The Mushroom Farm
The Mushroom Farm
The Mushroom Farm
Introduction
Glossary
Chilling, isn’t it? Statements like, “conversion might have been completed,” or “the
evidence is inconclusive that the bomb involved was a Mod 0!” I don’t know about you
but might and inconclusive are not words I want to see in a report dealing with a lost 1
megaton thermonuclear bomb that is sitting in the mud off of a city that has over 300,000
inhabitants in its’ metro area. Savannah Georgia is a vital city in the Southeastern U. S.
and is home to Fort Stewart, Hunter Army Bases not to mention Marine Corps Recruit
Depot Paris Island just to the northeast . It occurs to me that maybe the U. S. government
is and has been hoping this incident will go away and that the bomb will just deteriorate
into the mud.
With the shadow of nuclear annihilation perched on the doorstep of Tybee Island Georgia
I sure hope the bomb that is there doesn’t just decide to go off some day (triggered by a
random lightening strike) and give us all a dose of reality we are not ready for, or worse
yet, some nefarious salvage firm recovers it and sells it to one of our enemies, foreign or
domestic.
In this age of uncertainty I fear the possibility of the Islamic Extremists and other types of
domestic terrorists getting their hands on a suitcase sized nuke. (They exist and are very
easy to use)! A suitcase sized nuke may not have enough power to level a large city but it
could render Wall Street financial markets a fond memory if our government doesn’t
destroy them first. I know in my heart that there are many groups of disaffected U. S.
citizens who belong to radical left and right wing groups who would not hesitate to use a
nuke to get their point across. I have studied these home grown groups in my years in the
military intelligence training I have had and I attended a two week seminar once that was
absolutely chilling. The topic was “Domestic Sects, Cults and Deviant Movements”. It
was an two week course and I could not sleep well for quite a few weeks after attending it
because I had learned just how many groups there are right here living among us that are
enemies of the state for whatever misguided reasons they have. Not to mention the
religious nut cases halfway around the world who live in a doomsday theology such as
radical Islam. I decided right at that moment to write the definitive work on United States
Nuclear History without sugar coating it so anyone could have a reference at their
disposal to find the historical facts on Nuclear power generation, weapons, technology
and the Government organizations that regulate Nuclear energy in this nation. Let me
point out that I am no raving anti nuke person nor would anyone who knows me call me a
liberal. I am a self described Conservative Libertarian and as patriotic as any American
can be when it comes to the defense of my country. I adhere to the Theodore Roosevelt
philosophy of, “Talk softly and carry a BIG stick”! That being said, I cannot explain why
the United States has ten times more nuclear warheads and bombs than it has means to
deliver them. The only plausible answer is like the old frontier scouts used to say “You
can’t carry enough bullets in hostile Indian territory when you need them”! Nuclear
weapons are not like your typical conventional ammunition. You don’t drop nuclear
weapons every day on a city or military facility until you destroy it!
It only takes one of sufficient size to do the trick! So, I ask myself. Why do we have so
many nuclear bombs? Whatever the reason he has President George Bush will be
remembered in history as the Commander in Chief who trimmed our Nuclear Arsenal to a
manageable level by ordering the systematic dismantling and storage of thousands of
obsolete nuclear weapons and the lethal components they are made from. (This fact is not
widely published in the media for obvious reasons). The President thinks this is best for
us and I agree that we must do this.
We only have enough ships, submarines, aircraft and missiles to deliver 500 to 600
warheads at one time (in an all out combined forces effort of ship/submarine launched,
silo launched and aircraft launched weapons). If Iran carries out their threats and does
launch a nuke into Israel it will only take 2 medium sized weapons to destroy Israel but it
will take 11 warheads to completely destroy Iran. The Israelis have an ample supply of
nuclear warheads and delivery systems to accomplish this task. Eleven U. S. Trident
ICBM missiles launched from an Ohio Class SSBN within 10,000 miles of Iran would do
the trick but would obviously alter world history from that moment forward. Or 11
Nuclear tipped Cruise missiles launched from aircraft, submarines or surface ships would
do. If all out Nuclear War breaks out there would be a different scenario. If you combine
our delivery aircraft capability with the ballistic and cruise missile fleet in the Navy and
the missiles we have in silos ready to launch we can obliterate any threatening nation (or
group of nations) ten times over with a virtual storm of bombs and missiles. I know we
have to counter the historic potential adversary nations such as Russia and China but as
progress in nuclear weapon technology is made we have been and will be the leader in
the field for the foreseeable future and not the follower. India, Pakistan, Syria, South
Africa as second World Nations and other Third World nations only want to possess
nuclear weapons because the big kids on the block already have them and they are tired
of being pushed around. They are playing catch up except in the Iran case where they just
want to start WWIV to usher in the coming of the 12th Imam to fulfill their doomsday
prophesy. As stated in international press releases the delivery system technology of these
Second and Third World nations are primitive at best. Although, the Russians have
assisted Iran and others, by supplying advanced missile technology, the present Russian
nuclear technology lags behind the West in many ways.
During the Clinton Administration our own misguided State Department headed by
Madeline Albright and one private contractor named LORAL Corp. supplied China with
advanced missile guidance technology which enabled China to target anything in range
accurately. This was done in a misguided effort to win favor with the Peoples Republic.
As proven out in the unsealed records of the Kremlin and by our SALT Treaty Inspectors,
during the height of the Cold War the Soviet Union on their best day could only field one
third of the nuclear weapons we could and their rocket technology and accuracy was
faulty. They were not a “Paper Tiger” but they were not the huge angry Grizzly bear our
government hyped them up to be. They were more like an angry clumsy Black Bear.
They could have done us great harm but they could not have obliterated us in one attack.
Of course if you happened to be in a U. S. city or military installation and one of their
shaky missiles or aging bombers actually managed to hit it with a ten megaton nuke it
would have still been the end of your world. The Soviets were our prime adversary and
are maneuvering to that position again at this writing with their support of Iran and
Syria’s ambitious pursuit of nuclear weapons and their resurgence as a dominant power
over their former satellite nations such a Georgia. I also think our recent demonstration of
our ability to shoot down incoming missiles and orbiting satellites has them excited and
feeling left behind. I wrote this book to give a detailed history of our nuclear weapons
development and to open a window into the almost insane proliferation of this
technology. We have spent virtual mountains of money on the ability to destroy our
enemies (and ourselves) in literally a few minutes. The Iranians may cause the end of the
world as we know it by striking Israel with a nuke thus causing a nuclear exchange by
their political allies but we started the ball rolling in concert with our traditional enemies.
As recently evidenced by press releases from the Bush administration, President Bush has
directed the nuclear services to stand down aging nuclear weapons and delivery systems
and to stockpile unused obsolete weapons. There is the question of what to do with such a
huge pile of nuclear weapons. Where do we put them out of harms way that will not
endanger us or the rest of the world? The Department of Defense, the Department of
Energy and the Atomic Energy Commission have decided on Yucca Mountain Nevada. At
least President Bush has taken the bold step in reducing the pile and addressing our need
for a more streamlined and manageable nuclear weapons program.
I have a recurring nightmare of some loony head of some rogue nation (Iran) getting his
hands on a nuke and blowing up his country’s historical sworn enemy (Israel). This
triggers a response from the other nations in the region and their allies.
Let’s face facts here, the Iranian theocratic leadership and other radical Islamic regimes
lived hating each other religiously for centuries and many live under a doomsday
theology! Their hatred is based on tribal, ethnic, religious and territorial disputes which
are ages old. The leadership of Iran is living for the day when they can nuke the Israelis
off the map! Their titular leader has said as much. The Iranian ruling council of Islamic
clerics actually are the government of Iran. Under the right political climate and if the
pushing of buttons starts I fear it will not stop until the earth (form low orbit) will look
like a MUSHROOM FARM in full bloom.
If everybody has a nuke, someone will use one! History shows that we earthlings just
can’t get along with each other and we are incapable of managing our emotions, making
it inevitable that someone will target their enemy with a nuke someday. This scenario is
scary enough without the added scenario of a possible accident by our own military!
Accidents do occur as evidenced by the documentary entitled “America’s Lost H-Bomb”
which spent one hour explaining the fact that we lost one there. According to the Air
Force Official Report the bomber had been involved in a mid-air collision with an Air
Force F-86 Fighter and the B-47 was possibly going to crash and explode. My question
here is, if the Bomb was not “Armed” then why was the crew so fearful of it exploding in
the crash that they jettisoned it into the shallow waters off of Tybee Island Georgia!
The Author
Chapter 1:
Einstein’s Legacy.
Albert Einstein was a mathematician and theoretical physicist who had lofty ideas and
thought in an intellectual realm few venture into. His concepts were new paradigms in
every conceivable way. It is most evident to all mankind by now that Albert Einstein was
a true genius of galactic proportions. His E=MC2 formula and what it gave birth to
forever transformed world thought. He is the most quoted scientist ever. His impact on us
all is so immense that many of us will never understand the true depth of his discoveries.
He was a pioneer in theoretical physics but he had help. There were many great minds
that did yeoman work in the initial stages of mankind’s development of nuclear energy
for peaceful as well as harmful usage. I have many to thank for this shadow of doom we
all live under. It goes back two thousand years to Democritus, who put forth the theory
that matter is made up of atoms. Small particles, so small no one can see them. Then in
1896 Henri Becquerel discovered uranium ore, followed closely by Pierre and Marie
Curie’s work on radium. In 1919 in his laboratory Ernest Rutherford bombarded nitrogen
particles with alpha particles and produced a split atom. In the 1930’s Ernest Rutherford
and Albert Einstein thought that the normal speed of decay of atomic particles could not
be improved on. Thus, the release of the energy from atomic decay or half life was
thought not feasible to improve on. At this time the great science fiction writers H. G.
Wells and Edgar Rice Burroughs were including atomic bombs and radium engines in
their stories. When Dr. Leo Szilard started experiments on chain reactions in the lab he
said he was influenced by those science fiction stories.
In 1932 Sir John Cockcroft and Ernest Walton split the atom causing a chain reaction by
artificially accelerating particles in a lab. In 1934 Irene and Frederic Joliot-Curie found in
experiments that stable elements could be induced with alpha particles. At the same time
Enrico Fermi was bombarding uranium with neutrons but did not correctly interpret the
results.
In 1938 German scientists Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann published experimental
findings in scientific journals. Their experiment produced an isotope of barium. They had
an Austrian scientist working with them named Otto R. Frisch who interpreted the results
of their experiments to mean they have achieved nuclear fission.
It was followed by collaborative experiments performed by George Placzek in
cooperation with Frisch which proved fission was possible under properly controlled
circumstances. In 1933 Hungarian physicist Leo Szilard postulated his theory that “if any
neutron-driven process released more neutrons than those required to, start it, an
expanding chain reaction might result”. In chemistry it was widely known that chain
reactions were a familiar outcome of combining dissimilar chemicals which resulted in
explosions, fires and other extreme reactions. Dr. Szilard postulated in confidence that the
chain reaction that could result on a nuclear scale could be in theory used to make a very
powerful weapon. Dr. Szilard knew the implications for the world if this information got
into the hands of a hostile regime, such as was in power in Germany. Dr. Szilard tried to
keep his theory a secret but it was published to the world by the Joliot-Curie group. This
set Dr. Szilard on his quest to get Einstein to write to the president so the U. S. could
counter and possibly surpass any progress made by the Germans. At the time of these
burgeoning discoveries Europe was in turmoil. The Nazi’s were invading Poland and
setting off World War II. Most ex-patriot scientists who had fled to Great Britain and the
U. S. from the Nazi surge into their former countries feared that any published data on
uranium-235 fission would only empower the Nazis. Therefore a loose agreement was
made by most of the ex-patriot scientists to curtail any publication of such experimental
results. In Europe scientists such as Niels Bohr, George Placzek and John Wheeler had
established that the only isotope of uranium suitable for fission was Uranium-235. It was
known only 0.7% of the available uranium found in nature was U-235. The ore in most of
the world’s uranium deposits was useless uranium-238 which inhibits fission by
absorbing neutrons not emitting them. Of course the U-235 was so rare it was virtually
priceless. In the United States there were the physicists Leo Szilard, Edward Teller and
Eugene Wigner all Hungarian Jews who were well aware of the progress being made by
the German team headed by Werner Heisenberg.
