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nuclear attack submarinesCondé Nast
•66% Informative
Britain ’s nuclear weapons have always been an act of misdirection—the assertion of an identity that no one totally believes.
In 1946 , the U.S. withdrew from nuclear coöperation, leaving the UK with the awkward choice of whether to develop a bomb on its own.
The decision was always about convincing the Americans , and the British state, of the country's remaining vitality.
Everything about Britain ’s nuclear-weapons infrastructure is aging out.
The Vanguard , which fired the faulty missile, has been in service for thirty years .
In 2010 , for a mixture of political and cost-saving reasons, the Conservative-led government delayed ordering a new, thirty-billion-pound successor fleet of submarines for six years .
The first of the new ships, H.M. Dreadnought , originally supposed to come into service this year , is now not expected until the early to mid-twenty-thirties .
In early 2020 , Britain ’s decision to build its first new warhead in thirty years was accidentally revealed in a U.S. Senate hearing.
Only the Scottish National Party has anything skeptical to say about the Enterprise .
Nuclear weapons are an easy way for Keir Starmer to put some distance between himself and Jeremy Corbyn .
VR Score
75
Informative language
77
Neutral language
50
Article tone
formal
Language
English
Language complexity
52
Offensive language
not offensive
Hate speech
not hateful
Attention-grabbing headline
not detected
Known propaganda techniques
not detected
Time-value
short-lived
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no external sources
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