be detrimental to the interests of the United States.” ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan was the first to be designated as a sanctioned individual, though the list would swell to include members of the judiciary, including Second Vice-President Reine Alapini-Gansou from Benin, Uganda’s Solomy Balungi Bossa, Peru’s Luz del Carmen Ibáñez Carranza and Slovenia’s Beti Hohler.

The Open Society Justice Initiative accurately notes the effect of such sanctions, being “tantamount to a financial death penalty.” These entail the freezing of US assets in bank accounts, a denial of access to credit cards, relevant online platforms, banking services and health insurance, and the inability to attend speaking engagements in the US. Three of the sitting judges – Bossa, Alapini-Gansou and Canada’s Kimberly Prost are seeking declaratory and injunctive relieve against Executive Order 14203 in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York.

The State Department media note suggests more of the same, flavoured with a villainous menace. The entire US government diplomatic corps is to become a public relations arm “highlighting the abuses of the ICC and the risks posed to Americans” and urging member states to withdraw from the Rome Statute. Nations with partnering arrangements with American law enforcement and the military, and those enjoying “the benefits of the US security umbrella” will also be pressed “to reject the ICC’s purported authority to prosecute American officials and servicemen.”

States refusing to reject the authority of the ICC while still relying on American assistance would be subjected to greater scrutiny, while countries not a party to the Rome Statute would be encouraged to “leverage their diplomatic networks to take similar actions alongside us.” ICC personnel would be subjected to continued visa revocations and travel bans, while the tribunal and “affiliated organizations” will be subjected to further sanctions. It will be a time for war criminals and offenders of international law to rejoice.

All institutions, supposedly underpinned by protocols and principles, are at the mercy of Trump’s broad reading of executive power, one fickle and petulant. His office has also become a source of obscene self-enrichment, inuring this administration to giddying levels of corruption. “I’ve made money, I’ve made a tremendous amount of money, more than I would have ever thought I would have made,” he boasts. For a person who relishes breaching laws and flouting regulations, it is little wonder he, along with his insufferable cronies, have such an animus against a world court that, for all its faults and blemishes, remains a worthy project in international law and human rights.

July 19, 2026 Posted by | Legal, USA | Leave a comment

Holtec bets big on small nuclear reactors in its IPO filing

As it pivots from shutting down nuclear plants to building them, Holtec says small modular reactors can cut costs and speed construction. Now it has to prove it.

By Alexander C. Kaufman, 15 July 2026, https://www.canarymedia.com/articles/nuclear/holtec-ipo-small-modular-reactors

Nuclear giant Holtec International is betting big that its 300-megawatt small modular reactors are the future of atomic energy.

On Friday, the Florida-headquartered firm filed paperwork with the Securities and Exchange Commission in order to sell shares in the company on the Nasdaq.

Across hundreds of pages, the disclosure document outlines the 40-year-old Holtec’s plans to transform itself from the industry’s undertaker — manufacturing canisters to safely store radioactive spent fuel and decommissioning shuttered nuclear plants — to its midwife, producing and operating new electrical stations. This transition comes as nuclear energy regains popularity in the U.S. as a way to meet booming power demand without creating more planet-warming pollution.

Developers have traditionally offset nuclear’s high up-front costs by building ever-larger reactors to capture the economies of scale. Since the early 2000s, however, a number of companies have proposed building small modular reactors that can be constructed identically and in batches. SMRs could generate about a third of the electricity of conventional large-scale plants, but, proponents argue, would bring down costs through assembly-line repetition rather than physical scale.


That cost reduction has yet to be proven out in the real world with actual plants. But in its S-1 filing, Holtec said, ​“SMRs will offer scalable, cost-effective solutions for new capacity with enhanced safety features, reduced construction timelines and reduced land and transmission infrastructure needs as compared to traditional, larger-scale reactors.” It noted that a single-unit SMR plant would only need 15 acres of land and take a mere three years to build. By contrast, the big reactors on the grid today can take up hundreds of acres, and construction typically drags on for nearly a decade.

Holtec’s SMR-300, as the pressurized-water reactor is named, ​“is expected to receive regulatory approval for deployment in 2029” and reach its first deployment ​“in the early 2030s,” according to the filing.

The company said it expects SMRs to play ​“a meaningful role in the expansion of nuclear capacity,” noting that they can ​“complement large-scale nuclear generation through lower upfront costs” and more flexible planning around how much power is needed.

