A set of
recently released documents provides us with some significant insight regarding
the direction that the United States planned to take after the collapse of the
Soviet Union. The first
document is dated August
17th, 1992 and was authored by two scientists, Thomas W. Dowler and Joseph S.
Howard II, at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico. The second document with less detailed information is dated December 18
- 19, 1991 and was a briefing overview delivered to the Joint Defense Policy
Board and the Defense Science Board Task Force on Non-Strategic Nuclear Forces
or NSNF.
Let's look at the document from
1992 first. In their paper, Dowler and Howard note that the post-Soviet
world is a far different place and that there is a growing potential for a
"wide spectrum of regional conflicts". In this new post-Cold
War global reality, the two scientists note that there will be a requirement
for a new type of low-yield nuclear weapon that have the capability to
"deter well-armed tyrants" among others. The actors observed that, while the United States will
maintain its presence in the world as a major owner of strategic nuclear
weapons, the drawdown in the numbers of servicemen and women in the Armed
Forces will affect the type of combat that the United States is used to
fighting. It is important to keep in mind that, at the same time as this research was ongoing, in September of 1991, President Bush I
announced that the United States would eliminate its inventory of
ground-launched, short-range nuclear weapons including Army and Marine nuclear
artillery shells and Lance missiles. In addition, the Bush I
Administration committed to bring the Navy's inventory of tactical nuclear
weapons back to the United States. At the time, the authors projected
that the national nuclear weapon inventory would contain 3500 strategic nuclear
weapons and 1600 tactical nuclear weapons, all of which are designed to deter
or win a war against the Soviet Union. To provide America with the
weaponry needed to both deter and fight a war, the authors spent 18 months
focussing not he development of low-yield nuclear weapons for the following
reasons:
1.) Provision of stability,
insurance and deterrence by maintaining America's leading role in the continued
development of nuclear weaponry.
2.) Meet America's forward-deployed
commitments to NATO with the goal of continuing to provide stability to Europe.
3.) Added insurance against a
resurrected threat posed by a resurrected Soviet Union.
4.) Deterrence for nuclear-armed
third-world nations.
The authors focussed on the use of
low-yield nuclear weapons as a point of deterrence. These very low-yield nuclear weapons could be used to protect U.S. forces during the early stages of a
deployment when conventional forces are still highly vulnerable to attack by a
third world nation. They note that the use of such low-yield weapons
would result in far less political cost to an American administration than the
use of a high-yield weapon that would result in the destruction of vast urban areas. The
authors use the example of Operation Desert Storm; had Saddam Hussein attacked
with all of his forces before the coalition had time to get its forces in
theatre, the United States may have found itself choosing between the loss of a
division of soldiers and the deployment of a strategic nuclear weapon which
would have caused a disproportionate level of collateral damage. By
having a low-yield, low-collateral damage weapon, the United States would
provide itself with an option that is militarily advantageous at the same time
as it causes relatively little collateral damage.
What kind of weapons are we
discussing? The authors have three classifications of low-yield nuclear
weapons:
1.) Micronukes - have a yield
equivalent to 10 tons of high explosive
2.) Mininukes - have a yield equivalent
to 100 tons of high explosive
3.) Tinynukes - have a yield
equivalent to 1000 tons of high explosive
By way of comparison, the bomb that
devastated Hiroshima had a yield of approximately 15 kilotons (i.e. 15,000
tons) of explosive and the bomb that devastated Nagasaki a few days later had a
yield of approximately 20 kilotons (i.e. 20,000 tons) of explosive.
The authors then look at the
possible roles for micronukes. Micronukes could be effective in several
scenarios:
1.) destroy leaderships facilities
and command centres that are too deep to be destroyed by conventional weapons.
2.) crater enemy runways and
destroy enemy air forces which would prevent enemy air operations from taking
place.
Since these micro weapons have very
low yields, the radioactive fallout resulting from their detonation would be
minimal; a 10 ton weapon buried at 15 metres would have a fallout area of only
0.05 square kilometres and a 30 ton weapon buried at 10 metres would have a
fallout area of only 2 square kilometres as shown on this graphic from the
paper:
Tinynukes could be used to deter an
enemy attack in the case where enemy forces outnumber U.S. forces. The
lethal radii from a tiny nuke is still small but its lethal radius is still
substantial enough that it would result in far less effective enemy forces as
shown on this graphic from the paper:
The fallout from a tiny nuke could
cover as much as 60 square kilometres and extend nearly 20 kilometres downwind
from the airburst location.
The authors close their paper with
this paragraph:
"We believe that the long-term
nuclear stockpile of the US should include several hundred low-yield nuclear
weapons. These weapons would help provide long-term stability and
deterrence against world-wide contingencies, as well as insurance against technological
surprises. They could be used to meet our forward-deployed commitments to
NATO and to provide insurance against any possible resurrection of a tactical
nuclear threat from the former Soviet Union. But their mail role would be
to help deter aggression by future third-world nuclear states."
Now, let's take a brief look at the
briefing overview given to the Joint Defense Policy Board and the Defense
Science Board Task Force on Non-Strategic Nuclear Forces in December 1991.
Here is the title page of the heavily redacted document:
Here are the pages showing the goals
of the Non-Strategic Nuclear Forces:
Here are the pages showing the categories of low-yield nuclear weapons and the rationale behind using them:
These recently released documents
provide us with an interesting insider's glimpse at the mindset of the
Department of Defense and the Department of Energy's facilities at Los Alamos. Even
with the possibility of political backlash that would face the administration
that chose to use nuclear weapons in any form, for the Pentagon, it was full
steam ahead when it came to unleashing the power of the atom. In this time of a resurrected anti-Russian stance by Washington and a Russia that is flexing its military muscle is that this research into micro nuclear weapons could well become increasingly pertinent to the war mongers in the hallowed halls of the American federal government.
Now for the update: (2017)
ReplyDelete1) Russia has a land mass so grand that you can fit 3 America continents in it. This means you will not be able to sustain a first strike (preemptive) advantage
2) Russia also has tactical nukes that can be delivered upon the U.S. and U.S. allies at a moments notice
3) Russia has modernized it ballistics so that Russia will use them instead of nukes of any kind
4) Russia has also improved on the delivery of frequency jamming devices such as missiles, drones and EMF delivery devices
Crap, I can't even keep a case of water in my house my kids drink it.
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