$cam-U-Well_Jack$on
Superstar
Detterent.
You don't know that for a fact. Our ADS are grade A.

100% facts. Russia has over 100 Nuclear weapons.It serves as a deterrent. If Russia didn't have nukes there's a 100% chance NATO would have stepped in already in Ukraine.
So why does nobody, even the greatest military on the planet, fear north Korea?The purpose of nuclear weapons for most nations is deterrence, rather than actual use. The theory is that the threat of mutual assured destruction, which is the idea that a full-scale use of nuclear weapons by two or more opposing sides would cause the complete annihilation of both the attacker and the defender, will prevent adversaries from initiating an attack. In other words, the main idea behind nuclear weapons is to prevent wars, not to start them.
Your question seems to presume that a country would use a nuclear weapon because they have them. This logic is fundamentally flawed and dangerous. The catastrophic effects of nuclear weapons were seen after their only use in warfare by the United States in Hiroshima and Nagasaki during World War II. The consequences were devastating, leading to hundreds of thousands of deaths, and long-term health and environmental impacts. Therefore, the goal of international law and global diplomacy has been to prevent their use and to pursue nuclear disarmament.
Kim Jong in North Korea is still doing ballistic tests. Like yesterday lol He is aiming his missles at Japan!It's all a game of jockeying for position. But nobody wants to end the game.
no fear? there's a base in south korea for a reason.So why does nobody, even the greatest military on the planet, fear north Korea?
Well he might try. But if he keeps up, he'll get bombed on, literallyKim Jong in North Korea is still doing ballistic tests. Like yesterday lol He is aiming his missles at Japan!
I agree with you 100. But first of all, the arms race was with The Russians since way before we were alive.The purpose of nuclear weapons for most nations is deterrence, rather than actual use. The theory is that the threat of mutual assured destruction, which is the idea that a full-scale use of nuclear weapons by two or more opposing sides would cause the complete annihilation of both the attacker and the defender, will prevent adversaries from initiating an attack. In other words, the main idea behind nuclear weapons is to prevent wars, not to start them.
Your question seems to presume that a country would use nuclear weapons because they have them. This logic is fundamentally flawed and dangerous. The catastrophic effects of nuclear weapons were seen after their only use in warfare by the United States in Hiroshima and Nagasaki during World War II. The consequences were devastating, leading to hundreds of thousands of deaths, and long-term health and environmental impacts. Therefore, the goal of international law and global diplomacy has been to prevent their use and to pursue nuclear disarmament.