For example, smaller reactors may be better suited for converting some old coal-fired stations into nuclear plants. The DOE has been researching the idea for years, given that nuclear and coal are both thermal resources that operate with similar rates of frequency and therefore use similar equipment to generate electricity from steam — which in nuclear plants is made from the heat created by splitting atoms and in coal plants is made from heat created by burning the black rocks. Converting a 400-MW coal plant into a similar-size nuclear reactor makes more financial sense than using a bigger reactor, which could require costly transmission upgrades and more space


“We believe that our SMR-300 plant can become a favored nuclear generation source over large reactors because of certain advantages,” the company said in its filing.

The future of restarts

The company will also operate at least one conventional reactor, the 800-MW unit it’s currently restoring at its Palisades nuclear station, in western Michigan. That project — the nation’s first effort to return a permanently shuttered nuclear reactor to service — could be completed within months, though its contract to sell power to the local grid won’t kick in until next year.

Holtec hopes to combine its plant-restart strategy with its SMR vision. It’s planning to deploy two SMRs at the Palisades site; if that works out, the company has said it may build SMRs at New Jersey’s Oyster Creek nuclear plant, which it’s been in the process of decommissioning for eight years.

Holtec owns three other defunct nuclear plants — Massachusetts’ Pilgrim, Michigan’s Big Rock Point, and New York’s Indian Point — that it could also try to rebuild. The Trump administration has called for reconstructing Indian Point, but Albany remains opposed to the controversial proposal.

Local opposition isn’t Holtec’s biggest hurdle, however. That would be competition from the nuclear behemoths in Russia and China. Virtually every Western nuclear developer is facing an uphill battle to compete with the Kremlin’s state-owned Rosatom, by far the biggest international vendor of nuclear technology in the world, and China’s two state-owned nuclear companies, which are building more than three dozen reactors at home and are expected to enter the export game soon.

Still, among its domestic rivals, Holtec may be the best positioned to hold its own on a global playing field. It is an established company with profitable enterprises in a dozen countries across four continents, and has experience managing infrastructure so sensitive it’s overseen by a dedicated agency, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. The company has facilities with electrical equipment on-site that can be potentially used to deploy SMRs. It also has won significant support from the federal government, both in the form of a $1.52 billion loan the Department of Energy provided to finance the Palisades restart and the $400 million the agency gave the company to support construction of its first SMR-300s.

“We began work in 2011 on a small modular reactor solution, and drawing on our in-house capability to design, license, manufacture, construct, and commission nuclear systems, honed through decades of turnkey supply, we are now uniquely positioned to launch the development of our small nuclear reactor,” Krishna Singh, Holtec’s founder and chief executive, said in a letter to prospective investors. 

July 19, 2026 Posted by | business and costs, Small Modular Nuclear Reactors, USA | Leave a comment

Norwegian rocks to protect Sizewell B on Suffolk coast

15th July, By Sarah Chambers,

Rock armour is being shipped over from Norway to provide temporary coastal flood protection for Sizewell B.

 Around 6,700 rocks – each weighing between
three and six tonnes – are being delivered to Sizewell C’s Temporary
Construction Area via the Port of Great Yarmouth. They will be used to
protect the nuclear power station during construction of the neighbouring
Sizewell C site.

 East Anglian Daily Times 15th July 2026,
https://www.eadt.co.uk/news/26271343.norwegian-rocks-protect-sizewell-b-suffolk-coast/

July 19, 2026 Posted by | climate change, UK | Leave a comment

Warming Europe complicates France’s bet on nuclear power

“It is certain that climate change is taken into account in deciding the location of new plants. If you invest €13 billion in a site and it becomes obsolete the very next day because there isn’t enough water to cool the core, the investment is not right,”

Extreme heat is forcing the country to shut down nuclear reactors, just as the appetite for cheap, carbon-free electricity is set to explode.

July 13, 2026 ,By Giorgio Leali and Nicolas Camut, https://www.politico.eu/article/warming-europe-complicate-france-nuclear-power/

PARIS — A summer of fierce heat waves in France is fueling concerns about whether the country’s nuclear energy infrastructure can survive life on the planet’s fastest-warming continent.

Monday’s broiling temperatures in France forced EDF to stop three of France’s 57 nuclear reactors and reduce production in another seven, the state-owned utility provider said in a statement. When the mercury rose to record-breaking levels last month, a trio of reactors went offline and five were slowed down, causing an 8.7 percent dip in power production just as air conditioners caused a rise in electricity demand. 