Being politically marginalized the scientists sought the help of Albert Einstein who was
held in high regard in American academia. Thus the first letter to President Roosevelt was
conceived and dictated to Einstein who signed it and sent it to FDR. It took a full month
to receive the letter through channels and he acted quickly once the implications were
made clear to him.
He authorized the creation of “Uranium Committee” under the chairmanship of the
National Bureau of Standards chief Lyman Briggs. Since the United States would not
officially enter the war until December 7, 1941 work on nuclear fission proceeded at a
relatively leisure pace at the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington. Its chief scientist
was Philip Abelson who did work on isotope separation. At this same time Enrico Fermi
was making progress in the same field at Columbia University. The U. S. government
then placed the program under Vannevar Bush who was the administrator of the National
Defense Research Committee. Because most of the Jewish scientists were viewed by the
government as extreme leftists most of them were not included in any government tests at
that time. So you see the political atmosphere was such that Einstein’s letter was written
by a group of concerned scientists who had as their motive the survival of western culture
but a culture hopefully sans Nazis. In Einstein’s first letter to President Roosevelt dated
August 2nd, 1939 he cautioned Roosevelt that “Some recent experiments by E. Fermi and
L. Szilard, which has been communicated to me in manuscript, leads me to expect that
the element uranium may be turned into a new and important source of energy in the
immediate future”. His letter goes on to say that “This new phenomenon would also lead
to the construction of bombs, and it is conceivable – though much less certain – that
extremely powerful bombs of a new type may thus be constructed. A single bomb of this
type, carried by boat and exploded in a port, might very well destroy the whole port
together with some of the surrounding territory. However, such bombs might well prove
to be too heavy for transportation by air”. Up until this letter arrived on Roosevelt’s’
desk the possibility of nuclear energy had only been speculated about in government
circles. In the same letter Einstein goes on to point out that the U. S. has poor sources of
uranium ore but that Canada, Czechoslovakia and the Belgian Congo have enough
deposits to render fissionable material.
On page two of his first letter to FDR Einstein lays out the structure of a program to
facilitate the development of nuclear energy under the authority of the president. Since
Einstein was a Jew from Wurttemberg Germany, he knew all to well the fate of the world
if the Third Reich came possess such weaponry. He wrote in closing, “I understand that
Germany has actually stopped the sale of uranium from Czechoslovakian mines which
she has taken over. That she should have taken such early action might perhaps be
understood on the ground that the son of the German Under-Secretary of State, Von
Weiszacker is attached to the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institute in Berlin where some of the
American work on uranium is now being repeated”. In Einstein’s’ second letter to
Roosevelt, dated March 7, 1940 he points out the progress that he has been told the
Germans are making and urges the addressee to relay the information contained in the
letter to the president. He further states in the letter that Dr. Szilard has shown him a
manuscript he is preparing to publish in Physics Review and Einstein wants it to be
withheld on the grounds that publishing the exact process for creating a chain reaction in
uranium atoms should not be made public knowledge.
In his third letter dated April 25, 1940, Einstein lays out the outline for organization of
the “Manhattan Project” but does not call it that. He states that, “I am convinced as to
the wisdom and the urgency the conditions under which that and related work can be
carried out with greater speed and on a larger scale than hitherto. I was interested in a
suggestion made by Dr. Sachs that the Special Advisory Committee supply names of
persons to serve as a board of trustees for a nonprofit organization which, with the
approval of the government committee, could secure from government or private sources
or both, the necessary funds for carrying out the work. Given such a framework and the
necessary funds, it (the large-scale experiments and exploration of practical
applications) could be carried out much faster than through a loose cooperation of
university laboratories and government departments”. We now know through the
archival research in books and biographies of Einstein that he did very few experiments.
He was the prototype “Idea Man”! He used his intellect, a blackboard and note pads to
formulate theories that were then proven right or wrong through the work of other
physicists in laboratories.
I have always thought that Einstein was tuned into the universe that few others even
know exists on a cosmic level. In the great work “A tale of two Continents” by the
eminent physicist Dr. Abraham Pais, who was a contemporary of Einstein at Princeton
Dr. Pais recounts his relationship with Einstein in his last few years of life. On the many
walks Pais took with Einstein he was in awe of the great mans thinking. He was
interested in Einstein’s work on the Grand Unification Theory wherein Einstein tried to
establish the relationship of electromagnetic field energy to gravity which in turn distorts
time.
Dr. Pais was influenced by Einstein and in later years made great strides in Quantum and
elementary particle theory. Pais wrote the definitive biography of Einstein and went on to
write many influential books on physics. In 1939 when the president appointed Dr.
Briggs to head the Special Advisory Committee in September he thus started the U. S.
Governments entry into the all out race for nuclear armament. The project seemed stalled
to President Roosevelt and he directed the Army Department to get things going. This
was followed by the appointment of General Leslie Groves to head the Manhattan Project
and the rest is history. I have learned through research that Dr. L. Szilard dictated most of
the letters that Einstein sent to the president. Einstein thought in such lofty realms that he
had difficulty expressing himself in written language other than theory or mathematics.
Near the end of the war in March of 1945 Einstein wrote to Roosevelt at the behest of Dr.
Szilard concerning complaints about the level of secrecy the scientists were under who
worked for the Manhattan Project. General Groves had a great deal of trouble with the
civilian scientists who worked on the project because they were unaccustomed to strict
secrecy rules. In academia it is customary to share experimental results with colleagues
even if they are employed by your country’s enemies. This is referred to as “Peer Revue”
which in a pure academic sense validates experimental results. It was not unusual for
them to share their experiment results with the entire world physicist network. It was this
lack of security adherence that resulted in the Soviets gaining the knowledge and
technology to produce nuclear weapons so soon after we did. I don’t think it was
espionage on the part of the nuclear scientists. It was simply the way they had operated
for decades. The soviets captured many laboratories in eastern Germany where nuclear
experiments were conducted.
Along with the information supplied by the physicists network and the lack of security of
information the soviets simply added what they found in the labs with the documents and
threw in a few captured German scientists and built there own bomb. They did not have
to do the early experimental lab work as it was already done and documented. In
Einstein’s letters it is apparent that he is hesitant to promulgate such a potentially
devastating theory of power to a possibly hostile world. However, he knew that the
consequences would be grave for the entire free world if the Germans got their hands on
such power. If Einstein had nightmares he may have had ones involving mushroom
clouds.
I know I did after seeing “Dr. Strangelove” in the sixties at the Atlantic Drive In Theater
in Jacksonville Florida. At the end of the movie as the credits begin to roll there is a quick
scene of a succession of nuclear detonations one after another which increase in speed to
a rapid fire effect of mushroom after mushroom cloud. I had a very vivid dream where I
was just stepping out of a movie theater with my Wife and we were bathed in white hot
light from a nuclear detonation. As we reeled from the shock we looked at the horizon
and as far as we could see were mushroom cloud after mushroom cloud and then we burst
into flames. After observing the first nuclear detonation Dr. Oppenheimer is quoted as
reciting the line from the Hindu Poem the Bhagavad Gita;
“If the radiance of a thousand Suns were to burst at once in the sky that would be like
the splendor of the mighty one. Now I am become Death, the destroyer of Worlds”!
Chapter 2:
This is by no means a complete list of all of the contributors to our nuclear world. I
included foreign scientists because in academia many ideas and theories are shared and
debated amongst peers.
It was common in the pre WWII era for nuclear physicists to share data across borders.
The impetus for much of the parallel research done worldwide was often a letter from a
colleague across the pond. I know from my research that many of these men and women
had second thoughts about the possible implications of their discoveries. Some saw the
inhumanity displayed throughout history to be an indication that in some way this newly
discovered power would be used for destruction.
Chapter 3:
There are approximately 270 stable and about 70 unstable (radioactive) Nuclei in
nature. The three main types of Radioactive Nuclides or Radio-nuclides consist of these
groups.
1. The first group is characterized by their half –lives of at least 10% of the age of the
Earth. They are the remnants of the Neucleosynthesis that occurred in Stars before the
formation of our Solar System. An example is Uranium 238 which is common in nature
as opposed to Uranium 235 which is an Isotope of Uranium 238 and is rare.
2. The second group is made up of Isotopes of Radium which is formed in the decay
chain reactions of Uranium and Thorium.
3. The third group is made up of Nuclides such as Carbon (radiocarbon) that are made
by cosmic-ray bombardment of other elements. Over 1000 Nuclides have been
artificially produced in a lab.
Actinides or Actinoids
There are 15 radioactive chemical elements in this series. Beginning with Actinium (Ac),
Atomic Number 89 and ending with Lawrencium (Lr), Atomic Number 103. Included
in this group are Uranium (U) and Plutonium (Pu). During the Manhattan Project
Glenn T. Seaborg experienced difficulty isolating Americium and Curium. Seaborg
wondered if these elements belonged to a different chemical classification. In 1945 he
went out on a limb to insist that Mendeleev’s Periodic Table of Elements be changed.
Only Thorium and Uranium exist naturally in the Earth’s crust in more than trace
amounts. Neptunium and Plutonium show up in Uranium deposits occasionally in
trace amounts which are caused by radioactive decay or cosmic ray bombardment.
Neutron Capture
This is the Nuclear Reaction process where an Atomic Nucleus collides with one or
more Neutrons to form a heavier Nucleus. In Neutron Capture the Nuclei of mass
greater than 56 can be achieved that could not be formed in a Thermonuclear or Fusion
Reaction.
Fissionable
“Fissionable” elements are any material with Atoms that can undergo Nuclear Fission.
“Fissile” is defined to be materials that are “Fissionable” by Neutrons with zero Kinetic
energy. All “Fissile” materials are “Fissionable”, not all “Fissionable” materials are
“Fissile”. In general, Isotopes with an odd number of Neutrons are “Fissile”. Most
Nuclear Fuels have an odd number of Protons and Neutrons. But also have an even
number of Protons. Isotopes with an odd number of Neutrons and an odd number of
Protons are short lived because they can Beta decay to an Isotope with an even number
of Neutrons and Protons.
Nuclear Fuel
Any “Fissionable” Nuclear Fuel must;
• Be in the region of the binding energy curve where a fission chain reaction is
possible. (above Radium)
• Have a high probability of fission on Neutron Capture.
• Release two or more Neutrons on average per Neutron Capture.
• Have a reasonably long half life.
• Be available in suitable quantities.
Thermal Chain Reactions involving Uranium-235 releases binding energy by the
absorption of a Neutron which is greater than the critical energy for fission, therefore
Uranium-235 is a “Fissile” material. The binding energy released by Uranium-238
absorbing a thermal Neutron is less than the critical energy, so additional energy must be
possessed by the Neutron for “Fission” to be possible. Consequently, Uranium-238 is a
“Fissionable” material.
Uraniun-235
Uranium-235 is an Isotope of Uranium that differs from the element’s other common
Isotope Uranium-238, by its ability to cause a rapidly expanding fission chain reaction.
It has a half-life of 703,800,000 years. It is the only fissile Isotope found in any useful
quantity in nature. At least one Neutron from U-235 fission strikes another Nucleus and
causes fission and then the chain reaction will continue. If the chain reaction will sustain
itself it is said to have reached “Critical Mass”. A critical chain reaction can be achieved
by low concentrations of U-235 if the Neutrons from fission are moderated to lower their
speed since the possibility of fission is greater with slow Neutrons. A fission chain
reaction causes intermediate mass fragments to further decay causing the release of more
thermal energy (heat). Some of them produce Neutrons called delayed Neutrons which
contribute to and help sustain the chain reaction. In Nuclear Reactors this reaction is
kept under control by the insertion of control rods into the reactor chamber. The control
rods are made of materials such as Boron, Cadmium, or Hafnium which absorb great
quantities of Neutrons.
In a Nuclear Weapon the chain reaction is uncontrolled and the large amount of thermal
energy released causes the explosion. Only 7/10ths of one percent of natural Uranium
is U-235 most natural Uranium is U-238. The composition of U-238 is not suitable for
sustaining a nuclear chain reaction in a Light Water Reactor. Therefore Enrichment of
the Uranium-238 must take place by the removal of the U-238 which results in a usable
quantity of U-235.
Lithium-6
Is an isotope of Lithium used in nuclear weapons to enhance the rapid fission that occurs
when the chain reaction is started by the trigger mechanism.
Tamper
This is the device in an implosion type bomb that compresses the core of fissionable
material inward in an implosion to cause criticality and a resulting chain reaction
explosion.
Pit
The Fissile material, (usually Plutonium) with the Tamper attached is the “Pit”. This
unit initiates the implosion that causes the nuclear chain reaction.
