
Gallery
Now you must know about our stock. All of our items so far are:
Types of conventional bombs:
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Fireworks (Non-harmful)
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semtex-granade (sticky)
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TNT
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General-purpose bomb
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Bouncing bomb
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Bunker buster (can be nuclear)
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Car bomb
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Petrol bomb
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Cluster bomb
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Flour bomb (made with flour)
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Glide bomb
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Logic bomb
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Pipe bomb
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Smoke bomb
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Stink bomb - Stink bombs range in effectiveness from simple pranks to military grade or riot control chemical agents.
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Suicide bomb or suicide bomber OMI (Ongoing Military Investigation)
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Suitcase bomb
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Thermobaric bomb
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Tank bomb or slap bomb
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Barrel bomb
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Molotov cocktail
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Land mine
Types of nonconventional bombs:
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Atomic bomb
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Cobalt bomb
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Dirty bomb
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Electromagnetic bomb
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Hydrogen bomb
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Neutron bomb
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Nuclear bomb
Different sizes of bombs: According to their gross weight:
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150lb bomb
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250lb bomb
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500lb bomb
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750lb bomb
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1000lb bomb
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1200lb bomb
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1500lb bomb
Specific bomb models:
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BLU-82 (conventional)
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GBU-43 Massive Ordnance Air Blast bomb (conventional)
All of these bombs are $3000 each!!! What an amazing deal!
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Nuclear bombs
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Mark 1 – "Little Boy" gun-type weapon (used against Hiroshima). (13–18 kt, 1945–1950)
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Mark 2 – "Thin Man" plutonium gun design—cancelled in 1944
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Implosion Mark 2 – Another Manhattan Project plutonium implosion weapon, a hollow pit implosion design, was also sometimes referred to as Mark 2. Also cancelled 1944.
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Mark 3 – "Fat Man" implosion weapon (used against Nagasaki). (21 kt, 1945–1950)
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Mark 4 – Post-war "Fat Man" redesign. Bomb designed with weapon characteristics as the foremost criteria. (1949–1953)
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Mark 5 – Significantly smaller high efficiency nuclear bomb. (1–120 kt, 1952–1963)
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Mark 6 – Improved version of Mk-4. (8–160 kt, 1951–1962)
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Mark 7 – Multi-purpose tactical bomb. (8–61 kt, 1952–1967)
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Mark 8 – Gun-assembly, HEU weapon designed for penetrating hardened targets. (25–30 kt, 1951–1957)
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Mark 10 – Improved version of Mk-8 (12–15 kt, cancelled May 1952).
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Mark 11 – Re-designed Mk-8. Gun-type (8–30 kt).
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Mark 12 – Light-weight bomb to be carried by fighter planes (12–14 kt).
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Mark 13 – Improved version of Mk-6 (cancelled August 1954).
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TX/Mark 14 – First deployable solid-fuel thermonuclear bomb (Castle Union device). Only five produced. (5 Mt)
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Mark 15 – First "lightweight" thermonuclear weapon. (1.7–3.8 Mt, 1955–1965)
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TX/Mark 16 – First weaponized thermonuclear weapon (Ivy Mike device). Only cryogenic weapon ever deployed. Only five produced. (6–8 Mt)
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Mark 17 – High-yield thermonuclear. Heaviest U.S. weapon, second highest yield of any U.S. weapon. Very similar to Mk-24. (10–15 Mt)
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Mark 18 – Very high yield fission weapon (Ivy King device).
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Mark 20 – Improved Mark 13 (cancelled 1954)
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Mark 21 – Re-designed variant of Castle Bravo test
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Mark 22 – Failed thermonuclear design (Castle Koon device, cancelled April 1954).
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Mark 24 – High-yield thermonuclear, very similar to Mk-17 but had a different secondary.
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Mark 26 – Similar design to Mk 21 (cancelled 1956).
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Mark 27 – Navy nuclear bomb (1958–1965)
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B28 nuclear bomb (Mark 28) (1958–1991)
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Mark 36 – Strategic nuclear bomb (1956–1961) 9–10 Mt
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B39 nuclear bomb (Mark 39) (1957–1966)
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B41 nuclear bomb (Mark 41) (1960–1976); highest yield US nuclear weapon (25 Mt).
