2 British nuke were indeed store in Tengah decade ago..think its the 60s..
it was revealed couple of years back by the New Paper n the rest of the media start to pick up from there..n all the big hoo haa n rumors saying that one of the nuke were still in Singapore...

reporters from everywhere were flocking to TAB...TAB personel were warn not to talk to the press regarding anything abt the Airbase..
think there was a press conference by Mindef(not sure)..
well...its useless to ask us also..cos we only know after we have read the papers..
http://www.thebulletin.org/issues/2001/jf01/jf01rmoore.htmlNo strategic system was ever deployed in a country outside the United Kingdom, but due to government alliance commitments in the Middle East and Southeast Asia, the 1957 White Paper's conclusions on deterrence applied outside Europe as well. In 1960 and 1961, British tactical nuclear weapons began to be deployed overseas on Royal Navy aircraft carriers, and at RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus. In 1962, Prime Minister Harold Macmillan personally authorized the storage of nuclear weapons at RAF Tengah in Singapore. Facilities were introduced for handling nuclear weapons in transit in a number of other countries
Nevertheless, on August 17, 1962, Prime Minister Macmillan authorized the RAF to deploy both live and dummy weapons to Tengah. The live weapons were to be held at all times in their special storage area, but in November 1963 permission was granted to train with dummy weapons in the open.
Militarily, the justification for these deployments was still the possibility of limited war between the SEATO powers and China. Politically, by making a nuclear contribution to SEATO, Macmillan was trying to gain a measure of influence over U.S. nuclear policy in a region where Britain and the United States had historically been at odds; he was concerned, like a number of post-war British prime ministers, by the risk of U.S. belligerence in Korea, Taiwan, or Indochina. Macmillan's ministers had convinced him that British deployments, by contrast, carried no risk. But Malaysian Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman, although generally pro-British, was not informed. (Singapore had recently won independence from Britain as part of the Federation of Malaysia.) The British government had made a visible military commitment to SEATO, choosing to do so through the relatively inexpensive medium of a squadron of nuclear- capable aircraft, but it was coy about admitting, even privately, to the actual presence of nuclear weapons.