FBI warns citizens about ‘nuclear incident’ training

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FBI warns citizens about ‘nuclear incident’ training

A multi-agency exercise simulating a nuclear event will take place this week in the state of New York, the FBI has announced

 

A large-scale nuclear training exercise will take place in the US state of New York this week with visible activity expected to begin on Monday, the FBI has said.

The multi-agency training is scheduled to run from January 26 through January 31 in Schenectady, Albany, and Saratoga Counties, the agency announced. It added that the exercise poses no threat to the public.

The training will be primarily concentrated around Albany International Airport, the Stratton Air National Guard Base, and fire departments in northern Saratoga County.

The drills will simulate a nuclear event and are part of a series of regularly scheduled, biannual exercises conducted by the US government since 2012, the agency said in a statement on Friday. 

“I believe planning for this one began back in the spring,” FBI Albany Public Affairs Officer Sarah Ruane told reporters. The drills are not being conducted in response to any recent or ongoing world events, she added.

In areas where the training will be taking place, residents may see participants wearing personal protective equipment “to simulate realistic conditions,” as well as the presence of military personnel, vehicles, and aircraft, the FBI said.

The exercise is intended to “practice and enhance operational readiness to respond in the event of a nuclear incident in the United States or overseas,” according to the agency.

“This is an exercise of the National Technical Nuclear Forensics Ground Collection Task Force, which would support the investigation of a nuclear incident,” Ruane said. “The Task Force mission is to collect nuclear debris samples for analysis at the national laboratories.”

The US regularly conducts nuclear readiness exercises. One of the most recent significant drills was Global Thunder 25 (GT25), initiated by the US Strategic Command in October.

Last week, US President Donald Trump said he hoped to hold talks with Russia and China about reducing nuclear weapons stockpiles. According to Trump, the idea of denuclearization was previously backed by Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Trump also argued that maintaining America’s nuclear arsenal comes at a great expense and that “tremendous amounts of money are being spent on nuclear, and the destructive capability is something that we don’t even want to talk about.”

Russia and the US were previously committed to the New START arms control treaty, which required both nations to reduce their deployed strategic nuclear warheads. However, Moscow suspended its participation in 2023 in response to Washington’s military support for Ukraine. Russia has nevertheless stated it will continue to adhere to the treaty’s limits, with President Putin repeatedly emphasizing that nuclear weapons would only be used as a “last resort.”

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