Trigger
The trigger mechanism can be a series of electrical relays that detonate the spherical
charge surrounding core. There are many types such as the delayed arming mechanism in
Independent Reentry Vehicle type warheads that only arms after the weapon reaches a
critical point in its flight such as decent form a certain altitude or atmospheric pressure
change. Gravity bombs must be armed or enabled prior to release.
Triggers usually run on an internal power source or time delay. The Permissive Action
Link or “PAL” is designed to render the warhead or bomb safe until a series of switch
maneuvers are conducted and all of the safety devices are removed. In military parlance
this is called making the weapon “Hot” or arming the weapon. In the original “gun type”
weapons a plug of Uranium was fired down a barrel into a core of Uranium causing
critical mass and only a simple set of arming switches were involved. In the newer model
weapons the weapons officer or aircraft commander has to go through a series of arming
protocols to arm a weapon and usually the National Command Authority (read
Commander in Chief) is involved. Terrorists, of course just set them off by whatever
means expedient to them even if they are sitting on a nuke so they can fulfill their
religious or political goals.
Breeder Reactors
U-238 can be used as a source material for the creation of Plutonium-239 in a Breeder
Reactor. Breeder reactors carry out the process of transmutation of U-238 into P-239.
Given the known quantity of U-238 in the world there is enough fertile U-238 to supply
fissile Plutonium for at least 10,000 years or longer. That means that there is enough U-
238 to fuel power plants literally forever.
Breeder Reactor Technology has been used in several reactors. As of recently the only
breeder reactor in operation in the world is the 600 Megawatt plant at Beloyarsk Russia.
Since the Russians are chummy with the Iranians I get a chill knowing this.
The Japanese have notified the UN that they plan to restart their shut down Monju
Breeder Reactor which was secured in 1995. Another chilling fact is that the Chinese and
the Indians have recently announced intentions to build Breeder Reactors.
U-238 is often used as a shielding agent in controlling nuclear reactions by absorption of
Gamma and X-rays. U-238 emits Alpha rays which are weak and do not penetrate steel
but the heavy atomic mass of U-238 absorbs the lethal Gamma and X-rays. Depleted
Uranium is being used as an alloy in the construction of shielding around nuclear emitters
such as reactors as it is five times more effective in absorbing deadly radiation as lead. A
depleted uranium enhanced shield is thinner and less heavy than a lead shield and thus
easier to engineer.
Detection and protection from Ionizing Radiation.
Detection
Radiation can not be detected by human or animal senses. It can only be detected by
special instrumentation. These instruments are variants of the original Geiger-Mueller
radiation detectors. They are equipped with a dial and an audible alarm which warns if
radiation is present. These instruments are battery powered and portable. The come
equipped with a hand held probe used to sweep (move back and forth) over a person or
object to detect radiation. If radiation is present in sufficient quantities the needle on the
dial will register it and a slow clicking sound, a more rapid clicking will occur if the
probe is swept over an object with radiation present. These types of detection units are
readily available on the World Wide Web.
Protection
The deeper underground you go the more dense material you have between you and the
source of the radiation the better. Remember though, you must have clean air, water to
drink, long lasting food, sanitary facilities, a valuable commodity such as gold or silver
for trading and guns and ammunition to protect what you have. If there is an all out
nuclear war there will be anarchy of the worst possible kind after the fallout settles. No
one will be safe until civil authority is restored if ever. If you have seen the movies such
as the “Postman” or “The Day After” or “The Sum of All Fears” you will understand. If
you need help deciding to panic or not go to www.radshelters4u.com and learn all you
care to know.
Survival depends greatly on where you live.
Your location in the United States is critical. If you are in a large city you need to get to
the countryside where you can build an underground type shelter. As seen on the above
listed web site. If you live near a large military installation it will be a target for all types
of enemy weapons including, Biological and Chemical. Remember, terrorists could place
a WMD in a truck, on a ship or aircraft and deliver it to a spot close to a military base or
port and detonate it. We have virtually no defense against such a scenario. Our borders
are porous and only 10% of all freight containers coming into our ports are inspected. We
are the proverbial “Sitting Duck”!
Chapter 4:
The all out effort by the scientists in the U. S. did not get off to a good start. There were
diverse teams in various universities working separately and communication with each
other only on special occasions. Even the British group which was called “MAUD” had
difficulty getting data to the teams in the U. S. because of bureaucratic malaise. In March
of 1941 the British team sent a report to the American Uranium Committee headed by
Lyman Briggs. No word was given back to the British about the report so the British sent
“MAUD” Committee member Mark Oliphant across the pond in an RAF Bomber to find
out what had become of the report they had sent. Oliphant was astounded to find out that
the report had been locked in a safe by Lyman Briggs and never shown to the scientists.
Since the Uranium Committee made up of mostly scientists was under the prevue of
Briggs and the Office of Scientific Research and Development. It was obvious that
pressure would have to be used to get the program on the fast track. After all the British
had been at war for a year and needed our help. Oliphant went to see the chairman of the
National Defense Research Committee which was a war department branch and with the
help of Enrico Fermi, Arthur Compton and a copy of the MAUD report a deal was made
to snatch the program from the OSRD. Then with much pressure being brought to bear
on congress and high ranking department heads the National Academy of Sciences
proposed an all out effort to build a feasible nuclear weapon. Roosevelt authorized an all
out effort by November 1941. A new committee was formed and named “The Top Policy
Group”. Its purpose was to keep Roosevelt informed of the progress made in bomb
development. On December 6th, 1941 the committee met to reorganize efforts and
consolidate results. By early 1942 things were happening fast. Arthur Compton had
established the University of Chicago Metallurgical Laboratory to study plutonium and
fission pies and Compton asked J. Robert Oppenheimer of the University of California at
Berkley to take over research on fast neutron calculations.
Experiments at both institutions were coordinated and fruitful. Plutonium was a new
element and very little was known about it. Plutonium was created and discovered by
Glenn Seaborg and his team. Plutonium is created by uranium-238 absorbing a neutron
which has been emitted from the fission of a U-235 Atoms.
The scattered scientists in America who were working on the “Bomb” decided to have a
conference and put their heads together. UC Berkley was chosen as the site and they all
met there. There, they came up with many different ways to cause a mass of fissionable
material to go critical and start a chain reaction. The simplest design was to shoot a plug
much like a bullet into the sphere of active material. They explored many shapes and
designs even autocatalytic methods and spheres involving implosions. At the Berkley
conference physicist Edward Teller urged for a discussion a “Super Bomb” which would
use a fission bomb to set off a fusion bomb thus causing a much larger explosion. This
theory was discovered by physicist Hans Bethe before the war and was put forth to Teller
by Fermi. In this process the blast wave from the fission explosion would fuse the
deuterium and tritium nuclei and produce more energy than fission alone. Thus, was born
the “Hydrogen Bomb” but at the time only in theory. At this conference Teller brought
forth the idea that the detonation of an “Atomic Bomb” might ignite the very atoms that
compose the atmosphere. Physicist Hans Bethe refuted the idea by proving in theory that
the atmosphere was made up of dissimilar atoms and therefore could not ignite. Teller
went on to regret his folly as this theory of igniting the atmosphere took off and was hard
to prove otherwise to the general non-physicist populace. The general public latched onto
the idea that an atomic bomb would ignite the atmosphere and destroy all of mankind and
it was the panic topic of the early days of WW II. Once the project came under the
control of the OSRD headed by Vannevar Bush the need for military control of the
project became clear to Bush because of the war use of the proposed weapons. Vannevar
Bush brought his concerns to Roosevelt and he in turn asked Secretary of war Stimson
and Army Chief of Staff George Marshall to make it a priority. General Marshall gave the
assignment to the Corps of Engineers. The Commanding General of the Corps of
Engineers chose Brigadier General Brehon B. Somervell. Somervell was a career
engineer officer who had been a rising star since he graduated sixth in his class at West
Point in 1914.
Somervell had been the head of the Army Construction Branch of the Quartermaster
Corps. At the outbreak of WWII Somervell’s job was transferred to the Corps of
Engineers and was placed in charge of the building of the Pentagon.
Somervell was passed over to become the Chief of Engineers in favor of Brigadier
General Eugene Reybold.
At that time he was Army Chief of Staff George Marshall’s G-4, (Logistics Officer).
On February 28th, 1942 there were sweeping changes made in the structure of the Army
and the War Department. Somervell was swept up in the melee and came out as the
Commanding General of Services and Supply with the rank of Lieutenant General. Many
of his former superiors were now his subordinates. Thus the Army Corps of Engineers
was answerable to Somervell and he only answered to the Chief of Staff of the Army and
the Undersecretary of the Army. Since all Army special projects fell under Somervell he
chose the name, “Development of Substitute Materials” as the official name of the
project. Colonel James Marshall was chosen by Somervell to ramrod the Oak Ridge
Tennessee site construction but proved to be too cautious and slow. He was replaced by
Colonel Leslie Groves in the summer of 1942. Groves wasted little time in getting the
project organized and appointed Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer as the civilian head of the
scientists.
It was widely known that Oppenheimer was a devotee of the Soviet form of Marxism
but was considered a genius by most so his political aspirations were overlooked. Groves
named the project “The Manhattan Project” because the practice in the Corps of
Engineers had always been to name districts after the city the district headquarters was
located in. Since Groves was connected to the Manhattan District he chose the name.
Within one week of his assignment Groves had solved many of the complex problems
facing the start up of the nuclear weapons program.
Groves was promoted to the rank of Brigadier General so he would have the clout to deal
with the bureaucracy. In December of 1942 Enrico Fermi and his group had pulled off the
first sustained chain reaction in a controlled reactor under the bleachers in the laboratory
at Stagg Field on the campus of the University of Chicago. The Fermi group sent a
telegram in code to Oppenheimer informing him of their success and the race was truly
on and would never stop.
Subsequent experiments and massive amounts of money would cause the building of
many sites dedicated to the production of nuclear weapon technology. 130,000 people
were employed in this venture at its peak. The sites of the various component laboratories
were chosen for unique characteristics.
The Oak Ridge site was chosen due to the ready availability of cheap electrical power
from the Tennessee Valley Authority hydroelectric system. The Hanford Washington site
was chosen due to the availability of flowing water in vast quantities which would be
used to cool the reactors.
The Los Alamos site was previously an abandoned boy’s ranch that was very remote and
only accessible via few unimproved roads. In Oak Ridge the site encompassed more than
60,000 acres. In order to produce enough U-235 the machinery at Oak Ridge consumes
one sixth of the total electricity produced in the continental United States. It was so secret
that the Governor of Tennessee was unaware of its existence for many months. As the
sites grew in size and complexity the Hanford site developed to more than 1,000 square
miles in area. Hanford was our primary plutonium production center utilizing breeder
reactor technology. There were many different sites under the umbrella of the Manhattan
Project. There were three primary sites and seven sites of lesser importance to the project.
This was a vast and complex network of sites and plant as the following list shows.
“Sorrow”
Nagasaki Japan was a very beautiful city and was thought of by the Japanese people as
almost sacred in that it played a great part in the ocean borne commerce development of
Japan in the 18th and 19th and early 20th centuries. Many noble borne Japanese called
Nagasaki home and the mountains around the port were dotted by large mansions and
estates of noble families. It was chosen as the second nuclear bombing site because of it’s
cultural and historic significance to the Japanese.
An Ironic twist of fate in the aftermath of the Nagasaki bombing was the fact that the
half American and half Japanese son of the real life “Madame Butterfly” was so
emotionally devastated by the destruction of his beloved birth city that he hanged himself
16 days after the explosion in his New York apartment. His name in Japanese meant
“Sorrow”. Although very sad, I get great enjoyment from opera as it not only tells a story
but does so with such beautiful music. “Madame Butterfly” is a sad and mournful tale
based on real life. If you ever have the chance to attend that Opera you will understand.
CHAPTER 5:
Our Bombs.
On August 6th, 1944 the B-29 (Enola Gay) piloted by Army Air Corps officer Paul Tibbets
dropped the first nuclear weapon ever used in anger by the human race on Hiroshima
Japan. In that flash the world of geo-politics, diplomacy and warfare changed forever.
The bomb used was a Uranium 235 weapon with a gun type trigger device which means a
plug of Uranium 235 is fired down a gun barrel at very high velocity and smashes into
another wad of Uranium 235. The yield from the Hiroshima bomb was puny compared to
bombs and missile warheads developed later in the various programs around the world.
