It's worth mentioning that a nuke can be intercepted mid-air before it reaches it's preset detonation altitude. The target may still face some radioactive fallout but just low-activity Uranium 235 or Plutonium 239 - many orders of magnitude less than if it explodes. No immediate deaths, just a elevated risk for lung cancer.
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It's worth mentioning that a nuke can be intercepted mid-air before it reaches it's preset detonation altitude. The target may still face some radioactive fallout but just low-activity Uranium 235 or Plutonium 239 - many orders of magnitude less than if it explodes. No immediate deaths, just a elevated risk for lung cancer.
Nukes are designed *not* to detonate except by their detonator. Even if the interceptor ignited the explosive charge, it would not lead to the perfect symmetrical compression required to initiate the nuclear detonation. And yes, this was tested by the U.S.
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