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Internet Special Bulletin,
09-Nov-01 |
Nuclear Attack
Not As Scary As You Think
Just Take Precautions
Copyright © 2001
by Richard Maybury
There
is good news and bad news. First the bad news.
For years, almost every issue of EARLY WARNING REPORT contained
an article or two about this new war. One of the best issues
was November 1997,
it was packed with warnings about coming attacks, war in Asia,
and nuclear weapons. A good explanation, I suggest you review
all eight pages.
On September 6th, George Bush broke
the ice, openly admitting nuclear attack is a serious possibility.
Finally, the whole country is on the same page EWR subscribers
have been on for years.
The Good News
Confirmation of a possible nuclear
attack is the bad news. The good news - news that Bush should
have talked about at length but didn't - is that the nuclear
danger posed by the September 11th group is not as awful as it
sounds.
We need to cover two topics:
(1) kilotons vs. megatons and (2) your geographic location.
Kiloton means a thousand tons of TNT.
A megaton is a million tons.
A one-kiloton bomb has one one-thousandth
the power of a one-megaton bomb.
When we think of nuclear attack, our
minds instantly jump to the Armageddon we feared during the Cold
War. Our imaginations conjure up a hail of thousands of bombs
ranging in power from 100 kilotons to 20 megatons. The end of
the world.
In 1961, during the Berlin Wall Crisis,
Soviet rulers wanted to frighten America. They detonated a 50
megaton H-bomb - equal to a million railroad cars full of explosives.
It was 2,500 times as powerful as the A-bomb that destroyed Hiroshima.
The leg of the mushroom cloud was
six miles wide, and the shock wave broke windows in Norway and
Finland 700 miles away.
That bomb was so horrifying it became
the image that stuck in the minds of the public, and it is what
many certainly envisioned when Bush admitted a nuclear attack
is possible.
I suspect the fear generated by the
thought of the end of the world is so great that most Americans
cannot face the true threat, which is nothing like what we faced
during the Cold War.
The September 11th group certainly
does not have a 50-megaton bomb, and probably not even a one-megaton
bomb. Such doomsday devices are big, most weigh tons, and are
therefore hard to steal and smuggle. They have locking devices
that make them difficult to detonate. They are also extremely
hard to make even if the attackers have the necessary uranium
or plutonium.
Much more likely are the simple, easily
smuggled "tactical" nukes of 20 kilotons or less.
Most likely - and I give this a 95%
probability - the attackers have one or two dozen suitcase-size
tactical nukes of two kilotons or less.
The RA-115 backpack nukes reported
missing from Russian stockpiles are one kiloton. The blast would
be one 20,000th of the big bombs.
Also, these backpack nukes are Soviet,
which means there is a significant chance they are junk and will
not work.
Easy to steal, make and transport,
the small tactical nukes are firecrackers compared to the Cold
War doomsday devices. We are most likely talking about the type
of bomb that can destroy a few city blocks, or two or three square
miles, not a whole state.
That is three square miles out of
3.7 million square miles. If it happens near you there will be
plenty of safe territory to run to.
If you have the bad luck to be just
around the corner from one of these bombs when an attacker sets
it off, it will ruin your day, but what are the odds of that?
Persons who are more than three or
four miles away won't have much to worry about as long as they
do not do something stupid, like hang around and wait to see
if they can inhale enough fallout to glow in the dark.
You might get a better feel for the
danger in your area if you open a map, and around the center
of the nearest likely target draw a circle two miles in diameter.
That is the three square miles of greatest risk. How far are
you from that circle?
Blast effects from explosions drop
off surprisingly quickly with distance. The Hiroshima bomb, which
was about 12 kilotons, was detonated under ideal conditions -
at an altitude of 1,850 feet above a flat city, no hills. A brick
building only 640 feet from ground zero survived. At 0.91 miles,
a trolley car remained intact and on its tracks. And, that bomb
was six times larger than what the September 11th attackers are
likely to have.
This brings us to the second topic,
your geographic location.
I feel very confident promising you
that the September 11th group will not nuke Buzzard's Breath,
Wyoming. Nor will they nuke 99.9% of the other tens of thousands
of cities and towns in this very large country.
They pick their targets for maximum
emotional effect, because they want to stoke our war fever and
draw us deeper into the war. I will bet that you can think of
any number of places that will give them more emotional bang
for the buck than wherever you happen to be.
If you are more than ten miles from
a large city center or military base, I doubt you have anything
to worry about at all.
If you do not live near a likely target,
you can skip the next section.