By today’s standards the weapon used on Hiroshima was primitive and of relatively low
yield. The “Little Boy” bomb was the equivalent of our present day military tactical
nuclear weapons used on Intermediate Range Ballistic Missiles, (approx. 15 to 20 KT)
and on some artillery rounds and cruise missile warheads. In contrast the “Fat Man”
bomb dropped on Nagasaki by the B-29 “Bock’s Car” two days after the Hiroshima event
was a far more sophisticated weapon. The “Fat Man” weapon used Plutonium in an
implosion which is a man made element. Plutonium is used to enhance the yield of a
nuclear blast. The “Fat Man” bomb was the first time an implosion type device was
employed. Meaning a ball of compressed Uranium enhanced by Plutonium was further
compressed by a conventional explosive sphere blasting inward a mass of U-235 and
Plutonium to induce critical mass.
The yield from the Nagasaki device was different in that it produced a more intense blast
of higher heat concentration at ground zero. Both weapons were detonated above ground
or “Airburst” where the blast effect is much more widespread and inflicts maximum
destruction but relatively mild fallout. Since the initial use of these weapons in 1945 the
world has seen a vast quantity and variety of weapons made by the nuclear powers
detonated in tests in a global contest to see who could build the biggest, most accurate
and scariest nuclear weapon.
The U. S. Army Air Corps was the agency who delivered the first two weapons so when
the U. S. Air Force that was created in 1946 from the Army Air Corps they had the
expertise and means to deliver the few weapons the United States possessed at that time.
The following accounting is gleaned from declassified U. S. Department of Defense
Documents under the Freedom of Information act. Keep in mind that I only have detailed
data on U. S. nuclear weapons. We do not have the same access to French, British,
Russian, Chinese, Indian, Pakistan, South African or Israeli weapons. With that said I
remind you that there are still many things I as a researcher are not allowed access to.
There is a rumor afoot presently in global security rumors that indicate the U. S.
government has developed a Ground Penetrating Low Yield Nuclear Weapon specifically
designed to take out underground nuclear weapon manufacturing plants that are
subterranean in such places as Iran. It is not enough to conventionally destroy a nuclear
facility because it can be rebuilt. If you destroy it with a nuclear device then the radiation
renders the destroyed site too “Hot” to rebuild. The following data shows what the U. S.
military industrial complex has accomplished since 1945.
In my research I counted a total of 20,590 U. S. nuclear weapon devices built from 1945
to the present! Why did we need all those bombs you ask? Let’s explore the history.
1. The MK-1/MK-II bomb was the “Little Boy” Hiroshima bomb. It was a crude but
effective unit weighing 8,900 lbs. with a Highly Enriched Uranium core, of the six built
in 1945 five of these were retired in 1950. These weapons had an explosive yield of 15-
16 Kilotons and were fused for airburst only. Due to their weight the only aircraft in the
U. S. military that could carry this weapon was the B-29 and the B-50 variant of the B-29
heavy bomber.
2. The MK-II bomb was a theoretical design and was cancelled during the design stage
and incorporated into the “Little Boy” design in 1945
3. The MK-III bomb was the “Fat Man” Nagasaki bomb. It had a Plutonium Implosion
type core and weighed 10,300 lbs. with an IFI (In Flight Insertion) trigger mechanism
that would be incorporated in all subsequent designs for safety. It worked exceptionally
well so this design was adopted as the production run model.
They were built from 04/1947to 04/1949. All 120 of them were retired in late 1950.
These weapons had an explosive yield of 18 to 49 Kilotons and were fused for airburst
only. The one dropped on Nagasaki was the prototype which all future nuclear weapon
designs in the U. S. arsenal would be based. Due to their weight these bombs were only
carried by the B-29, B-50 and the newly introduced B-36 bombers.
4. The Mk-4 bombs were improved MK-III designs with the IFI (In Flight Insertion)
fusing designed in. These units were 10,800 to 10, 900 lbs. depending on the core yield
design. The yield was controlled by altering the PU/HEU (Plutonium/Highly Enriched
Uranium) core. They were produced from 03/1949-05/1951. Of the 550 units made all
were retired between mid 1952 and mid 1953. These weapons had an explosive yield of 1
to 31 Kt and were fused for airburst only. Many of these cores were recycled and used
again in future models. Due to their weight the only aircraft capable of carrying them
were the B-29, B-50 and B-36 heavy bombers.
5. The MK-5 bombs were much improved versions of the MK-4. They were much
lighter in weight, (3,025-3,175 lbs.) and had a 92 lens implosion ball. Upon detonation it
produced a thermonuclear blast with a much wider thermal blast zone. These units were
designed with automatic IFI (In Flight Insertion). These units had an explosive yield of 6
to 120 Kt and were fused for airburst or contact. They were produce in 1952. Of the
140 units made all were retired between 1952 and 1963. Due to their weight these
weapons were only carried by the B-29, B-50 and B-36 heavy bombers.
6. The MK-6 bombs were much improved higher yield modifications of MK-5 units.
These units weighed 7,600 -8500 lbs. They incorporated a 60 lens implosion ball.
Of the 1100 units made from 07/1951 to 04/1955 and all were retired by 1962. These
units had an explosive yield of 8 to 160 Kt and were fused for airburst or contact. Due
to their weight these weapons were only carried by the Navy AJ-1, Air Force B-29, B-50
and B-36 heavy bombers.
7. The MK-7 bombs were smaller (1,645-1,700 lbs.) and used a 92 lens implosion ball.
Since they were lighter many more types of smaller aircraft such as fighter/bombers
could carry them mounted on wing pylons. These were the first units to incorporate the
PAL (Permissive Action Link) electronic system. This system contained the safeties
where in the aircraft personnel had to go through a sequence of switch manipulations
before the weapon could be armed. These units had an explosive yield of 8 to 61 Kt and
were fused for airburst or contact. The fact that these weapons were deliverable by
much more aircraft gave the U. S. military a much expanded threat capability to our
enemies. Of the 1800 units built from 07/1952 to 02/1963 many were in service from
1952 until 1967. Due to their lighter weight these weapons could be carried on any
aircraft in the U. S. military fitted with advanced electronics for PAL. In the late sixties
many were recycled into newer model weapons.
8. The MK-8 bombs were designed as earth penetrating units. They incorporated a
hardened bomb casing which increased weight. These units weighed 3,230-3,280 lbs.
Since these weapons only had a 12 to 15 kiloton yield the detonation core was an
improved gun type and not an implosion model. These units had an explosive yield of 15
to 30 Kt and were fused for pyrotechnic delay. Only 40 units were produced from
11/1951 to 05/1953 and they were retired by 1957. These weapons were carried by all of
our bombers fitted with PAL.
9. The MK-9 bombs were produced not as a bomb, but as an ADM (Atomic Demolition
Weapon). It was man-portable and the yield was sub Kiloton but effective on fortified
positions. It was a gun type nuclear trigger and used HEU. These units were fused for
time delay detonation. Only a few were built and stockpiled in 1957. They were retired
in 1963. They were of a “backpack” design similar to large satchel charges of TNT.
10. The MK-10 was cancelled in the design stage.
11. The MK-11 bombs replaced the MK-8 units on a one for one basis. They weighed the
same as the MK-8 units (3,210 to 3,500 lbs.) and had the same yield. They had improved
PAL systems and were later listed in the U. S. nuclear stockpile as MK-91 Penetration
Bombs. Only 40 units were produced from 01/1956 to 01/1957 and they were in service
until 1960. These units had an explosive yield of 12 to 15 Kt and were fused for
pyrotechnic delay detonation. They were capable of being carried by all bombers in the
U. S. military equipped with PAL.
12. The MK-12 bombs were designed to be dropped by high speed fighter/bomber
aircraft from wing pylons and were very streamlined in shape. They weighed 1,100 to
1,200 lbs. which made them aircraft wing pylon mountable. They could be carried by any
U. S. military aircraft with PAL technology. They were nicknamed “BROK”. These
weapons were the first to use a Beryllium Tamper. These units had an explosive yield of
12 to 14 Kt and fusing for contact or time delay. They were produced from 12/1954 to
02/1957. The 250 units produced were gradually retired from 07/1958 to 07/1962. They
could be carried by any U. S. military aircraft.
13. The MK-13 Bomb was cancelled prior to production in 1954.
14. The TX/MK-14 bombs were the first deployed solid fuel thermonuclear weapons.
They weighed 28,954 to 31,000 lbs. their weight relegated them to use by the heaviest
bombers in the U. S. military inventory. The yield was huge, (5 to 7 megaton) and these
bombs were only carried by the huge B-36 bomber. The B-36 had a payload capacity of
86,000 lbs so it was capable of carrying two. These units were fused for airburst only.
Only five were produced between 02/1954-10/1954 and were all recycled into the MK-
17 weapon in 1956. These weapons were dropped from the huge B-36 and were retarded
by a parachute for airburst only.
15. The MK-15 bombs were improved mass produced MK-14 types. They had a
secondary HEU casing and were deployed via parachute. They were smaller and lighter
in weight at 7,600 lbs. They had an explosive yield of 3.8 Megatons and were fused with
the new FUFO (Full Fusing Option) which enabled the aircrew to dial in the option of
how to detonate the weapon. They were produced in 1954 to 1957 and 1200 units were
made. They were capable of being carried by all of the Bombers in the U. S. inventory.
16. The TX-16 bombs were extremely large and heavy rendering them to being carried
by the B-36 or the new B-52 bombers only. These units weighed 39,000 to 42,000 lbs.
They had a yield of 6 to 8 Mt and were fused for airburst only. These monsters were the
firsts of their kinds in several categories. They were the first truly purpose built
thermonuclear devices. They were the first and only cryogenic thermonuclear weapons
ever deployed. There were on five of them produced in 1954 and they were kept in the
stockpile until the mid sixties. They were so heavy that they could only be carried by the
B-36 or B-52 heavy bombers.
17. The EC-17 bombs were high yield at 11 Mt and were large at a weight of 39,600 lbs.
These units used natural lithium and were free fall bombs. They were fused for airburst
only. They were only carried by B-36 or B-52 bombers because of their weight. Only five
units were built in 1954 and were kept in the stockpile until the late sixties. They were
fused for airburst only.
18. The MK-17 bombs were truly heavy. They weighed 41,400 to 42,000 lbs. They had a
yield of 11 to 15 Mt and were fused for airburst or contact. They were the heaviest
nuclear weapon ever produced in the U. S. When dropped they were retarded in
decent by a parachute. There were 200 units produced from 07/1954 to 11/1955 and they
were retired from 11/1956 to 08/1957. These weapons had the second highest yield of
any U. S. nuclear bomb. They were only carried by the B-36 or the B-52 bombers.
19. The MK-18 units were the largest pure fission bombs ever deployed. They
weighed 8,600 lbs. and produced an explosive yield of 500 Kt. They were classed as
SOB (Super Alloy Bombs) with a 92 point implosion ball. They had an HEU core and
were produced from 03/1953 to 02/1955. They were fused for airburst or contact. Since
they were of a more manageable weight they were carried by all bombers equipped with
internal bomb bays. 90 units were produced and all were retired in the first three months
of 1956.
20. The MK-20 units were cancelled in the design phase.
21. The MK-21 bombs were cancelled in the planning stage.
22. The MK-22 bombs were cancelled in the planning stage.
23. The EC-24 Bombs were large and weighed 39,600 lbs. They had an explosive yield
of 13.5 Mt and were fused for airburst only. Only ten were produced in 1954. They were
kept in the stockpile until the mid sixties. The core used enriched Lithium-6 and they
were dropped in free fall and fused for airburst only. They were only carried by the B-
36 or B-52 heavy bombers.
24. The MK-24 bombs were very heavy at 42,400 to 42,000 lbs. They had an explosive
yield of 10 to 15 Mt and the first models were fused for airburst only. They were
dropped via a 64 foot diameter parachute to retard decent. They were similar to the
MK-17 but were improved in the electronics and fusing variants. A later variant could
be fused for contact. They were produced from 07/1954 to 11/1955 and all 105 units
were retired in late 1956. They were only carried by the B-36 and the B-52 heavy
bombers.
25. The MK-26 bomb was cancelled in 1956.
26. The MK-27 bombs were made for the Navy. They weighed 3,150 to 3,300 lbs and
had an explosive yield of 1 Mt. They were fused for airburst or contact. They were of a
UCRL design and were classed as lightweight thermonuclear weapons. 700 units were
produced from 11/1958 to 6/1959 and all were retired from 11/1962 to 07/1965. All navy
aircraft could carry these weapons. Most were carried by the A-3d Sky Warrior or the
A-5 Vigilante Carrier Based Bomber.
