http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/296-169/19446-focus-the-secret-history-of-americas-nuclear-arsenal
The Secret History of America's Nuclear Arsenal
17 September 13
In a new book, the 'Fast Food Nation' author investigates the many near-misses that could have caused catastrophes
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was a one-in-a-million bounce: A socket slipped from a wrench and fell
about 70 feet before piercing the fuel tank of the most powerful missile
in the United States' nuclear arsenal. What followed was a race to
prevent an explosion that could have incinerated the state of Arkansas.
In his new book, Command and Control,
award-winning investigative journalist and longtime Rolling Stone
contributor Eric Schlosser reveals how this disaster was narrowly
avoided at a Damascus, Arkansas missile silo in 1980 – and shows that it
was just one incident in an ongoing pattern of near-misses and
bureaucratic blunders that have brought America to the nuclear brink
again and again. Drawing on six years of research, Schlosser challenges
and expands on the U.S. government's secretive record regarding nuclear
accidents.
The best-selling author of 2001's Fast Food Nation –
which began as an exposé published in RS – likens his new book to a foot
soldier's history of World War II, relying on the firsthand accounts of
U.S. service members. His interview subjects, many of whom served at
the height of the Cold War, have been called on time and again to
prevent nuclear devastation, often at tremendous personal risk.
Command and Control hits bookstores tomorrow.
Schlosser called RS to explain the results of his latest eye-opening
research, and make the case for nuclear disarmament. "I'm not
apocalyptic," he says. "But I think we have to confront this issue."
Let's get the big question out of the way: How many times have we just barely avoided nuclear armageddon in the U.S.?
That's a good question. It's a very secretive subject,
and I did my best, through interviews and through the Freedom of
Information Act, to get as much information as I could on these
accidents. The Pentagon lists 32 broken arrows, which are their official
nuclear weapon accidents that they consider really serious – but if you
look carefully at that list, quite a few of those accidents posed no
threat of an accidental detonation on American soil, and I found a lot
of other accidents that did.
So the answer is more than once, and far too many for
us to be comfortable. The accident that I wrote about at length could
have destroyed the state of Arkansas while Bill Clinton was governor. I
write about another accident that occurred not long after John F.
Kennedy's inauguration that could have deposited lethal fallout as far
north as New York City. These are very complicated machines, and they're
the most dangerous machines ever invented. I think every nation that
has nuclear weapons has to really understand the risk, not only that
they pose to your enemy, but to yourself.
You've written about a wide range of topics,
from the fast-food industry to marijuana prohibition to immigrant
workers. What prompted you to investigate nuclear weapons?
I was in Colorado Springs, spending time with members
of the Air Force Space Command, and they started telling me stories of
nuclear weapons. And I heard the story of the Damascus [Arkansas]
accident, and I thought it was just an unbelievable story. I'd never
heard about it. I couldn't believe that it happened, and I was
determined to write about it someday. And the more I investigated, the
more I realized this accident wasn't the only one. For many years, there
were safety flaws with our nuclear weapons which weren't being
addressed and which were being covered up. We're just very, very, very,
very, very fortunate that a major city has not been destroyed by a
nuclear weapon since Nagasaki. But there's no guarantee that that luck
will last.
Why did you focus the book on the experience of these nuclear foot soldiers?
Well, you know, there's no shortage of Cold War
memoirs by former secretaries of state or former national security
advisers or presidents talking about dealings with the Russians. But
very little has been written about the ordinary servicemen and women who
often took great risks. I tell the story of a guy whose job it was to
walk over to a nuclear weapon damaged in an accident and dismantle it –
basically a bomb squad guy trained to handle nuclear weapons. Now, that
takes a lot of nerve to do, and people like that put themselves at risk
in order to prevent catastrophes. I think their stories are really worth
telling.
It was important to me to show, not just the
bureaucratic incompetence in many cases, but also the incredible heroism
of these ordinary servicemen. So it's not a simplistic, black-and-white
anti-military thing at all. There's a Vietnam War memorial, but there
really isn't any memorial to the people who served in the Cold War – and
many of them lost their lives, even though it wasn't a declared war.
What was your research process like?
Unlike the government, I've done everything I can to
make the work transparent on this subject. So there's a massive, massive
bibliography and source notes – which were a total drag to do, but
which were a way of letting readers know where I got the information.
Someone who reads one of my books, if they don't want to read any of the
source notes, that's fine. But it's sort of a map to the book. And
very, very little of the book is based on unnamed sources or anonymous
sources. It's all very documented, and I think it was important to do
that because the government has been so incredibly secretive on this
subject, and there's been a great deal of disinformation and
misinformation about it.