In Case You Live Near A Target
No matter where a bomb goes off, the
rest of this vast country will remain intact, so a spot that
is hit will quickly receive mountains of help from surrounding
areas. You do not need to be prepared to survive for years, just
days, and maybe only hours.
Even if you are one of the unusual
cases who have the bad luck to live near a likely ground zero,
you have a good chance of surviving if you take a few simple
precautions. Here is what to do.
Immediately explain the danger to
your family and make a plan:
When a nuclear bomb goes off, it produces
a bright flash followed by a shock wave of blast and heat. When
you see the flash, duck and cover. This means put as much mass
as possible between you and the flash. If you can get to a basement
quickly, go there. Otherwise, get behind anything solid. Steel
reinforced concrete is best.
Don't look at the flash, it can be
blinding.
Note the location of windows and cover
yourself against flying glass.
As an example, my home has no basement
but it does have a large fireplace in the center of the house.
In our area there are two likely targets, a city center and an
airbase. The city center is to the south, the air base to the
west. For a flash that comes from the direction of the city,
we would stand behind the north side of the fireplace; from the
airbase, the east side.
After the blast, the most important
thing is to quickly get upwind of the target to escape the fallout.
If you can drive, do so; otherwise walk, but do whatever you
must to get away from the cloud of fallout.
The cloud from a small bomb will be
only a few miles wide. A healthy person can walk or ride a bicycle
to get out from under it.
Someone who cannot get away from the
fallout should put as much mass as possible between them and
the radiation. Radiation moves only in straight lines, so even
a storm sewer provides good temporary protection if you stay
away from the opening and get behind a curve.
Your family may not all be at home.
One of the most important preparations is to get out a map now
and select four meeting places - north, east, south and west
- of the likely target. Each meeting place should be at least
50 miles away, to avoid the turmoil that will surround the immediate
area of the attack.
Unless your home has a fallout shelter,
everyone should go to the meeting place upwind of the target.
Select an exact address for each of
the four destinations - a school, shopping mall or other large
place that would have restrooms, water and an enclosed space
to shelter against bad weather.
At all times, each person should carry
a card with these addresses in their wallets, plus cash and credit
cards.
Either in the car or ready to go at
all times have a suitcase packed with maps, three days of food
and water, blanket (or sleeping bag), soap, toilet paper, change
of clothing, radio, medications, cash and whatever else you need
to be comfortable away from home a few days.
If you have children in school, talk
with their teachers about the school's emergency plan. Know where
you should meet your children. A cell phone for each child is
not a bad idea either. Everyone in the family should have a list
of phone numbers of friends who live far away and would be able
to act as an electronic contact point for your family.
Schools should be doing the kind of
training they were doing in the 1950s. If your child's school
is not, do it yourself.
For more about protection against
a nuclear blast and fallout:
www.tacda.org/resources/ptw/ExpedientSheltering-4.html
www.ki4u.com/free_book
Also do a web search for words such
as: Civil Defense, Nuclear Protection, Fallout, Fallout Shelter,
etc.
Most of what you will find will be
about surviving a massive attack by the USSR, so it will be much
more detailed and frightening than is necessary for the type
of small incident likely now. But it is better to have too much
information than not enough.
When George Bush admitted the possibility
of nuclear attack but failed to explain that we are not facing
the end of the world, I think he frightened a lot of people into
sticking their heads in the sand. Do not be an ostrich, learn
what you need to know, and warn everyone you care about.
Relax, It's Not That Bad
Let me emphasize, unless you live
near a likely ground zero, you have little to worry about, and
even then, if you take precautions and know how to quickly duck
and cover, odds of being harmed will be greatly reduced. This
is a big country and the attackers are not likely to have very
many bombs. It is a high statistical probability that almost
everyone reading this will be in no danger, they will see the
disaster only on TV.
But, essential services and supplies
of food may be temporarily disrupted, especially if a rail center
is hit, so take the Y2K preparations recommended in the January
1999 EWR, page 3, and June 1999 EWR, page 7. Have supplies to get along comfortably for
at least a month.
Again, I suggest you review the November
1997 EWR, it will help get you oriented to the present situation
including the nuclear threat.
We are thinking about you and will
continue doing all we can to help.
Sincerely,
Editor, Early Warning Report
U.S. & World Early Warning Report®. Published ten times per year. © 1991-2007 Henry Madison Research, Inc., PO Box 84908, Phoenix, AZ 85071.
Phone toll-free 1-800-509-5400. Outside US: 602-252-4477. Fax: 602-943-2363.
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