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12 Seconds Apart: Twin Seismic Pulses In China That Set Off US Nuclear Alarm
- Thursday February 19, 2026
- World News | Edited by NDTV News Desk
A small tremor rippled through a remote corner of Central Asia in June 2020. It registered at 2.75 on the seismic scale. The signal was picked up by a monitoring station in Kazakhstan operated by the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Organisation
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www.ndtv.com
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Treaty Under Cloud, Nuclear Test Ban Agency Asks India To Turn "Observer"
- Wednesday May 15, 2019
- India News | Written by Sukirti Dwivedi
The Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organisation (CTBTO) has invited India to become an "Observer" with access to International Monitoring System data, so it can take an informed decision on ratifying a much-debated nuclear disarmament treaty.
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www.ndtv.com
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India shuns world's largest scientific network to catch nuclear bomb tests
- Monday June 24, 2013
- World News | Written by Pallava Bagla
This network has cost one billion dollars. It has been funded by 183 countries. And it has one agenda - to detect within minutes nuclear explosions that are conducted on land, air or even under the sea.
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www.ndtv.com
-
12 Seconds Apart: Twin Seismic Pulses In China That Set Off US Nuclear Alarm
- Thursday February 19, 2026
- World News | Edited by NDTV News Desk
A small tremor rippled through a remote corner of Central Asia in June 2020. It registered at 2.75 on the seismic scale. The signal was picked up by a monitoring station in Kazakhstan operated by the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Organisation
-
www.ndtv.com
-
Treaty Under Cloud, Nuclear Test Ban Agency Asks India To Turn "Observer"
- Wednesday May 15, 2019
- India News | Written by Sukirti Dwivedi
The Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organisation (CTBTO) has invited India to become an "Observer" with access to International Monitoring System data, so it can take an informed decision on ratifying a much-debated nuclear disarmament treaty.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
India shuns world's largest scientific network to catch nuclear bomb tests
- Monday June 24, 2013
- World News | Written by Pallava Bagla
This network has cost one billion dollars. It has been funded by 183 countries. And it has one agenda - to detect within minutes nuclear explosions that are conducted on land, air or even under the sea.
-
www.ndtv.com