Read Sleepwalking With the Bomb Online
Authors: John C. Wohlstetter
Tags: #Europe, #International Relations, #Russia & the Former Soviet Union, #Nuclear Warfare, #Arms Control, #Political Science, #Military, #History
Popular protests bore fruit in 1958: in March, the Soviet Union announced a moratorium on nuclear testing, and five months later President Eisenhower declared a U.S. moratorium to begin at the end of October. France—not a signatory to the treaty ban—ignored the super-power moratorium and tested in the atmosphere after the 1963 ban, as did China.
T
HEN, IN
September 1961, the Soviets ended their three-and-a-half-year hiatus. They began a series of tests, culminating in the largest man-made nuclear explosion ever, the Tsar Bomba, tested in the Arctic Ocean archipelago of Novaya Zemlya.
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The 1961 Tsar Bomba test yielded 50 megatons, equal to a magnitude 7 earthquake like the one that devastated Haiti in 2010. It released one-quarter the explosive force of the 1883 Krakatoa island eruption that created a 135-foot tsunami, sent a huge layer of dust around the world, and was heard thousands of miles away. The 27-ton monster bomb created a fireball that reached almost as high as the 6.5-mile altitude from which the Russian TU-95 bomber dropped it, and generated a mushroom cloud that rose 40 miles, seven times the height of Mount Everest. Because it detonated at 12,000 feet, far too low for a bomb this size, it hurled highly radioactive debris that spread all over the globe via jet-stream winds.
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The radius of
total destruction
was 34 miles, the third-degree burn radius was over 60 miles, the blast shock wave reached 430 miles, and windows broke as far away as Norway and Finland, over 600 miles away.
The bomb’s energy was 97 percent fusion energy, which does not produce the poisonous radioactive by-products that fission does—only the 3 percent from the fission first-stage A-bomb trigger (which ignited the fusion H-bomb “secondary” stage) released radioactivity. The Soviet bomb designers could have used fission boosting—surrounding the fissile plutonium core with uranium-238 as a fissionable third stage, as originally planned. Instead they used a tamper of nonfissionable lead. A 3-stage bomb would have yielded 100 megatons, and all the extra energy release would have sent vast quantities of highly toxic by-products into the atmosphere to circle the globe. But Sakharov convinced Khrushchev that a 100-megaton blast would increase total radiation in the atmosphere by 25 percent over that released by all previous tests combined.
The Tsar Bomba, even at 50 megatons, was in fact not a deliverable weapon—it was far too large to fit in any bomber’s bomb bay. It was suspended underneath the plane’s fuselage and dropped with a parachute that slowed its descent, so that the lumbering TU-95—whose top speed is roughly that of civilian airliners—could get far enough away to withstand the severe blast shock wave and intense heat.
The largest deliverable weapons known to have been deployed were 25-megaton warheads (deployed by both superpowers). We do not know for sure the largest remaining from the Soviet arsenal, but there are few U.S. weapons today with yields above one megaton. Yet a one-megaton weapon is 70 times as powerful as the Hiroshima uranium bomb and 50 times as powerful as the Nagasaki plutonium bomb. (The largest A-bomb ever detonated was a 500-kiloton U.S. A-test.) Britain, France, and China have tested in the megaton range. Israel is believed to have such an H-bomb capability, and Pakistan reportedly is working on it.
A
N EXPLOSION
the Soviets conducted on Christmas Day 1962 marked the last superpower atmospheric test. July 1963 was the “hottest” radioactive month in U.S. history, as debris continued to fall from the atmosphere. On August 5 the U.S., USSR, and UK signed the Limited Test Ban Treaty, which ended atmospheric, surface, and underwater tests.
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The U.S. Senate ratified it later that year.
A decade later, in July 1974, President Nixon signed two treaties—the Threshold Test Ban Treaty and the Peaceful Nuclear Explosives Treaty (which dealt with excavation)—limiting underground nuclear explosions to 150 kilotons (roughly 10 times the Hiroshima bomb’s yield). The yield limitation was important. Scientists found that in principle, the potential yield of the H-bomb is without limit.