27. The MK-28/B-28 bombs were considered multipurpose thermonuclear weapons in
that they were developed in several different variants. Depending on the variant they had
an explosive yield of 70 Kt to 1.45 Mt. They were FUFO fused and weighed 1,700 to
2,320 lbs. depending on the model selected. This bomb design was the longest running
in U. S. military history at 33 years. Versions were in service from 1958 to 1991. There
were 4,500 units produced and the last one was retired in 09/1991. They were capable of
being delivered by a wide range of military aircraft.
28. The MK-36 bombs were designed as two stage thermonuclear type with two
variants. One was “dirty” and the other was “clean”. They weighed in at 17,500 to
17,700 lbs. and were deliverable by medium to heavy bombers only. They were equipped
with FUFO and were dropped parachute retarded. The 940 units built were produced
from 4/1956 to 6/1958 and were retired from 08/1962 to 01/1962. Carried by B-47, B-52,
B-57, B-58 and B-56 bombers.
29. The MK-39 bombs were improved Mk-15 models. They used a gas boosted
primary trigger system to reduce overall weight. They had thermal batteries, improved
safeties and variable parachute deployment packages. They weighed 6.650 to 6,750
lbs. and were capable of an explosive yield of 3 to 4 Mt. They were capable of low level
deployment in the “lay down” configuration. There were 700 units made between
02/1957 and 03/1959 and all were retired in the 1962 to 1966 period. They were capable
of being carried by all U. S. medium and heavy bombers.
30. The MK-41 bombs were the highest yield U. S. nuclear weapons ever deployed.
They were of an advanced design with a three stage thermonuclear core. They were
built in two versions, one was “dirty” and one was “clean”. They weighed 10,500 to
10,670 lbs. and had an explosive yield of 25 Mt. They were FUFO equipped and were
dropped with a parachute for retardation or free fall. There were 500 units
manufactured from 09/1960 to 06/1962. They were retired from service from 11/1963 to
07/1976 in favor of the MK-53 weapon. They were too heavy for wing pylon mounting
so they were only carried by bombers with internal bomb bays.
31. The MK-43 bombs were built for high speed low altitude delivery. They were small
enough at 2,060 to 2,125 lbs. and streamlined enough to be pylon mounted on a wide
variety of aircraft. They had an explosive yield of 70 Kt to 1 Mt and were FUFO
equipped. There were 1000 units built between 04/1961 and 10/1965. They were
equipped with the newer PAL B upgrade. They were fission only bombs and were
retired during the 12/1972 to 04/1991 period.
32. The MK-46/B46 bombs were cancelled prior to production.
33. The MK-53/B-53 bombs were designed as HEU fission only weapons with no
Plutonium. They were and remain our main weapon deliverable by the B-47, B-52, B-58
follow on Bombers such as the B-1B and B-2. They weigh in at 8,850 to 8,900 lbs. and
have a 9 Mt explosive yield. They were FUFO equipped and are parachute retarded or
free fall. They were manufactured from 08/1962 to 06/1965 and were modified in
7/1967. Of the 350 units produced 300 units were retired in 1997 but 50 units were
retained in our in service stockpile.
34. The MK-54 was produced as an ADM (Atomic Demolition Munition). They weigh
150 lbs. and are man portable. They have an explosive yield of 10 Tons to 1 Kt. They
were manufactured from 08/1964 to 06/1966 and were retired from service in the period
of 1967 o 1989. They were equipped with a mechanical combination lock and PAL and
were fused with a time delay. They were “Backpack” type weapons similar to a TNT
satchel charge. There were 300 units produced.
35. The MK-57/B-57 bombs were light weight at 490 to 510 lbs. and had an explosive
yield of 5 to 20 Kt. They were used as multipurpose tactical weapons and were used in
depth charges, torpedoes and tactical strike weapons deliverable by any aircraft.
They were equipped with FUFO and PAL B. 3,100 units were produced from 01/1963 to
05/1967. The early models were retired from 06/1975 to 06/1993. They were dropped via
a parachute retardation method or free fall. They could be carried by any aircraft.
36. The MK/B-61 bombs were light weight at 695 to 716 lbs. and adaptable to many
weapons systems. There were many modifications made and these weapons are the main
weapons remaining in our stockpile today. They have a variable yield (depending on
the model) from 0.3 Kt to 340 Kt. They are equipped with the latest PAL version and
use an IHE in the primary core. They were manufactured from 10/1966 to the early 90’s
and many of the older models were retired. Of the 3150 units manufactured 1350 late
model units remain in our stockpile. They were the longest production run of any U.
S. nuclear bomb. The remaining units are part of our “enduring stockpile”. They can
be carried by any aircraft and adapted to many delivery vehicles.
37. The B-77 bombs were cancelled during the design phase in 1977.
38. The B-83 bombs are our current high yield thermonuclear weapon. They weigh 2,400
lbs. and have an explosive yield to 1.2 Mt. They are FUFO equipped with the latest PAL
system with a fire resistant explosive pit. They are deliverable by all current aircraft
in the U. S. military. They use an IHE primary. They are parachute retarded and are
low altitude, high speed deliverable. They were manufactured from 06/1983 to 1991
and there were 650 produced. They are our “Go To” nuclear weapons currently.
39. The B-90 bombs were cancelled in the design stage in 1991.
No new bombs have been produced recently but there is a rumor that the U. S. is working
on a low yield earth penetration weapon called the “Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator”,
specifically to take out underground WMD production plants.
Bombs produced up until 1968 were referred to a “MK” (Mark). Bombs produced from
1968 on were designated “B” (Bomb). The “TX” designation stood for “Test
Experimental”.
Chapter 6:
1. The B-29 or “Super Fortress” entered service in early 1944 and was the first U. S.
“Nuclear Bomber”. Versions were in service well into the sixties in reserve commands.
The “Enola Gay” dropped the “Little Boy” HEU bomb on Hiroshima Japan on
August 6, 1945 was a B-29. The B-29 “Bock’s Car” dropped the Plutonium bomb
“Fat Man” on Nagasaki Japan on August 8, 1945. Shortly thereafter Japan’s Imperial
Government sued for peace. These two instances were the first and only known use
of nuclear weapons in War. The B-29 was propeller driven and slow by today’s
standards. The B-29 “Super Fortress” Specifications are four each Wright Radial 3350,
turbocharged 23 cylinder engines. Each rated at 2,200 horsepower. They had a max speed
of 357 MPH. They carried a crew of 5 officers and 6 enlisted men. They had a range of
5,600 miles and could carry 20,000 lbs. of bombs in an internal bomb bay. Aircraft
maximum takeoff weight was 133,500 lbs.
2. The B-50 or “Super Fortress” entered service in 1945 and was a slightly improved
model of the B-29. It was in service well into the sixties in reserve components and
National Guard units. It had a crew of 8. The aircraft was propeller drive and still slow by
today’s standards at a max speed of 395 MPH. It had Pratt & Whitney Radial 4360
engines. Each rated at 3,500 horsepower. It had a range of 5,000 nautical miles and a
bomb load capacity of 20,000 pounds in the bomb bay and 8,000 pounds on external
pylons. Aircraft maximum takeoff weight was 173,000 lbs.
3. The B-36 or “Peacemaker” entered service in 1949 and was the first U. S. bomber
designed as a strategic bomber with a huge bomb weight capacity. The B-36
established several firsts. It was the first U. S. Air Force Bomber to be equipped with
Jet Engines to supplement the Propeller Engines. It had a crew of 9. The B-36 had 6
each Pratt & Whitney Radial 4360 piston engines rated at 3,800 horsepower each. It also
had 4 each GE J47 turbojets rated at 5,200 pounds of thrust.
Typically after reaching cruising altitude the jet engines were shut off to conserve their
limited on board supply of jet fuel. Most of the fuel capacity was taken up with aviation
gas for the piston engines. They had a 72,000 lb. internal bomb capacity, a top speed of
420 MPH and a range of 5,905 nautical miles. The maximum takeoff weight was 410,000
lbs.
4. The B-45 or “Tornado” was the first all jet operational bomber for the Air Force. It
was built by North American and introduced in 1948 as a medium bomber and 143 units
were produced. It had a crew of four. It was powered by four GE J-47 turbojet engines
developing a combined thrust of 20,800 pounds. It had a maximum takeoff weight of
110,000 pounds. It had a range of 870 nautical miles and a maximum speed of 570
MPH. It could carry a bomb load of 22,000 pounds and was capable of carrying any
nuclear weapon in the USAF inventory at the time.
5. The B-47 or “Stratojet” entered service in 1955/56 and was the first swept wing all
jet powered bomber in the Air Force inventory. It took a crew of 5 to operate it and it was
powered by six GE J47 turbojet engines developing 7,200 lbs. of thrust each. The early
jet engines were not powerful enough to get the plane off the ground in a reasonable
length of runway so a JATO (jet assisted take off) rocket system was installed on either
side of the fuselage aft near the tail to give the extra thrust to weight ratio to attain takeoff
speed quickly. The B-47 was capable of a top speed of 607 MPH. It had a maximum
range of 4,037 nautical miles. It could carry a 25,000 lb. bomb load in the internal bomb
bay. Its maximum takeoff weight was 230,000 lbs.
6. The B-49 or “Flying Wing” was introduced in 1948 as an experimental bomber. It had
control problems from the start and the first prototype crashed on June 5, 1948 killing
the five man crew. The pilot of this aircraft was Capt. Glenn W. Edwards USAF. The
Air Force named the base in California after him. The B-49 was powered by very
weak Allison Jet engines which only produce 3,750 lbs. of thrust each. Even with the
eight engines fitted this did not give the B-49 enough power for good control. The
concept of the flying wing was ahead of its time and the technology of the day could not
overcome the instability of the tailless design. The program was scrapped in late 1949.
7. The B-52 or “Stratofortress” was built from 1956 to 1962. There were 744 built and
many of the later H models were upgraded over the years and are still active in the
Air Force as strategic bombers. There are approximately 100 B-52H models still in the
Air Force inventory. They carry a crew of five and the present B-52 aircraft are at three
locations. The 2nd Bomb Wing is at Barksdale AFB in Louisiana. The 5th Bomb Wing
is at Minot AFB North Dakota, and the 20th Expeditionary Bomb Squadron is at
Anderson AFB Guam. The B-52H in service today has eight Pratt & Whitney TF-P-
3/103 Turbofan Jet engines each developing thrust of 17,000 lbs. This power gives the B-
52H a top speed of 560 Knots. It can carry a bomb load 60,000 lbs. mixed between
internal bomb bays and wing pylons. It can also launch ALCM cruise missiles. This
model has a range of 11,000 miles and a maximum takeoff weight of 488,000 lbs. The
crews call them “BUFF” (big ugly fat fellows). The B-52H can carry and deploy any
nuclear weapon in the U. S. stockpile.
8. The B-57 or “Canberra” is the U. S. model of a British design. The U. S. model was
introduced in 1963 and is powered by two Wright J65-W-5 turbojets developing 7,220
lbs. of thrust each. This gives the B-57 a top speed of 598 MPH. It requires a crew of two
to operate this aircraft. The Air Force retired all of its B-57 fleet in the early 1970’s
and the only ones known still flying belong to NASA. They are used for atmospheric
testing and Space Shuttle Launch observation. As bombers the B-57’s were considered
light/medium bombers in that their bomb capacity was only 7,300 lbs. of that total
4,500 lbs. could be carried in the internal bomb bay and 2,800 lbs. could be divided
between four external wing pylons. The B-57 has a range of 2,720 nautical miles and a
maximum takeoff weight of 53,345 lbs. They could carry the smaller nuclear weapons.
9. The B-58 or “Hustler” was introduced to the Air Force in 1960 as the first true
high speed and high altitude penetration bomber. The were designed to fly high and
fast to penetrate the Soviet Unions air defenses and drop Nuclear weapons before being
shot down. They were designed much like the Air Force Delta wing shaped fighter of that
time with a severely swept delta wing and four huge GE J79 turbojets slung under the
wings each producing 15,600 lbs. of thrust. This power coupled with the shape gave the
B-58 a top speed of 1,400 MPH or Mach 2.1. The crew of three was busy keeping this
bullet under control as the delta wing shape was a notoriously difficult design to fly.