What were your most startling discoveries?
The most startling discoveries were how close we came
to having a nuclear detonation on American soil. The other thing is how
the most trivial, mundane little mistake could have potentially
catastrophic consequences. In the Damascus accident, someone is using a
socket wrench and the socket comes off the wrench. The idea that a
socket could lead to a nuclear detonation is unbelievable – but there
are other accidents in which somebody used a screwdriver instead of a
fuse-puller and blasted a warhead off of a different intercontinental
ballistic missile of ours.
There was another case in which a navigator for a long
flight decided to bring some rubber seat cushions onto a B5-2 bomber,
and he put the cushions underneath his seat too close to a heat vent.
The cushions caught on fire; the bomber wound up crashing with all of
its nuclear weapons and almost hit one of our most important military
bases. The notion that a nuclear detonation that could destroy one of
our most top-secret bases could be caused by some rubber cushions
catching on fire is just crazy.
In the last decade, conversations about national
security have been dominated by the threat of terrorism, and we don't
hear as much about the dangers of nuclear weapons specifically. What do
you make of that shift?
There's an enormous amnesia on the part of the
American people about nuclear weapons. About half of the American
population wasn't born yet or were small children when the Berlin Wall
came down and the Soviet Union vanished. One of the reasons I wrote the
book was just to remind people that these weapons are out there and how
easily they can go wrong.
I am hugely concerned – and people who have more
expertise than I do in this area are hugely concerned – about the
possibility of terrorists getting ahold of a nuclear weapon, or the
possibility of a nuclear weapons accident by one of the nuclear weapons
powers. I'm critical of the management of our nuclear weapons, but we
invented this technology. I think we probably build the safest weapons
on Earth. And yet, when you think of countries like Pakistan and India
and North Korea having nuclear weapons, a useful guide would be to look
at the rate of industrial accidents in those countries, which is much
higher than here, and their ability to manage this incredible, complex
technology is really worrisome. People can disagree on what the best
policy should be for the United States, but I think everyone should know
what the options are and what the real risk is.
How secure are the nuclear weapons that exist today, both in the U.S. and abroad?
The Air Force has had some real problems with the
management of its nuclear weapons in the last few years. The worst
incident I wrote about in the book was in 2007. They lost half a dozen
of their powerful nuclear weapons for a day and a half. They had been
loaded on a plane inadvertently and nobody bothered [to notice] – there
was no paperwork required when they were moved from the bunker. It was
incredible that that could occur. Since then, again and again, Air Force
units that handle nuclear weapons have been decertified or have been
punished for safety lapses.
A few years ago, an entire squadron of our Minuteman
missiles went offline, and the missile crews couldn't communicate with
our own missiles. The Air Force denied there was any possibility that
someone had hacked into our system, but later admitted that they're very
concerned about the threat of somebody hacking into our nuclear command
and control system. That's like the plot of a bad movie – but if an
insider like [whistleblower Edward] Snowden can obtain that sort of
information about the NSA, which is some of the most top secret secrets
that we have, it's concerning when you have intercontinental ballistic
missiles controlled by software.
The biggest concern right now, by far, is Pakistan.
One of the things that just came out through some of Snowden's
revelations is how little we know about how Pakistan is managing its
nuclear arsenal. They're rapidly building all kinds of nuclear weapons.
If you have 150 weapons and you only lose one of them, you're still
taking care of more than 99 percent of them perfectly – but you can't
afford to lose one. Again, one weapon equals one city.
Do you believe there's a place for nuclear
weapons in a national defense arsenal, or is the inherent threat they
pose too great?
I agree with our president. I think these weapons
should be abolished, in the same way I think that biological and
chemical weapons should be abolished. Those NBC weapons – nuclear,
biological and chemical –weapons, are considered the weapons of mass
destruction. I think that it's not going to happen overnight, but people
need to be aware of the risk and then I think that over time they can
be negotiated out of existence.
If I thought that we were all doomed and it was
hopeless to do anything about this, I would not have bothered spending
six years researching and writing about nuclear weapons. But I think
that we don't have to lose a city to a nuclear weapon – and neither does
any other country. People need to be aware, and the world needs to act
to eliminate these weapons.
So you believe a day might come when nuclear weapons are gone?
I do. Again, I don't think it's going to happen
overnight, but the first step would be for the major nuclear powers to
meet and begin greatly reducing the sizes of their arsenals. The fewer
weapons there are, the less likely there is to be a catastrophic
accident. I mean, that's just the law of probability. Realistically, you
have an alternative: You can abolish nuclear weapons or you can accept
that one day they're going to be used. It's just almost unimaginable
what that would mean.
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