As Russia looms, NATO showcases nuclear drill

A Dutch F-35 jet roared off the runway Tuesday at Volkel airbase in the Netherlands as part of NATO's annual nuclear exercise Steadfast Noon. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 21 October 2025
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As Russia looms, NATO showcases nuclear drill

  • The long-planned drill, which involves no live nuclear bombs, is routine practice for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
  • Involving over 70 aircraft from 14 countries and some 2,000 personnel, the 2025 iteration of the drill is focused on the North Sea region

VOLKEL, Netherlands: A Dutch F-35 jet roared off the runway Tuesday at Volkel air base in the Netherlands as part of NATO’s annual nuclear exercise Steadfast Noon.
The long-planned drill, which involves no live nuclear bombs, is routine practice for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization to ensure it is ready to use its ultimate weapon if necessary.
As tensions have risen with Russia over the war in Ukraine and repeated air incursions, it is now also an unmistakable message to Moscow of NATO’s potential might.
For the first time, NATO this year allowed a small group of journalists including AFP on site during the two-week exercise.
Involving over 70 aircraft from 14 countries and some 2,000 personnel, the 2025 iteration of the drill is focused on the North Sea region.
The press invitation was part of the Western political and military alliance’s shift away from a deep culture of military secrecy — up until four years ago it didn’t even divulge the name of the nuclear exercise.
“We’ve long not talked about this, but it’s certainly time that we talked to our publics about it,” said US Air Force Col. Daniel Bunch, chief of NATO Nuclear Operations.
“This is not sabre-rattling. This is about consistently performing our mission and going out and demonstrating the full range of capabilities that the alliance has.”
NATO’s increased openness about its nuclear activities comes as Moscow has adjusted its own nuclear rhetoric in line with the ebbs and flows of the war in Ukraine.
Jim Stokes, NATO’s Director of Nuclear Policy, insisted that the alliance’s increased messaging wasn’t “necessarily directed at Russia.”
“It’s about communicating to our domestic audiences,” Stoke said.
“We want to make sure that folks understand that we’re a responsible nuclear alliance, what we’re doing is transparent as we can be, we are not acting aggressively.”

- ‘No doubt’ -

But in typical NATO fashion, the transparency only went so far, given that the operation is one of the alliance’s most closely guarded secrets.
Journalists watched a string of Dutch and German jets capable of carrying tactical nuclear payloads streak into the skies.
But the media was not allowed to see the crews practicing prepping the dummy bombs for loading.
Such is the sensitivity around a nuclear exercise that none of the planes participating are actually carrying even the mock-up weapons.
NATO’s nuclear deterrence relies on US weaponry stationed in numerous bases in Europe.
While doubts have been raised about Washington’s reliability under President Donald Trump, commanders were adamant that nothing has changed.
“I don’t think anybody should question the American role,” said US Col. Bunch.
Russia’s recent air incursions in Poland and Estonia, and a string of unexplained drone flights, have rattled NATO.
But Marcel van Egmond, head of the Netherlands air combat command, said that security at the bases involved in the exercise was as high as ever.
“We haven’t taken any specific measures,” he said. “Our self-defense has been part of our mission, always.”
For those involved in the exercise, the weight of training to use such devastating weapons is heavy.
“It’s a strain. It’s hard. It’s obviously the biggest violence you can give to a pilot,” said Dutch squadron commander Bram Versteeg.
But he insisted that “deterrence is all about (how) you have to be capable, you have to be credible, and you have to communicate.”
“So no doubt in my mind that my people are up to the task,” he said.


Louvre thieves escaped with 30 seconds to spare, probe reveals

Updated 2 sec ago
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Louvre thieves escaped with 30 seconds to spare, probe reveals

  • Probe found only one of two security cameras was working near the site where the intruders broke in on the morning of Sunday October 19
PARIS: The thieves who stole crown jewels from the Louvre in October evaded police with just 30 seconds to spare due to avoidable security failures at the Paris museum, a damning investigation revealed on Wednesday.
The probe, ordered by the culture ministry after the embarrassing daylight heist, revealed that only one of two security cameras was working near the site where the intruders broke in on the morning of Sunday October 19.
Agents in the security control room did not have enough screens to follow the images in real-time, while a lack of coordination meant police were initially sent to the wrong place once the alarm was raised, the report unveiled at the French Senate’s Culture Commission stated.
“It highlights an overall failure of the museum, as well as its supervisory authority, to address security issues,” the head of the commission, Laurent Lafon, said at the start of a hearing.
One of the most startling revelations was that the robbers left only 30 seconds before police and private security guards arrived on the scene.
“Give or take 30 seconds, the Securitas (private security) guards or the police officers in a car could have prevented the thieves from escaping,” the head of the investigation, Noel Corbin, told senators.
He said that measures such as a modern CCTV system, more resistant glass in the door cut open with angle grinders, or better internal coordination could have prevented the loss of the jewels — worth an estimated $102 million — which have still not been found.
Major security vulnerabilities were highlighted in several studies seen by management of the Louvre over the last decade, including a 2019 audit by experts at the jewelry company Van Cleef & Arpels.
Their findings stressed that the riverside balcony targeted by the thieves was a weak point and could be easily reached with an extendable ladder — exactly what transpired in the heist.
‘Stunned’
Corbin confirmed that under-fire Louvre boss Laurence des Cars had not been aware of the audit which was ordered by her predecessor, Jean-Luc Martinez.
“The recommendations were not acted on and they would have enabled us to avoid this robbery,” Corbin said, adding that there had been a lack of coordination between the two government-appointed administrators.
Police believe they have arrested all four intruders, who escaped on powerful motorbikes, having carried out the heist in the Apollo Gallery in around 10 minutes in total, according to the investigation.
The revelations on Wednesday are likely to pile more pressure des Cars, the first woman in the role who was appointed by President Emmanuel Macron in 2021.
Questions have swirled since the break-in over whether it was avoidable and why a national treasure that is the world’s most-visited museum appeared to be so poorly protected.
France’s lower house of parliament is carrying out its own inquiry, while des Cars and Martinez are set to be grilled by senators next week.
Last month, France’s state auditor said security upgrades had been carried out at a “woefully inadequate pace” and the museum had prioritized “high-profile and attractive operations” instead of protecting itself.
Senior police officer Guy Tubiana, a security adviser at the culture ministry who took part in the investigation, told senators he was “stunned” by what he had discovered at the museum.
“There was a succession of malfunctions that led to catastrophe but I never would have thought the Louvre could have so many malfunctions,” he said.
Staff at the Louvre at set to go on strike on Monday to demand management act against what they see as understaffing and overcrowding at the museum, which welcomed 8.7 million people last year.
At the weekend, the museum revealed that a water leak had damaged 300 to 400 journals, books and documents in the Egyptian department in late November.