None of the shutdowns caused power outages, so we’re a long way from offline reactors plunging people into the dark ages.

But the appetite for France’s cheap, carbon-free electricity is about to explode. Paris has in recent years tried to leverage its abundant nuclear power to court promising, energy-intensive industries like artificial intelligence and cloud computing, hoping new investments in these fields can kickstart a moribund economy.

“Our citizens need to have complete trust in our ability to produce even under these circumstances,” EDF CEO Bernard Fontana said earlier this month.

Politically, the dividing lines have been drawn as expected. Supporters of nuclear power, such as Energy Minister Maud Bregeon and prominent MEP Christophe Grudler, have expressed confidence in the resilience of plants across the country.

“What we are living is ordinary,” Bregeon, who also serves as government spokesperson, said in an interview with radio station RTL on Monday. “Every year nuclear plants face a power reduction when the temperature goes above a certain threshold.”

Opponents of nuclear power, like the far-left France Unbowed, call into question whether its widespread use — nuclear power provides France with about 60 percent of its electricity — is sustainable.

“The situation we are experiencing today should open all of our eyes. Nuclear power is not resilient to climate change,” high-ranking France Unbowed lawmaker Manuel Bompard said Monday.

Analysts, meanwhile, remain sanguine about France’s big bet on nuclear power.

“France has a surplus of low-carbon electricity that could indeed be partly absorbed by data centers. But predicting exactly how much electricity future data centers will require is extremely hard,” said Phuc-Vinh Nguyen, head of the Jacques Delors Institute’s energy center.

“Still, even with more stops due to heat waves, as long as the existing nuclear fleet is authorized to extend its lifetime, there will probably be no problems.”

Warm rivers and jellyfish

Rising temperatures affect nuclear power plants because they rely on rivers and oceans to draw in water to cool reactors and release the warmer water back out. During a heat wave, water gets hotter and scarcer, complicating power production.

Last summer, the Gravelines plant in northern France was forced to halt operations at four reactors because of a climate-change-fueled jellyfish invasion near where seawater was pumped in. To avoid the same problem this summer, EDF installed cameras and has fishing boats ready to be deployed.

All of the shutdowns this summer have been triggered at riverside plants to protect nearby marine life and biodiversity from the dangers of excessively hot water, not problems with the plants themselves.

EDF plans to invest €8.7 billion between now and 2040 to adapt its nuclear reactors to a warmer France, including by expanding the use of so-called “cooling towers.”

The first such towers were installed near the city of Poitiers, at the Civaux nuclear plant along the Vienne River, where traditionally low water levels have exacerbated climate-related problems. But the cooling towers there use ventilators to chill water by 3 to 7 degrees Celsius before it is reinjected into the Vienne.

“EDF is anticipating the impacts of climate change on its facilities through detailed modeling that extends through the end of the century,” the company said in a statement to POLITICO.

Nuclear expansion

Construction of six new reactors, which are expected to cost more than €80 billion, is underway, and the government is expected to decide by the end of the year whether to build another eight on top of those.

To minimize the risk of local opposition, authorities plan to build any new reactors alongside existing plants. Four of those being built are located at two seaside sites.

Climate change will likely play a decisive role in choosing future locations.

“The water issue is one of the key factors in determining which sites to select,” confirmed one senior French official, who was granted anonymity to speak about the confidential selection procedure, which will conclude by the end of the year.

Grudler, who chairs a cross-party group of pro-nuclear lawmakers in the European Parliament, concurred.

“It is certain that climate change is taken into account in deciding the location of new plants. If you invest €13 billion in a site and it becomes obsolete the very next day because there isn’t enough water to cool the core, the investment is not right,” he said.

Former energy minister Agnès Pannier-Runacher, who helped draw up Macron’s nuclear energy policy during his second term, is confident that the government can find a sufficient number of sites for new nuclear plants, even if “it won’t happen in the blink of an eye.”

“Nuclear power plants have been designed with an overemphasis on safety and security. They are in fact much more robust […] than many other facilities in our energy system,” she said, citing concerns over the electric grid.

“Of course, it needs to be factored into the to-do list, but it isn’t a challenge that stands out on the critical path of nuclear power plant construction,” said Pannier-Runacher.

July 18, 2026 Posted by | climate change, France | Leave a comment