
US President Donald Trump warned that “monsters” nuclear weapons are the greatest threat to humanity and it is easy to “end the world” tomorrow.
The U.S. commander-in-chief issued a grim warning as he regrets the dangers of stockpiling nuclear weapons in his efforts to re-engage weapons control talks with Russia and China.
“The greatest [threat] Trump said to Fox News’ “Sunday Morning Future” that sitting on shelves in various countries is a huge monster of “nuclear weapons.”
Trump continues to regret the U.S.’s second largest nuclear weapons stockpile, and it has already spent on nuclear weapons programs after Russia.
“We spent a lot of money on nuclear weapons – the level of destruction is beyond your imagination,” he said in an extensive interview.
“You have to spend all this money on what you use, it can be the end of the world, and that’s really bad.”
Trump also overturned world leaders who spent years claiming climate change is the greatest threat to humanity.
“I’m looking [former President Joe] For years, Biden said that there was a threat from the climate. “Trump said. “I said ‘No. ‘”
“They talk about climate, about the dangers of climate, but they don’t talk about the dangers of nuclear weapons that could happen tomorrow.”
His statement comes after he recently warned that Russia has by far the most nuclear weapons in the world, but predicts that China, which owns the third largest stock, may catch up within a decade.
Trump also stressed that he wanted to restart nuclear weapons control dialogue with Russia and China, and ultimately hoped that both countries and the United States would agree to cut their large-scale defense budgets by half. He added that once the Middle East and Ukraine “we’ll figure it out” he would hope to have nuclear negotiations with the two countries.
“We have no reason to build brand new nuclear weapons, we already have a lot,” Trump said last month. “You can destroy the world 50 times more than 100 times. Here we are building new nuclear weapons and we are building nuclear weapons.”