The safety of nuclear weapons is
the theme of Eric Schlosser's 2013 book Command
and Control: Nuclear Weapons, the
Damascus Accident, and the Illusion of Safety. After reading the book, my own reaction is mirrored in a
quote Schlosser cites from General George Butler, who became head of the U. S. Strategic
Air Command shortly before the Soviet Union came to an end in 1991. After familiarizing himself with the
secret plans for nuclear war, Butler later remarked that "we escaped the
Cold War without a nuclear holocaust by some combination of skill, luck, and
divine intervention, and I suspect the latter in greatest proportion."
Did you know, for example, that
on March 11, 1958, a nuclear bomb landed on a playhouse belonging to the Gregg
family of Mars Bluff, South Carolina?
The impact was strong enough to set off the high explosives in the bomb,
destroying the playhouse, a nearby automobile, and injuring six family
members. Fortunately, the nuclear
core was not inserted in the bomb.
It remained behind in a B-52 aircraft three miles above, where the
navigator had entered the bomb bay to check on the status of a locking
pin. As he crawled awkwardly around
the device, he grabbed the nearest object at hand for support, which happened
to be the manual bomb-release lever.
The bomb fell onto the bay doors and forced them open, and the navigator
narrowly avoided following it to the ground by hanging on for dear life.
That same manual bomb-release
lever was responsible for at least one other accidental loss of a nuclear bomb. The most hair-raising accident
involving nuclear weapons happened to a Titan II nuclear missile in a silo near
Damascus, Arkansas, on September 18, 1980. The Titan II was the same multistage rocket that boosted the
Gemini manned spacecraft into orbit in the 1960s. It used highly hazardous nitrogen tetroxide liquid oxidizer
and an equally dangerous rocket fuel, which would explode on contact with the
oxidizer. You can imagine the
challenges involved at underground missile silos all over the U. S., as Air
Force personnel struggled to keep dozens of these hundred-foot-tall rockets
fueled and ready for launch in minutes during the many years of the Cold
War.
Inevitably, something would go
wrong. On that fateful day in
1980, during a routine pressure check on the missile in Launch Complex 374-7, a
technician dropped a heavy socket-wrench socket. It bounced off a projection inside the underground silo, hit
the thin aluminum skin of the rocket, and punctured it, allowing fuel to escape
into the silo. Over the next nine
hours, things got steadily worse.
I won't give away the ending of this particular story, which reads like
a Tom Clancy thriller in spots, but today the silo is filled in and the land
has been returned to its previous owner.
The Damascus accident advances in fits and starts over the
entire length of the book as Schlosser digresses into the history of nuclear
weapons, the evolution of nuclear-weapons policy in international relations,
and attempts to make nuclear weapons safe as well as reliable. This structure mostly works, although
at times I found myself wishing for less political and military infighting and
more Cold War stories about bomb accidents. But there is plenty of both, for policy wonks interested in
the finer points of Henry Kissinger's diplomatic skills and for techies wanting
to know exactly how a thermonuclear weapon's electronic system functions.
The more time passes, the harder
it is to believe that two of the most advanced industrial countries of the
world—the U. S. A. and the Soviet Union—routinely played chicken with nuclear
weapons, not just once, but dozens of times. And most of these games were played in an era when the most
advanced communications systems were either submarine cables installed as long
ago as the 1860s, or shortwave radios that were essentially amateur radio sets
on steroids. During the Cuban
missile crisis of 1962, generally recognized by historians as the time that the
world edged closest to the nuclear brink, whenever the Soviet ambassador in
Washington wanted to send urgent messages to his superiors back in the USSR, he
had to call Western Union, which sent a messenger to the embassy on a bicycle
and carried a piece of paper back to the telegraph office by hand.
Because few civilians ever saw or
dealt with nuclear weapons, the whole Cold War threat had an unreal quality to
it, but it was frighteningly real.
Schlosser shows us that everyone living in the U. S. and the USSR, not
to mention other nations with nuclear capabilities, had numerous escapes from a
fiery or lingering death by nuclear holocaust during the Cold War, though most
of us were unaware of them. And of
course, that threat still exists today, though now the most dangerous nations
with nuclear weapons are places like North Korea and Pakistan. As I write this, North Korea's nominal
leader Kim Jong Un has not been seen in public for more than a month, so we
don't really know who's in charge there.
Toward the end of the book,
Schlosser quotes Langdon Winner's comment that "artifacts have politics." That is to say, the very nature of some
technologies compels the formation of certain types of political structures to
deal with them. The only way to
deal with nuclear weapons, Winner concluded, is to form a secret, authoritarian
system of control. The ultimate in
hazardous technology demands the ultimate in control and safety
precautions. Although
nuclear-weapons powers have done pretty well at controlling the intentional use
of such devices, the horror-story list of accidents that Schlosser has compiled
in Command and Control leaves one
with the impression that it is only a matter of time until we see an entire
city or region vaporized, not because someone decided to start a war on
purpose, but because some technician screwed up. For the sake of everyone who might be endangered by it, I
hope that such an accident never happens.
But unless those who decide to build nuclear weapons value safety as
highly as they do reliability, the chances are that sooner or later, it will.
Sources: Eric Schlosser's Command
and Control: Nuclear Weapons, the
Damascus Accident, and the Illusion of Safety was published in 2013 by the
Penguin Press. I also referred to
Wikipedia articles on Mars Bluff, SC, the Mark 6 nuclear bomb, Titan II,
Langdon Winner, and the 1980 Damascus, Arkansas incident. As of today (Oct. 6, 2014), CNN reports
that Kim Jong Un has not made a public appearance since Sept. 4.
I'm currently in the middle of this book. It's one of many I've read on the subject. For more hair raising tales look into the Palomares and Goldsboro incidents. In my opinion, they make Damascus look like a high school lab spill.
ReplyDeleteAny weapon made perfectly safe would then be unsuitable for its purpose. Therefore, any weapon/bomb that can explode will explode and sometimes when it's not intended.
We can discuss technological and human factors means of making a weapon safe all day.
For your regular dose of nuclear weapons matters I suggest the Restricted Data blog.