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B43 nuclear bomb (Mark 43) (1961–1991)
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B46 nuclear bomb or (Mark 46); experimental, design evolved into B53 nuclear bomb and W-53 warhead (cancelled 1958)
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Mk 101 Lulu
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B53 nuclear bomb (1962–1997; dismantled 2010–2011)
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B57 nuclear bomb (1963–1993)
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B61 nuclear bomb (1966–present)
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B77 nuclear bomb (cancelled 1977)
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B83 nuclear bomb (1983–present)
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B90 nuclear bomb (cancelled 1991)
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Nuclear artillery shells
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16-inch (406 mm)
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W23 (1956–1962) Gun-type
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280 mm:
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W9 (1952–1957) Gun-type
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W19 (1953–1956) Gun-type, W9 derivative
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8-inch (203 mm)
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W33 (1956–1980s) Gun-type
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W75 (cancelled 1973)
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W79 (1981–1992)
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155mm
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W48 (1963–1992)
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W74 (cancelled 1973)
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W82 (cancelled 1983 (W-82-0 Enhanced Radiation) and 1990 (W-82-1 fission only))
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Atomic Demolition Munitions
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W-7/ADM-B (c. 1954–1967)
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T4 ADM (1957–1963) Gun-type
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W30/Tactical Atomic Demolition Munition (1961–1966)
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W31/ADM (1960–1965)
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W45/Medium Atomic Demolition Munition (1964–1984)
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W54/Special Atomic Demolition Munition (1965–1989)
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Missile warheads
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W4 for SM-62 Snark missile (cancelled 1951)
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W5 for MGM-1 Matador (1954–1963)
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W7 for MGR-1 Honest John (1954–1960), Corporal SRBM (1955–1964), Nike Hercules SAM (1958–1960s)
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W8 for SSM-N-8 Regulus, Gun-type (cancelled 1955)
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W12 for RIM-8 Talos missile (cancelled 1955)
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W13 for SM-62 Snark missile and Redstone MRBM (cancelled 1954)
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W15 for missiles (cancelled 1957)
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W21 for B-58 bomber, SM-64 Navaho missile (cancelled 1957)
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W25 for MB-1 "Ding Dong", later AIR-2 Genie (1957–1984)
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W27 for SSM-N-8 Regulus missile (1958–1965)
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W28 for AGM-28 Hound Dog missile, MGM-13 Mace missile (1958–1976)
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W29 for (cancelled 1955)
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W30 for RIM-8 Talos missile (1959–1979)
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W31 for Honest John (1961–1985), Nike Hercules (1960s–1988)
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W34 for Mk101 Lulu nuclear depth charge, Mk45 ASTOR torpedo, Mk105 bomb (1958–1976)
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W35 for Atlas ICBM, Titan I ICBM, Thor IRBM, PGM-19 Jupiter (cancelled 1958)
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W37 (cancelled 1956)
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W38 for Atlas ICBM and Titan I ICBM (1961–1965)
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W39 for Redstone MRBM (1958–1964)
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W40 for MGM-18 Lacrosse SRBM (1959–1964)
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W41 for (cancelled 1957)
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W42 for Air to Air and Surface to Air missiles (cancelled 1961)
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W44 for ASROC (1961–1989)
1962 test of an ASROCantisubmarine rocket armed with the W44
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W45 for Little John rocket, RIM-2 Terrier and AGM-12 Bullpup missiles, MADM (1961–1969 (some 1988))
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W46 for Redstone, Snark, B-58 (cancelled 1958)
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W47 for Polaris SLBM (1960–1974)
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W49 for PGM-19 Jupiter (1959–1963) and Thor IRBM (1959–1963)
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W50 for MGM-31 Pershing (1960–1990)
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W51 for various (program converted to W54 in 1959)
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W52 for MGM-29 Sergeant (1962–1977)
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W53 for LGM-25C Titan II (1962–1987)
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W54 for Davy Crockett recoilless rifle and AIM-26 Falcon AAM (1961–1972)
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W55 for Subroc (1965–1989)
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W56 for Minuteman I and II ICBM (1963–1993)
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W58 for Polaris A-3 SLBM (1964–1982)
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W59 for Minuteman I ICBM and Skybolt missile (1962–1969)
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W60 for Typhon SAM (cancelled 1963)
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W62 for Minuteman III ICBM, (1970–2010)
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W63 for Lance SRBM (cancelled 1966)
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W64 for Lance SRBM (cancelled 1964)
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W65 for Sprint ABM (cancelled 1968)
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W66 for Sprint ABM (1970–1975)
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W67 for Poseidon SLBM and Minuteman III ICBM (cancelled 1967)
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W68 for Poseidon SLBM (1970–1991)
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W69 for AGM-69 SRAM (1972–1990)
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W70 for Lance SRBM (1973–1992)
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W71 for LIM-49A Spartan ABM (1974–1975; dismantled 1992)
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W72 for AGM-62 Walleye (1970–1979)
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W73 for Condor missile (cancelled 1970)
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W76 for Trident I SLBM (1978–present)
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W78 for LGM-30 Minuteman III (1979–present)
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W80 for AGM-86 ALCM, AGM-129 ACM and BGM-109 Tomahawk (1981–present)
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W81 for RIM-67 Standard ER, based on B61 (cancelled 1986)
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W84 for BGM-109G Gryphon GLCM (1983–1991)
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W85 for Pershing II IRBM (1983–1991)
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W86 for Pershing II IRBM Earth penetrating warhead option (cancelled 1980)
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W87 for Peacekeeper ICBM (1986–2005) and Minuteman III ICBM (2007–present)
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W87-1 for MGM-134 Midgetman ICBM (cancelled 1992)
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W88 for Trident II SLBM (1988–present)
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W89 for AGM-131 SRAM II (cancelled 1991)
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W91 for SRAM-T (cancelled 1991)
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RNEP (Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator) design program (2001–2005)
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All of the rest of our weapons (the nukes) are 1 million dollars each!!!