The There were 103 aircraft built and all were retired by 1970. Only 8 aircraft remain
on static display at various AFB locations. They were short legged by B-52 standards
and the maximum range was only 4,720 miles. They we too small and sleek to have an
internal bomb bay so all bombs were contained in a Pod slung under the fuselage.
The Pod had the capacity for 4 each B-43 or 4 each B-61 nuclear bombs.
The Pod was basically an externally mounted bomb bay that could be operated by
the weapons officer like an internal bomb bay. Its maximum bomb load was 19,450
lbs. and it had a maximum takeoff weight of 176,890 lbs. In my opinion the B-58 was the
coolest bomber ever built.
10. The B-66 or “Destroyer” was introduced to the Air Force in 1954 as a medium
Bomber. The plane was essentially a Navy A-3D “Skywarrior” in Air Force colors.
They B-66 was employed by the Air Force as a medium payload and medium range
bomber. It was powered by two Allison J71-A-11 or -13 turbojets developing 10,200
pounds of thrust each. The aircraft had a top speed of 631 MPH and a maximum range of
2,470 Miles. It was operated by a crew of 3 and could carry 15,000 lbs. of conventional
and nuclear weapons. The B-66 had a maximum takeoff weight of 83,000 lbs. The later
versions were converted to electronic warfare platforms and carried a much larger crew.
This is the aircraft the Lt. Col. Campbell of “Bat-51” fame ejected from over Viet
Nam.
11. The B-70 or “Valkyrie” was the Air Forces’ short lived experiment with Mach 3
bombers from 1964 to 1967. It was a huge aircraft with six GE YJ93 turbojet engines
each capable of creating 28,000 lbs. of thrust. This aircraft was capable of reaching 2,000
MPH. It had a crew of 2 and was capable of carrying a massive internal bomb load of
conventional and nuclear weapons. It had a maximum takeoff weight of 534,700 lbs. It
was cancelled because it was too complex to maintain and consumed too much fuel.
Also the newer high altitude SAM missiles rendered it vulnerable.
12. The F/B-111 or “Aardvark” or “Switchblade” as the crews called them was a
very fast variable wing geometry light bomber. It had a crew of 2 and was equipped
with advanced ECM systems. It was equipped with two Pratt & Whitney TF30-P-100
turbofan engines each putting out 17,900 lbs. of thrust dry or 25,100 lbs. of thrust in
afterburner.
They were capable of 1,650 MPH top speed and could carry 31,500 lbs. of weapons
internally and externally. They were able to carry the B-43, B-57, B-61 or B-83
nuclear weapons. They had a maximum takeoff weight of 98,979 lbs. They were in
service from 1967 until 1998 with the Air Force. F-111 aircraft flew from Britain to
Libya to bomb Mohmar Kadafi during the Libyan crisis.
13. The B-1B or “Lancer” was introduced in 1985 and is the current long range
heavy bomber in the Air Force inventory along with the B-52. There are 67 active
aircraft and 25 are in ready reserve status. It is the only “Swing Wing” or variable
geometry wing heavy bomber we have. The B-1B is operated by a crew of 4 and is
powered by four GE F-101-02 turbofan engines producing 30,000 lbs. of thrust each.
This gives the B-1B a top speed in the 1000 MPH range. It has three internal bomb bays
and is capable of carrying a massive bomb load of conventional and nuclear weapons. It
has Nap of the Earth flying ability by which it can fly lower and faster than any
bomber. It has a small radar cross section so it’s harder to spot on radar and it has
advanced ECM systems. It has an intercontinental range un-refueled. It has a
maximum takeoff weight of 477,000 lbs.
14. The B-2 or “Spirit” (introduced in 1997) is the only “Stealth Bomber” in our
inventory. It provides the ability to penetrate defense systems unseen. The B-2 has a
crew of 2 pilots. It is powered by four GE-F118 engines providing 17,000 lbs. of thrust
each. It has a top speed of just under 700 MPH. (You don’t have to go fast if they can’t
see you”!) It can carry a massive 40,000 lb. bomb load. (That’s 16 B-61 or B-83
nuclear bombs) or ALCM’s in the internal bomb bays rotary launchers. There are 21
of these aircraft in our current inventory. They have an intercontinental un-refueled
range and a maximum takeoff weight of 336,500 lbs. At night you would never know it
was there!
1. The AJ-1 or “Savage” was built as a triple engine (one jet and two radial piston
engines) carrier based medium bomber. It went into service in 1949. It had a crew of
three and was powered by one Allison J33-A-1 turbojet in the tail developing 4,600
lbs. of thrust and two Pratt & Whitney R-2800-44W engines rated at 2,400 HP each.
It had a top speed of 471 MPH and a range of 600 miles. It was capable of carrying
12,000 lbs. of bombs in an internal bomb bay and was fitted to carry one MK-6 Nuclear
Bomb. It had a maximum takeoff weight of 50,954 lbs.
2. The P2V-1 or “Neptune” was built as a twin radial engine land based medium
bomber for the Navy. The first ones went into service in 1946. In the mid sixties the
aircraft were retro-fitted with two J34-WE-34 jet engines with one under each wing
outboard of the radial engines. The addition of the jet engines gave the P2V increased
maximum takeoff weight. The main radial engines were two Wright R-3350-32W turbo
boosted compound Cyclone engines rated at 4,000 HP. The P2V had a large bomb bay
and could carry up to 8,000 lbs of bombs, depth charges or aerial torpedoes. They
were operated by a crew of 7 and were used for long range maritime patrol.
They were capable of carrying any nuclear weapon in the Navy arsenal. They had a top
speed of 300 MPH with a range of 4,130 miles and had a maximum takeoff weight of
80,000 lbs. The last ones were retired in the mid 1970’s.
3. The F2H-2B or “Banshee” was introduced to the Navy in 1948 as a carrier based
fighter. 845 units were built by McDonnell Aircraft. They had a crew of one pilot. They
were powered by two Westinghouse J-34 turbojet engines with a combined thrust of up to
6,500 pounds. They had a maximum takeoff weight of 28,500 pounds and a maximum
speed of 527 MPH. They could carry 3,000 pounds of external weapons including one
nuclear gravity bomb or nuclear tipped missiles.
4. The F9F or “Cougar” was a carrier based fighter bomber designed and built by
Grumman Aircraft Co. and was introduced to the Navy in 1952. The total number built
was 1,792 aircraft of all variants. They had a crew of one pilot. The aircraft were fitted
with one P & W J-48P turbojet engine equipped with water injection which developed
8,500 pounds of thrust. The Cougar had a maximum takeoff weight of 24,763 pounds
and a maximum speed of 647 MPH. The Cougar could carry up to 2,000 pounds of
weapons externally including one nuclear gravity bomb or nuclear tipped missile.
5. The F3H or “Demon” was introduced to the Navy by McDonnell Aircraft in 1956 as a
carrier based fighter bomber. They made 519 units in the 3 year production run. The
Demon carried a crew of one Pilot. It had one J-40 Westinghouse Turbojet engine
producing 14,400 pounds of thrust. It had a maximum takeoff weight of 39,000 pounds. It
had a maximum speed of 716 MPH and could carry 6,000 pounds of weapons externally
including nuclear gravity bombs and nuclear tipped missiles.
6. The FJ-4 or “Fury” was introduced to the Navy in 1951 as a carrier based
fighter/bomber for the Navy and Marines by North American Aviation. The design was
an improved F-86 Saber platform and 1,115 units were built during the production run. It
had a crew of one pilot and was powered by one Wright J-65 turbojet engine
developing 7,700 pounds of thrust. The aircraft had a maximum takeoff weight of
23,700 pounds. It had a maximum speed of 680 MPH. It could carry up to 3,000 pounds
of external weapons including one nuclear gravity bomb or nuclear tipped missiles.
7. The A3D or “Skywarrior” was introduced to the Navy in 1956. (The Air Force B-66
is identical) It was the first carrier based jet powered strategic nuclear bomber in
Navy history. It was operated by a crew of three and was powered by two J57-P-10
turbojet engines rated at 10,000 lbs. of thrust each giving it a top speed of 610 MPH. It
could carry one MK-15 free fall Nuclear Weapon and subsequent N weapons of the same
dimensions. It had a range of 1,325 miles. The aircraft was boosted on takeoff by the
addition of 12 JATO rockets on each side forward of the tail. The A3D had a maximum
takeoff weight of 70,000 lbs. All aircraft were stricken from the Navy inventory by
1991.
8. The A-4 or “Skyhawk” was introduced to the Navy in 1956 as a Carrier Based
Attack Aircraft. It was operated by a crew of one and was powered by one J52-P8A
turbojet (Non-Afterburner) engine producing 9,300 lbs. of thrust giving it a top speed
of 673 MPH. It could carry 9,900 lbs. of bombs or rockets on 5 hard points under the
wings. It was capable of carrying any externally mounted nuclear weapon in the
Navy arsenal. The A-4 had a range of 1,700 miles and a maximum takeoff weight of
24,500 lbs. All Navy A-4 aircraft were stricken from the Navy inventory by 1991. This
aircraft was what Senator John McCain was flying when he was shot down and
captured during the Vietnam War.
9. The P-3 or “Orion” was introduced to the Navy in 1962 as a land based maritime
patrol bomber to replace the P2V “Neptune”. It was operated by a crew of 11 and was
powered by four Allison T56-A-14 turboprop engines developing 4,600 HP each and
giving it a top speed of 370 MPH. It can carry 20,000 lbs. of conventional and nuclear
weapons including AGM-84 “Harpoon”, AGM-84E SLAM, AGM-65 “Maverick”
missiles and MK-46 and MK-50 torpedoes, mines and depth charges. The P-3 has a
range of 5,600 miles and a maximum takeoff weight of 142,000 lbs. 650 aircraft were
built and many are still in service with the U. S. Navy and other countries around
the world.
10. The A-5 or “Vigilante” was introduced to the Navy in 1964 as a carrier based
strategic nuclear bomber. It had a crew of two and was powered by two GE J79-GE-8
afterburning turbojet engines. Each with 17,000 lbs. of thrust giving it a top speed of
1,320 MPH. It could carry up to three nuclear weapons, (9,000 lbs.) one in the internal
bomb bay (which dropped the bombs out of the tail through a tube between the engines
exhausts) and two on wing hard points. The A-5 had a range of 1,290 miles and a
maximum takeoff weight of 62,950 lbs. All A-5 aircraft were stricken from the Navy
inventory by 1979.
11. The A-6 or “Intruder” was introduced to the Navy in 1963 as a carrier based
heavy tactical/strategic bomber. It had a crew of 2 and was powered by two J52-P8-B
(Non-Afterburner) turbojets each producing 9,300 lbs. of thrust for a top speed of 648
MPH. The A-6 could carry an impressive load of under wing mounted ordinance
(18,000 lbs.) including the B-61 nuclear bomb. The A-6 had a range of 2,819 miles and
a maximum takeoff weight of 60,626 lbs. All aircraft were stricken from the Navy
inventory by 1997. They were replaced by the F/A-18 “Hornet”.
12. The A-7 or “Corsair II” was introduced to the Navy as a carrier based light attack
aircraft in 1967. It was also used by the Air Force. It had a crew of one and was
powered by one Allison TF41-A-1 turbofan (non afterburner) engine producing
14,500 lbs. of thrust. The A-7 had a top speed of 698 MPH. The A-7 could carry 15,000
lbs. of weapons on wing and fuselage hard points. This ordinance included the MK-
28, B-57 or B-61 nuclear bomb. The A-7 had a range of 2,485 miles and a maximum
takeoff weight of 42,000 lbs. All aircraft were retired in 1991 but some were retained
in the Air Force National Guard units until 2000.
13. The F-14 or “Tomcat” was introduced to the Navy in 1974 as a maritime air
superiority fighter, fleet defense interceptor and tactical strike aircraft. It had a crew
of 2 and was powered by two F110-GE-400 afterburner turbofan engines producing
27.800 lbs. of thrust each. The F-14 had a top speed of 1,544 MPH. It could carry
13,000 pounds of ordinance externally and was capable of carrying any nuclear
weapon in the Navy arsenal. The F-14 had a range of 1,600 miles and a maximum
takeoff weight of 74,350 lbs. The last F-14 was retired from the Navy in 2006. They
were replaced by the F/A 18E or F “Super Hornet”.
