Question:

When will the next nuculear bomb be detinated?

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When and where will the next bomb be placed

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14 ANSWERS


  1. Hopefully never


  2. We should bomb Iraq to get the war over with.

  3. Iran will set one off in Israel, and the Israeli's will retaliate with theirs turning Iran into glass.

  4. Israel will bomb Iran if Iran keeps s******g around.

  5. Atomic weapons are political tools, and not military tools...  Meaning, chances are that the next nuclear testing will be a country trying to demonstrate that they have developed the capability.  Iran would be a good candidate for this, but it does not mean anything....

  6. Hopefully never and nowhere. Except maybe some testing, but i think thats pretty much stopped by now

  7. When mexico- the land of tequila and siestas- builds one, it'll be time to paint your windows white.

  8. On a political popsicle stick positioned next to God's sphincter.

  9. idk hopefully not here lol...

  10. If Israel will be attacked by Iran ,it will unleash from its arsenal the atom bomb, and the nuclear bomb will be detonated on Iran Iran is keeping quiet ,have they got the atom bomb too,and if they have, will they be the first to detonated their Atom bomb on Israel, are we coming on the prediction of Nostradamus, that a Prince with a green turban will start the third world war,

  11. Somewhere in the U.S. unfortunately

  12. No one knows? I'm pretty sure the gov't doesn't broADcast information like that.

  13. Who knows?  I think I know what you are asking though. An article from www.worldnetdaily.com stated:

    NUCLEAR WAR-FEAR

    Iran launches space rocket West fears Tehran mastering

    its atomic missile technology

    --------------------------------------...

    Posted: February 05, 2008

    10:29 pm Eastern

    By Jerome R. Corsi

    © 2008 WorldNetDaily

    Iran today conducted its first successful space-rocket launch, with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on hand to order the takeoff and inaugurate the country's space center, according to the Islamic Republic News Agency.

    Government spokesman Gholam-Hossein Elham, who also observed the launch of Researcher-1 today, announced Iran soon plans to send its first satellite into space, the Omid. Tehran claims the satellite is made in Iran and intended for research.

    The Iranian Student News Agency said the Omid would be launched in the next Iranian calendar year, which begins March 20. Today's launch, the news agency said, enters Iran in the ranks of 11 countries that have sent a rocket into space.

    One year ago, Iran launched a domestically built rocket that failed to reach orbit level.

    Western observers continue to express concern that the space program could be a cover for Iran's attempt to develop a military ballistics missile program capable of delivering an atomic warhead.

    Today's launch may also have been timed to answer Israel's successful test of a new long-range missile propulsion engine Jan. 17 at the IDF's Palmachim Air Force Base.

    Moscow to deliver?

    In a separate development, the Russian news agency RIA Novosti published a report Friday that Iran was continuing to negotiate with the Russian government for the delivery of an advanced S-300 air defense missile system to Iran.

    Iran's determination to defend nuclear and military sites with advanced Russian-built surface-to-air missile systems is widely viewed as an attempt to harden the targets against air and missile attacks by the U.S. or Israel.

    In December, Iranian Defense Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar announced Iran and Russia had signed a contract under which Moscow promised to deliver an unspecified number of S-300s to Iran.

    Subsequently, a statement from Russia's Federal Service for Military-Technical Cooperation raised doubts about Najjar's claim, issuing a statement that delivery of the missiles was not a subject of current negotiations.

    According to RIA Novosti, the advanced version of the S-300 system, the S-300PMU1, or SA-20 Gargoyle, has a range of over 150 kilometers, about 93 miles, and can intercept ballistic missiles and aircraft at both low and high altitudes.

    According to Israeli news reports, the S-300s are effective against cruise missiles and ballistic warheads and are equivalent to the PAC-3 Patriot missile, though Russian military officials contend the S-300 is of a higher operational standard than the U.S.-built Patriot missiles currently used by Israel.

    One year ago, WND reported Russia had begun delivery to Iran of 29 TOR M-1 mobile surface-to-air missile defense missiles in a $1 billion deal with Iran.

    The S-300 is considered a major improvement over the TOR M-1 system now in place in Iran defending multiple nuclear and military sites.

  14. Maybe in Nevada as a test bomb

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