Nuclear deterrence is dying. And hardly anyone notices

Thebulletin.org By Alex Kolbin | January 30, 2026

A man in a dark coat stands outdoors holding a black umbrella, illuminated by a red light in the background at night.President Donald Trump speaks to the media before boarding Marine One on January 9, 2026. The day before, the President told New York Times reporters, “If it expires, it expires,” referring to New START—the last remaining bilateral nuclear arms control treaty between Washington and Moscow, which expires on February 5. (Photo: White House/Molly Riley)

For decades, nuclear weapons have been treated as the ultimate arbiter of international politics. They were supposed to deter great-power war, impose caution on leaders, and anchor what strategists liked to call strategic stability. Today, that framework is eroding in plain sight. Yet the reaction from policymakers and much of the expert community remains oddly muted.

Put simply, nuclear weapons are no longer functioning as a decisive factor in global security.

For almost four years, Russia—the world’s largest nuclear power—has been subjected to missile strikes carried out with systems supplied by several other nuclear-armed states. The United Kingdom now openly speaks of developing new tactical ballistic missiles for Kyiv and of placing “leading-edge weapons” directly into the hands of Ukrainians. Russia itself employs nuclear-capable intermediate-range ballistic Oreshnik missiles as if they were any other conventional weapon system for punishing Ukrainian infrastructure. Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump casually commented on New START—the last remaining bilateral nuclear arms control treaty between Washington and Moscow, which expires on February 5—“If it expires, it expires.” And former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, currently serving as a Deputy Chief of the Russian Security Council, stated, “No START-4 is better than a treaty that only masks mutual distrust and provokes an arms race in other countries,” referring to what may come next after New START expires.

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Raised White: How Korea’s Fake “Orphan Rescue” To USA, Sweden Stole Lives | One “Orphan” Every Hour

Channelnewsasia.com

Nearly 250,000 South Korean children were adopted to the West as “orphans” in the 60 years following the Korean War. Some to loving homes. Others to tragic ends. Raised in places where they looked like nobody else, many were told to forget their past and be grateful.

But the innate desire to understand where you came from has led many Korean adoptees to search for their roots. In the process, they discover lies in their past and families they never knew existed. In this documentary, correspondent Wei Du travels around the world to meet Korean adoptees and accompany a few on their journey to reclaim who they are. Together, they reveal how an “orphan rescue” mission separated families and erased the roots of hundreds of thousands.

00:00 Meet the adoptees
01:44 The lie of Korea’s “orphans”
03:04 A song I no longer recognise
05:15 Why 10,000 Korean children were sent to Sweden
07:11 How Sweden became a hub for Korean adoptions
10:29 Why the US took in so many Korean children
15:06 GI babies: Korea’s children of US soldiers
19:54 Cult leader’s adopted Korean children
24:13 “Saved from prostitution”? The truth of my adoption
27:55 Why this US couple adopted in 2005
32:03 Lies in our adoption stories
38:22 How Sweden pressured Korea to give up more children
42:49 Chase’s biological sister visits for his 20th birthday
46:15 Anna’s life in Sweden: Always different
48:54 Phil’s search for his birth family
52:46 Rebuilding siblinghood: Mary & Chase’s struggle
58:17 Catherine’s complex relationship with her adoptive mother
1:00:47 Catherine and Anna reunite after 50 years
1:06:58 Phil returns to Korea after 50 years
1:08:58 Koroot: NGO supporting Korean adoptees
1:10:15 Were adoption agencies in it for the money?
1:11:53 “A child supply market”: Moses Farrow
1:17:24 Korea investigates human rights violations in adoption
1:19:26 Confronting the orphanage manager who sent him abroad
1:23:41 Adoptees find comfort in each other
1:26:25 Han Tae-soon’s hunt for her kidnapped daughter
1:29:28 The fight for truth continues

Israel has abducted and jailed 1,000,000 Palestinians since 1967 — US group’s report.

TRT.global

Israel has abducted and jailed 1,000,000 Palestinians since 1967 — US group’s reportTel Aviv has jailed Palestinians at an average of 47 per day, says a new study, adding US “bankrolled this oppression” against Palestinians for nearly 700 months.

On February 24, Israeli occupation troops abducted Fidaa Assaf from the village of Kafr Laqif in Palestine’s Qalqilya governorate. She was returning from Ramallah Medical Complex after undergoing medical examinations.

Palestinian officials later revealed that the female prisoner, who is married and a mother, was subjected to multiple strip searches and verbal abuse.

They also noted that she was detained in a cell described as unhygienic and infested with insects, and was deprived of water and food for several days.

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Americans and Russians see the world differently, and that’s hurting Syrians

 

theconversion_U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry recently said that he sometimes feels like he’s living in a “parallel universe” compared to his Russian counterpart when it comes to Syria.

This parallel universe can be explained by analyzing the strategic narratives of the United States and Russia since the end of the Cold War. Tiếp tục đọc “Americans and Russians see the world differently, and that’s hurting Syrians”