14. The F/A-18 or “Hornet” was introduced to the Navy in 1983 as the replacement
for the A-6, A-7 and F-14 as a carrier based strike fighter. It has a crew of one and is
powered by two F404-GE-402 turbofan afterburner engines each producing 17,750
lbs. of thrust. The F/A-18 has a top speed of 1,127 MPH. It can carry 13,700 lbs. of
assorted ordinance on under wing hard points including any nuclear weapon in the Navy
arsenal. The F/A-18 has a maximum range of 2,070 miles and a maximum takeoff weight
of 51,550 lbs. There were over 1,400 aircraft built for several nations. All are still in
service.
15. The AV-8B or “Harrier” was introduced to the Navy (Marine Corps) as a
STOL/VTOL attack aircraft in 1985. The Harrier has a crew of one and is powered by
one Rolls Royce Pegasus vectored thrust turbofan engine providing 21,750 lbs. of
thrust. The Harrier has a top speed of 675 MPH. The Harrier can takeoff loaded from a
short runway of jump ramp. It can takeoff and land vertically (like a helicopter) when
empty. It can carry 13,200 lbs. of mixed ordinance on external hard points. It can carry
any externally mounted nuclear weapon in the Navy/Marine Corps arsenal. It has a
range of 1,200 miles and a maximum takeoff weight of 31,000 lbs. in STOL mode. They
are currently in service.
16. The F/A-18E/F or “Super Hornet” was introduced to the Navy in 1999 as an
enhanced capability carrier based fighter/attack aircraft. It has a crew of 2 and is
powered by two F414-GE-400 turbofan afterburner engines that produce 22,000 lbs.
of thrust each. The aircraft has a top speed of 1,400 MPH. It has an external weapons
capacity of 17,750 lbs. & can carry any nuclear weapon in the Navy arsenal. It has a
range of 1,800 miles and a maximum takeoff weight of 66,000 lbs. 300 aircraft have
been built and are currently in service.
17. The F-35B/C or “Lightening II” will become operational in the Navy/Marine
Corps as a stealth strike fighter to replace current older aircraft. The aircraft is called the
Joint Strike Fighter and in its three variants will be capable of handling any nuclear
weapons in the U. S. arsenal. At the time of this writing none of the F-35 variants
are in operational squadrons.
Chapter 7:
1. The W-4 Warhead was the first nuclear warhead planned to fit a missile but was
cancelled. It was planned for the “Snark” SSM and was cancelled in 1951.
2. The W-5 Warhead was produced from 04/1954 to 07/1954 from recycled MK-5
Bombs. It weighed 2,405 to 2,600 lbs. and had an explosive yield of 6 to 120 Kt and
was fused for airburst or contact. 35 units were produced for the “Regulus-1” SSM-
N-8 missile program and 65 units were produced for the “Matador” MGM-1 missile
program. They were fused for airburst or contact. All units were retired from 07/1961
to 01/1963.
3. The W-7 Warhead was produced from 12/1953 to 06/1955. There were 225 units
built for the “Boar” air-to-surface missile, 300 units built for the “Corporal” M-2
missile, 300 units built for the “Honest John” M-3 missile and 300 units built for the
“Betty” MK-90 ASW Depth Bomb. All units were stockpiled between 1956 and 1963.
They weighed 900 to 1,100 lbs. and had an explosive yield of between 90 T and 40 Kt
with fusing for airburst, contact or hydrostatic. An additional 300 were planned for the
“Nike Hercules” SAM but they were cancelled in 1956.
4. The W-8 Warhead was scheduled for the “Regulus-1” missile but was cancelled in
1955.
5. The W-9 Warhead was produced from 04/1952 to 11/1953. 80 units were produced
for the T-124 artillery shell which was the first nuclear artillery round. It was fired
from a stationary 280 MM cannon. It weighed 803 to 850 lbs. and had an explosive
yield of 15 Kt. They were fused for mechanical time delay or airburst. It was a gun
type HEU weapon modified from the recycled previous bombs. All units were retired in
05/1957.
6. The W-12 Warhead was scheduled to be produced for the Navy “Talos” missile but
was cancelled in 1955.
7. The W-13 Warhead was scheduled for the “Snark” cruise missile and the
“Redstone” ICBM but was cancelled in 1954.
8. The W-15 Warhead was supposed to be a TN unit but was cancelled in 1957.
9. The W-19 Warhead was an artillery shell. 80 units were produced in 07/1955. They
weighed 600 lbs. and had an explosive yield of 15 to 20 Kt. They were used in the T-315
projectile. They had an HEU gun assembly and were fused for mechanical time delay
or airburst. All units were retired in 1963.
10. The W-21 Warhead was scheduled for the “Navaho” SM-64A missile but was
cancelled in 1954.
11. The W-23 Warhead was built as a 16 inch Navy “Katie” artillery round. There
were 50 units produced in 1956. They weighed 1,500 to 1,900 lbs. and had an explosive
yield of 15-20 Kt. They were fused for mechanical time delay or airburst. All were
retired in 10/1962.
12. W-25 Warhead was built for AIR-2 “Genie” missile from 1957 to 1965. 3150 units
were produced. They weighed 218 to 221 lbs. and had an explosive yield of 1.7 Kt and
were fused for time delay. All units were retired by 1984.
13. The W-27 Warhead was built for the ‘Regulus 1” SSM-N-8 missile. 700 units were
built between 09/1958 and 06/1959. They weighed 2,800 lbs. and had an explosive yield
of 70 Kt to 1.45 Mt. They were fused for airburst of contact. All units were retired from
1962 to 1965.
14. The W-28 Warhead was built for the ‘Hound Dog” AGM-28 missile and the
“Mace” MGM-13 cruise missile. There were 1000 units built between 1959 and 1960
that weighed 1,500 to 1,725 lbs. and had an explosive yield of 70 Kt to 1.45 Mt. The
units were fused for airburst or contact. All were retired by 1970.
15. The W-30 Warhead was built for the Navy “Talos” SAM/SSM, XW-30 missile in
three models totaling 600 units were produced from 1959 to 1965. The warhead
weighed from 438 to 450 lbs. It had an explosive yield of between 300 T and 19 Kt.
They were fused for airburst, contact or time delay. All were retired from 1962 to
1979.
16. The W-31 Warhead was built for the “Honest John” SSM, the “Nike Hercules”
SAM from 1959 to 1961. A total of 4,500 units were built. They weighed between 900
and 945 lbs. with an explosive yield of 1 to 40 Kt. They were fused for airburst, time
delay or contact. All were retired to the stockpile from 1960 to 1987.
17. The W-32 Warhead was designed as a 240 MM artillery shell but was cancelled in
1955.
18. The W-33 Warhead was built as a 203 MM artillery shell. 2000 units were
produced from 1957 to 1965. They weighed 240 to 243 lbs. and had an explosive yield of
5 to 40 Kt. They were fused for mechanical time delay or airburst. All units were
retired to the stockpile by 1992.
19. The W-34 Warhead was built for the Navy as an ASW (antisubmarine warfare)
weapon and for tactical use. It was for the MK-34 “LULU” depth charge and the MK-44
“Astor” torpedo. It could also be used as a MK-5 “Hotpoint” lay down parachute
bomb. It had a boosted fission implosion device similar to the MK-28 primary. A total
of 3200 units were built between 1958 and 1962. There were 2000 “LULU”, 600
“Astor” and 600 “Hotpoint” units built. They were fused for hydrostatic, lay down or
impact. They had an explosive yield of 11 Kt. All were retired by 1976.
20. The W-35 Warhead was designed for ICBM use but was cancelled in 1958.
21. The W-37 Warhead was designed for IRBM use but was cancelled in 1956.
22. The W-38 Warhead was built for the “Atlas” and “Titan I” ICBM from 1961 to
1963. There were 180 units built. They each weighed 3,080 lbs. and had an explosive
yield of 3.75 Mt. They were fused for airburst or contact. All units were retired to the
stockpile in 1965.
23. The W-39 Warhead was built for the “Snark” cruise missile and the “Redstone”
MRBM from 1958 to 1963. A total of 90 units were produced (60 for the “Redstone”
and 30 for the “Snark”). Each unit weighed 6,230 to 6,400 lbs. and had an explosive
yield of 3.8 Mt. They were fused for airburst, contact or parachute lay down. All were
retired to the stockpile by 1965.
24. The W-40 Warhead was built for the “Bomarc” SAM and the “Lacrosse” SSM
from 1959 to 1962. A total of 750 units were produced, (350 for the “Bomarc” and
400 for the “Lacrosse”). They each weighed 350 to 385 lbs. and had an explosive yield
of 10 Kt. They were fused for airburst or contact. All units were retired to the stockpile
by 1964.
25. The W-41 Warhead was designed for ICBM use but was cancelled in 1957.
26. The W-42 Warhead was designed for air-to-air missiles but was cancelled in 1961.
27. The W-44 Warhead was built for the Navy as an ASW (Antisubmarine warfare)
ASROC (Antisubmarine Rocket) from 1961 to 1968. There were 575 units produced.
Each weighed 170 lbs. and had an explosive yield of 10 Kt. They were fused for
hydrostatic. All units were retired by 1989.
28. The W-45 Warhead was built for the “Little John” SSM, The “Terrier” SAM ,
The MADM (Medium Range Air Defense Missile) and the “Bullpup” ASM. A total of
1700 units were produced from 1962 to 1966, (750 “Terrier”, 350 MADM, 100
“Bullpup” and 500 “Little John”). They each weighed 150 to 350 lbs. with an
explosive yield of 500 T to 15 Kt. They were fused for airburst, contact, time delay or
command. All were retired to the stockpile by 1988.
29. The W-46 Warhead was designed for the “Redstone” MRBM but was cancelled in
1958 and replaced by the W-53 for the “Titan II”.
30. The W-47 Warhead was built for the “Polaris” SLBM (Submarine Launched
Ballistic Missile) from 1960 to 1964. A total of 1,660 units were produced. Each had an
explosive yield of 600 Kt to 1.2 Mt and fused for airburst or contact. All were retired
to the stockpile by 1974.
31. The W-48 Warhead was built as an artillery shell for the 155 MM field artillery
weapon. 1,985 units were produced from 1963 to 1969. Each one weighed 118 to 128
lbs. They had an explosive yield of 72 T and were fused for mechanical time delay,
proximity, airburst or contact. All were retired by 1974.
32. The W-49 Warhead was built as an ICBM/IRBM warhead for use on the “Thor”,
“Atlas”, “Titan”, “Jupiter” missiles from 1958 to 1964. 80 units were produced. Each
weighed 1,640 to 1,680 lbs. and had an explosive yield of 1.44 Mt. They were equipped
with the PAL A trigger. All were retired to the stockpile by 1975.
33. The W-50 Warhead was built for the “Pershing” SSM and the “Nike Zeus” SAM
from 1963 to 1965. 280 units were produced. Each weighed 409 to 410 lbs. and had an
explosive yield of 60 to 400 Kt. They were fused for airburst or contact. All were
retired to the stockpile by 1991.
34. The W-51 Warhead was built as a very small spherical implosion warhead. It was
converted to the W-54 warhead in 1959.
35. The W-52 Warhead was built for the “Sergeant” SSM and had the PAL-A trigger
system. 300 units were produced from 1962 to 1966. They weighed 950 lbs. and had an
explosive yield of 200 Kt. They were fused for airburst or contact. All were retired by
1978.
36. The W-53 Warhead was built for the “Titan II” ICBM missile. 60 units were
produced from 1962 to 1963. Each weighed 6,200 lbs. and had an explosive yield of 9
Mt. They were fused for airburst or contact. All were retired by 1987.
37. The W-54 Warhead was built for the AIM-26A “Falcon” AAM. 2,000 units were
produced from 1961 to 1975. Each weighed 50 to 51 lbs. and had an explosive yield of
250 T. They were fused for contact or proximity. All were retired by 1972.
38. The MK-54 Warhead is the same as the W-54 and was built for the “Davy
Crockett” M-388 recoilless rifle projectile. There were 400 units made from the W-51
Warhead from 1961 to 1965. They weighed 50-55 lbs. and had an explosive yield of 10
to 20 T. All were retired by 1971.
39. The W-55 Warhead was built for the Navy “SUBROC” (Submarine Launched
Rocket), UUM-44A ASW weapon from 1963 to 1974. They each weighed 470 lbs. and
had an explosive yield of 202 Kt. There were 285 units produced. They were fused for
hydrostatic. All were retired by 1990.
