A recent hire at the Department of Energy’s nuclear security wing may reveal what Kamala Harris has planned for America’s nuclear arsenal.
Who’s ready for liberals to do to America’s nuclear deterrent what they did to the United States Secret Service?
Fox News reports that The Biden-Harris administration announced Sneha Nair had been appointed as special assistant at the National Nuclear Security Administration in February 2024. Nair believes in eradicating purported “White supremacy” in the nuclear field as well as “queering nuclear weapons” as part of a diversity, equity and inclusion push she believes is essential for deterring threats to nuclear energy facilities in the U.S.
“Finally, queer theory informs the struggle for nuclear justice and disarmament,” she wrote last year. “Queer theory helps to shift the perception of nuclear weapons as instruments for security by telling the hidden stories of displacement, illness, and trauma caused by their production and testing.”
Nair argues that DEI, more broadly, “is essential for creating effective nuclear policy.”
Before she joined the administration, she worked for the Stimson Institute, which has received hundreds of thousands from Soros’ Open Society Foundations and millions from “The Embassy of the State of Qatar” over the years, Fox News Digital’s review of their funding sources revealed.
Before her current role, Nair worked the Stimson Institute, a think tank that has received substantial funding from sources including George Soros’ Open Society Foundations and the Embassy of the State of Qatar, according to a review by Fox News Digital.
During her time there, she wrote, “U.S. government reports show that qualified applicants with foreign ties have been discouraged from applying to sensitive national security positions and faced barriers to obtaining a security clearance. This is in part due to preconceived confirmation biases held by investigators about certain racial or ethnic groups.”
“Considerable progress has been made in advancing DEI in the nuclear field, but the largest obstacle remains in ensuring that nuclear security practitioners understand how DEI can serve as a tool to strengthen nuclear security,” she continued. “Greater focus on the intersections between nuclear security and DEI is essential.”