The disarmament movement’s revival began with another success, but this time, it was Western activists collaborating with the Soviets to undermine support for deployment of the neutron bomb, as noted in
chapter 4
. The Soviets concocted a brilliant propaganda campaign, labeling the neutron weapon “the capitalist bomb” because it killed people while preserving property. The claim was laughable, as property within range of the lethal dose of neutron radiation would be contaminated for years, and thus rendered unusable. West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt staked his prestige on neutron deployment, only to see President Jimmy Carter unilaterally cancel the weapon. For the Soviets it was a twofer: getting an effective battlefield weapon cancelled and creating a fissure within the NATO alliance.
During the 1980s the movement was considerably less successful than it had previously been. Activists hampered but did not prevent NATO’s efforts to counter Moscow’s aggressive deployment of nuclear missiles in Europe. They pressed for a nuclear freeze, which would in actual practice have been utterly unenforceable against Moscow, while enforced against the West by public opinion. Key hardcore activists were working hand in glove with “peace groups” like the World Peace Council, which the Soviet Union created to hinder Western nuclear programs. The vast majority of freeze supporters among the general public had no inkling of the shadowy connections between phony peace groups and the Soviet KGB (secret police), but Western intelligence agencies knew.
A nuclear freeze also would have eliminated Moscow’s fear that it could not keep up with emerging American nuclear strategic developments. It was narrowly defeated by the steely resolve of Western leaders, above all Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher, who surely understood that once a freeze is signed, it for practical purposes binds Western nations far more firmly than their adversaries.
In 1983 a highly touted film about nuclear war between the U.S. and USSR,
The Day After
, was shown on ABC. The film was clearly aimed at pushing public sentiment towards abolition of nuclear weapons. It presented a scenario in which a crisis ensues when the Soviets blockade Berlin. The U.S. sends forces to re-open the city, and a shooting war begins. NATO forces use tactical nuclear weapons first, and Moscow responds. Then one of the sides—which is left unclear—escalates to use of strategic weapons against cities. Shortly thereafter an all-out nuclear exchange results, with countless millions killed on each side, plus vast physical devastation.
The Reagan administration feared that the movie’s graphic depictions of the horrific devastation and loss of life caused by a nuclear exchange would stampede public opinion. It requested airtime after the movie to respond to it, and ABC assented. Secretary of State George Shultz appeared, and declared nuclear war “unacceptable.” The movie did not noticeably shift public attitudes.
The Cold War triumvirate of Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, and West German chancellor Helmut Kohl held the line against the nuclear freeze movement, a critical psychological factor in preserving the Western alliance and convincing the Soviet Union that the West would not crumble from within. Earlier, however, disarmament movements had driven government policy—for the better with the ban on above ground and underwater tests, but for the worse with NATO’s unilateral scrapping of the neutron bomb.
How popular pressure will weigh in the new push for nuclear abolition remains to be seen, but whatever happens will confirm the Ninth Lesson of nuclear-age history: Popular pressure for unilateral disarmament can prevail unless Western governments explain its hidden, grave dangers. One major step is pending: the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, to ban all nuclear weapon testing.
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The challenge skeptical governments must meet is to educate their publics about the risks of precipitous disarmament, which could lead to, rather than prevent, nuclear blackmail.
__________________
44.
The Hiroshima bomb was originally dubbed “Thin Man” after the Dashiell Hammett fictional detective, while “Fat Man” was the nickname of the Caspar Gutman character played by Sydney Greenstreet in the film of Hammett’s novel
The Maltese Falcon
; Thin Man was shortened and then renamed Little Boy.
45.
Because Fat Man missed its aim point by over two miles the death toll was about half that for Hiroshima. This dramatically taught the first nuclear-age targeting lesson:
accuracy is a greater factor in a nuclear weapon’s overall destructiveness than is yield.
It is for that precise reason that as missiles became far more accurate their warhead yields even more dramatically declined.
46.
