There will be traceability issues.Every aircraft parts comes with a part number that can be traced to source.Dismantling old aircrafts would pose quality risk as scrapped parts may be reintroduced into circulation by unscrupulous elements. Remember ,there is no parking space in the sky!
@Serdeic_@Imranmuhdz Hhhh wahala
Let us see how this event will evolve over time again
🤣🤣🤣
Look how that previous FCC saga seamlessly slides.
These screen scripted events are just there to twist the mind of the masses.
But we all know the actual negotiations took place behind the closed door
I wish I can add how complex the process of disposing Nuke waste is.
Even proper setting of the initial infrastructure for the disposal will take some countries a decade to construct. Not handling the waste properly which is still radioactively active.
The gap is so wide man
😁
Now that I’m feeling like an expert lol, let me use the little time I have in the sun to explain something.
Many people think building a nuclear weapon is like building an app.
It isn’t. It is arguably the most sophisticated thing humans have ever produced.
First, you need exceptional brainpower. Nuclear fission and fusion, quantum mechanics, neutron transport physics, implosion dynamics.
These are fields dominated by the top 1% of scientists, and they are not evenly distributed around the world.
Certainly not in Africa. Yet I constantly see people suggesting Africans should just get nukes.
Next, you need supercomputers to simulate implosion physics, followed by testing to confirm that the weapon actually works.
Before anyone starts thinking about trial and error, understand this.
A basic nuclear weapons program costs between 10 and 50 billion dollars upfront.
The United States spends around 50 billion dollars every year just to maintain its nuclear arsenal.
Nigeria’s entire national budget this year is about 36 billion dollars.
Then there is the know-how. Most of the technical knowledge required is highly classified.
The United States, Russia, and others have accumulated decades of research, testing, and refinement. This is not knowledge you can download.
Next, you need enriched uranium, not the natural kind. That requires massive centrifuge cascades operating continuously.
The energy demand alone is enough to power a small town.
Meanwhile, Nigeria’s capital complex, Aso Rock, has been reported to struggle with power supply bills.
And what about plutonium, which is produced during enrichment?
How do you handle, store, and shield such extreme radioactivity safely.
Let us assume you somehow get the materials, the money, and the power. Now you must engineer the bomb itself.
The tolerances required are finer than a human hair. Then you still need delivery systems such as ICBMs, submarines, or strategic bombers.
The tiniest mistake, and your own warhead turns you into dust.
You must also engineer it to evade missile defense systems like THAAD or Aegis.
The logistics are almost impossible. And that is before we even mention international surveillance and restrictions.
You cannot test a nuclear weapon without the entire world knowing.
The truth is this. It is almost impossible for ordinary nations to build nuclear weapons.
And frankly, I pray Africa, especially sub-Saharan Africa, never even dreams of it.
One simple act of incompetence, and my nation becomes a radioactive post-apocalyptic wasteland.
The reality of global power is this. Nations align with those who already have nukes.
That is why global geopolitics revolves around the United States, Russia, and China.
These are the big players, the ones who actually hold the nuclear keys.