Manhattan Project physicist Hans Bethe opined at the time that the Soviets must have begun their extensive preparations by March 1961, just as the Geneva test ban talks resumed. Half a year before they announced it, the Soviets already had begun planning to end their moratorium.
47.
A rule of thumb for blast effect: each ton of nuclear yield vaporizes one ton of debris at ground level. Because the Tsar Bomba’s 50-megaton blast was an airburst, but too low, it vaporized earth at ground zero. A pure ground-level Tsar Bomba burst would have thrown skyward 50 million tons of debris. (The U.S. Air Force nixed a Strategic Air Command request for a 60-megaton H-bomb; in the event, President Eisenhower refused to allow an atmospheric test in the Pacific.)
Far-flung radiation effects began with the 1945 Trinity test, which transmuted cerium-140 (a stable rare-earth element of the soil in the western continental U.S.) into intensely radioactive cerium-141. Winds carried it across the United States, where it ruined film at the Eastman Kodak factory in Rochester, New York. Another odd example: on May 25, 1953, a shell from the Army’s atomic cannon exploded in the Nevada desert with a 15-kiloton yield (slightly greater than the Hiroshima bomb), sending a radioactive cloud east that contaminated hail falling in a thunderstorm over Washington, D.C.
48.
Paul Nitze points out that the Soviets gathered more detailed information than did the U.S. on atmospheric tests and by signing the treaty locked in a knowledge edge.
49.
Through January 2012, 182 countries had signed and 156 had ratified the treaty. It will enter into force once 44 nuclear-energy countries that helped negotiate have ratified it. Eight countries remain on this list: China, Egypt, India, Iran, Israel, North Korea, Pakistan, and the U. S. The U.S. has signed, but not ratified, the treaty.
You don’t want a messianic apocalyptic cult controlling atomic bombs. When the wide-eyed believer gets hold of the reins of power and the weapons of mass death, then the entire world should start worrying, and that is what is happening in Iran.
Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu to
Jeffrey Goldberg, The Atlantic, March 2009
C
OUNTRIES DISARM FOR THE SAME REASON THAT THEY ORIGINALLY
arm: because they judge it to be in their supreme national interest. They do not disarm because America or anyone else is “setting an example.” Nor do they do so because they wish to earn the goodwill of the (largely fictive) “international community,” unless the step is tied to a specific benefit such as the lifting of economic and political sanctions (South Africa), or winning political autonomy (former Soviet republics).
About hostile nations in particular—rogues like North Korea and revolutionaries like Iran—we can say that they do not disarm if they think they can get away with not doing so. Given sufficient national security reason to retain a clandestine cache of nuclear weapons, they will retain it, even if other nations are reducing. For them, some combination of sanctions, credible threats, or military action is necessary to derail their programs. Thus the Tenth Lesson of nuclear-age history: Disarming hostile powers cannot be done by negotiations alone.
This lesson has been behind various efforts to disarm recalcitrant nascent nuclear powers by force, before they produce weapons. These efforts include Israel’s 1981 raid on Iraq’s Osirak reactor, its 2007 raid on a partially finished Syrian nuclear reactor, and the allied coalition’s 2003 decision to invade Iraq and end any possibility of Saddam Hussein becoming head of a nuclear state. America and Israel have contemplated a preemptive strike against Iran’s nuclear facilities, to prevent or at least delay Iran’s ability to produce nuclear weapons.
In considering a variety of cases of disarmament, this chapter makes clear that when leaders deem it in their country’s best interest to disarm, they will do so. But hostile powers must be disarmed by force.
B
ROAD-SCALE DISARMAMENT
efforts first bore fruit in Latin America. Brazil floated the first proposal for a Latin American nuclear-free zone in 1962—even before the Cuban Missile Crisis brought nuclear missiles to America’s neighbor. Just five years later, in 1967, five Latin American countries—Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador, and Mexico—signed the Treaty for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America (known as the Treaty of Tlatelolco, after the part of Mexico City where the signing ceremony happened). The treaty came into force just over a year later, and by 2002 all 33 Latin American countries had signed and ratified it.
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