40. The W-56 Warhead was built for the “Minuteman I and II” ICBM from 1963 to
1966. There were 1,455 units produced. Based on the W-47 design they weighed 600 to
680 lbs. with an explosive yield of 1.2 Mt. They were fused for airburst or surface
contact. All were retired to the stockpile by 1993.
41. The W-58 Warhead was built for the “Polaris” A-3 SLBM from 1964 to 1967.
1,400 units were produced. They were the first MRV (Multiple Re-Entry Vehicle)
warheads in service. Each “Polaris” A-3 missile had three warheads. They were fused
for airburst or contact. They weighed 257 lbs. and had an explosive yield of 200 Kt. All
were retired to the stockpile by 1982.
42. The W-59 Warhead was built for the “Minuteman I” ICBM and the cancelled
“Skybolt” missile. 150 units were produced from 1962 to 1963. They weighed 550 to
553 lbs. and had an explosive yield of 1 Mt. They were fused for airburst or contact.
All were retired by 1969.
43. The W-60 Warhead was designed for the “Typhoon” SAM and they were cancelled
in 1963.
44. The W-62 Warhead was built for the “Minuteman III” MK-12-RV ICBM. There
were 1,725 units built from 1970 to 1976. The Re-Entry Vehicle weighs 700 to 800 lbs.
and each individual warhead weighs 253 lbs. They have an explosive yield of 170 Kt.
They are fused for airburst or contact. 1,115 units were retired by 1980 and there are
610 units in service today.
45. The W-63 Warhead was designed as a “Neutron Bomb” for the “Lance” SRBM
and was cancelled in 1966.
46. The W-64 Warhead was designed as a “Neutron Bomb” for the “Lance” SRBM
and was cancelled in 1964.
47. The W-65 Warhead was designed for the “Sprint” ABM but was cancelled in 1968.
48. The W-66 Warhead was built for the “Sprint” ABM and is a ‘Neutron Bomb”
design. 70 units were produced from 1974 to 1975. They weighed 150 lbs. and had an
explosive yield of 1 Kt. They were fused for proximity. All were retired by 1985.
49. The W-67 Warhead was designed for the “Poseidon” SLBM and “Minuteman
III” ICBM. They were cancelled in 1967.
50. The W-68 Warhead was built for the “Poseidon III” SLBM. Each missile carried
10 Re-Entry Vehicles. 5,250 units were produced from 1970 to 1975. Each warhead
weighs 367 lbs. and has and explosive yield of 40-50 Kt. 3200 were refurbished from
1978 to 1983 and the other 2,050 were retired to the stockpile. They are fused for
airburst or contact.
51. The W-69 Warhead was built for the AGM-69A SRAM (Short Range Attack
Missile). They were built from the retired MK-61 units. 1500 units were produced from
1971 to 1976. Each unit weighs 275 lbs. and has an explosive yield of 170 to 200 Kt.
They are fused for airburst or contact. All were retired to the stockpile by 1991.
52. The W-70 Warhead was built for the “Lance” SSM and has a PAL D trigger
system. 1,280 units were produced from 1973 to 1983. They were built in several
versions and some models were “Neutron Bomb” types. They weigh 270 lbs. and have
an explosive yield of 1 to 100 Kt. They have airburst or contact fusing. 900 early
models were retired in 1992 and there are 380 model 3’s still in service.
53. The W-71 Warhead was built for the “Spartan” ABM missile and was designed to
use thermal x-rays for killing enemy re-entry vehicles. 30 units were produced from
1974 to 1975. The units weighed 2,850 lbs. and have an explosive yield of 600 T. They
were fused for airburst, contact or delay timer. All were retired by 1992.
54. The W-72 Warhead was built from the modified W-54 Warhead for the “Walleye”
AGM-62 Glide Weapon. 300 units were produced from 1970 to 1972. Each unit
weighed 825 lbs. and has an explosive yield of 600 T. The units were fused for contact
only. All were retired in 1979.
55. The W-73 Warhead was designed for the “Condor” ASM and was derived from the
MK-61. It was cancelled in 1970.
56. The W-74 Warhead was designed as a 155 MM artillery shell with a linear
implosion pure fusion core intended to replace the W-48. It was cancelled in 1973.
57. The W-75 Warhead was designed as a 203 MM artillery shell. It was cancelled in
1973.
58. The W-76 Warhead was built for the “Trident I” and “Trident II” MK-4 Re-
Entry Vehicle. Trident warheads carry 8 to 14 Re-Entry Vehicles. They were
produced from 1978 to 1987. 3,000 units were made. Each warhead weighs 363 lbs. and
has an explosive yield of 100 Kt. They are fused for airburst or contact. All of them are
still in service.
59. The W-78 Warhead was built for the “Minuteman III” MK-12A Re-Entry
Vehicle. 1,083 units were produced from 1979 to 1982. They weigh 400 to 600 lbs. and
have an explosive yield of 335 to 350 Kt. They are fused for airburst or contact. 163
units were retired and 920 are still active as part of our “Enduring Stockpile”.
60. The W-79 Warhead was built as an 8 inch artillery shell. It has a linear plutonium
implosion core and is capable of “Neutron Bomb” enhanced radiation effect. 550
units were produced from 1981 to 1986 of that number 325 were enhanced radiation
type. Each unit weighs 200 lbs. and has an explosive yield of 100 T to 1.1 Kt. They are
proximity, airburst or contact fused. All were retired in 1992.
61. The W-80-0 Warhead was built for the Navy SLCM program. 367 units were
produced from 1983 to 1990. They are equipped with the PAL-D trigger and were
derived from the B-61. They weigh 290 lbs. each and have an explosive yield of 5 to 500
Kt. They are fused for airburst or contact. All are in active service today.
62. The W-80-1 Warhead was built for the ALCM and ACM programs and all are
equipped with the PAL-D triggers. They were derived from the B-61. 1,750 units were
produced from 1981 to 1990. They each weigh 290 lbs. and have an explosive yield of 5
to 170 Kt. They are fused for airburst or contact. 350 units have been retired and
1,400 units remain in service.
63. The W-81 Warhead was designed for the Navy as the SM-SAM warhead. They were
cancelled in 1986.
64. The W-82 Warhead was designed as a 155 MM artillery shell. They were cancelled
in 1990.
65. The W-83 Warhead was designed for the GLCM program but was cancelled in
1988 because of the INF treaty.
66. The W-84 Warhead was built for the BGM-109G “Gryphon” GLCM program.
They are equipped with PAL-F triggers. 350 units were produced from 1983 to 1984.
Each unit weighs 388 lbs. and has an explosive yield of 0.2 to 150 Kt. They are fused for
airburst or contact. They are currently in our “Inactive Stockpile”.
67. The W-85 Warhead “Alternate Image” was built for the “Pershing II” SSM.
They were equipped with PAL-F triggers. 120 units were produced from 1983 to 1986.
They weigh 880 lbs. and have an explosive yield of 5 to 80 Kt. They had fusing for
airburst or contact. All of them were retired by 1991 and were recycled into the B-61
Model 10 Bombs.
68. The W-86 Warhead was designed as an “Earth Penetrating Warhead” for the
“Pershing II” SSM. The program was cancelled in 1980.
69. The W-87 Warhead was built for the “Peacekeeper” (MX) ICBM/MK-21 Re-
Entry Vehicle. It is a thermonuclear weapon and the missile carries 10 RV’s in the nose.
525 were produced from 1986 to 1989. Each weighs 500 to 600 lbs. and has an explosive
yield of 300 to 475 Kt. They are fused for timer, proximity, airburst or contact. When the
MX missile program was shut down these warheads were placed on “Minuteman
III” ICBM’s. They remain in active service at this writing.
70. The W-88 Warhead was built for the “Trident II” MK-5 Re-entry Vehicle. 400
units were produced from 1988 to 1989. Each unit weighs 800 lbs. and has an explosive
yield of 475 Kt. They are fused for timer, proximity, airburst or contact. All 400 units
are in active service at this writing.
71. The W-89 Warhead was designed for the SRAM II (Short Range Attack Missile)
program. They were cancelled in 1991.
72. The W-91 Warhead was designed for the Tactical version of the SRAM but they
were cancelled in 1991.
Chapter 8:
Our Missiles.
1. “Pershing I”, (Army) had 377 units in service on mobile launchers from 1962 to
1964. Each missile carried one W-50 Warhead. They were solid fueled and they had a
range of 460 miles. They were replaced by the Pershing 1A. All batteries of Pershing
models were stationed in West Germany and South Korea.
2. “Pershing 1A”, (Army) had 377 units in service on mobile launchers from 1969 to
1975. Each missile carried one W-50 Warhead, They were solid fueled and had a range
of 500 miles. They were replaced by the Pershing II.
3. “Pershing II”, (Army) had 380 units in service on mobile launchers from 1984 to
1988. Each missile carried one W-85 Warhead. They were solid fueled and had a range
of 900 miles. They were all outlawed by the Salt II treaty and destroyed in 1991.
4. PGM-17 or “Thor” IRBM, were deployed in the UK by the United States from 1959
to 1963. They had a 1,750 mile range and carried a MK-2 and later with the W-46
Warhead and fueled by Liquid Oxygen and Kerosene. 224 units were produced and 145
were used as satellite launch vehicles.
5. PGM-19 or “Jupiter” IRBM, 45 units were deployed in Italy and Turkey from 1961
to 1963. They had a 1,500 mile range and carried the W-49 warhead. They were fueled
with liquid oxygen. The placement of Jupiter missiles in Turkey was one of the sparks of
the Cuban missile crisis from the Soviet point of view.
1. “Polaris A1”, (Navy) had 80 units deployed on the 5 George Washington Class
SSBN (16 missile tubes) Submarines from 1959 to 1972. Each missile had one W-47
Warhead, and a 1000 mile range. The boats were retrofitted with Polaris A3 missiles
from 1966 to 1982.
2. “Polaris A2”, (Navy) had 208 units were deployed on the 5 Ethan Allen Class SSBN
(16 missile tubes) Submarines from 1961 to 1986 and on 8 of the 9 Lafayette Class
boats from 1964 to 1972. Each missile had one W-47 Warhead, and a 1,500 mile range.
The boats were retrofitted with the Polaris A-3 missiles from 1970 to 1981.
3. “Polaris A3”, (Navy) had 336 units were deployed on the 9 Lafayette class SSBN
(16 missile tubes) Submarines from 1963 to 1990, on the 10 James Madison Class
boats from 1964 t0 1970 and on the 12 Benjamin Franklin Class boats from 1966 to
1972. Each missile had 3 MIRV W-58 warheads, and a 2,500 mile range. The boats
were retrofitted with Poseidon C3 missiles from 1975 to 1990.
LATE MODEL SLBM’s
4. “Poseidon C3”, (Navy) had 480 units were deployed on the 10 James Madison
Class (16 missile tubes) Submarines from 1970 to 1992, the 9 Lafayette Class boats
from 1976 to 1992 and the 12 Benjamin Franklin Class from 1974to 1991. The C3
had a hardened re-entry vehicle with 3 MIRV W-58 warheads and a 2,700 mile range.
11. “Trident 1-C4”, (Navy) had 96 units were deployed on 6 of the Benjamin
Franklin Class (16 missile tubes) boats from 1979 to 1990 when the Benjamin
Franklin boats were decommissioned. There are currently 192 units deployed on 8 of
the Ohio SSBN Class (24 missile tubes) from 1979 to present. Each Trident 1 C4
missile has two solid fuel stages and has eight independently targetable reentry
vehicles which are W-76 Warheads. The missile has a range of 4,600 miles.
12. “Trident II-D5”, (Navy) has 336 units are deployed on 14 of the new Ohio Class
SSBN (24 missile tubes) submarines from 1990 to present. Each Trident II D5 missile
is has two solid fuel stages and has eight independently targetable reentry vehicles
which are W-88 Warheads. The missile has a range of 7,000 miles.
1. MGM-5 or “Corporal” (Army), 1100 built from 1952-63. They were liquid fueled
and had a range of 130 miles at 2,200 MPH. They could carry one W-7 Warhead. They
were phased out in favor of the MGM-29 “Sargeant”.
2. MGM-29 or “Sargeant.” (Army) had 500 units produced from 1963 to 1975. They
were solid fueled and could deliver a W-52 Warhead 140 miles at a speed of 2,000
MPH.
3. MGM-18 or “Lacrosse”, (Army) had over 100 missiles in eight battalions of
batteries from 1956 to 1964 deployed in Europe and South Korea. The missile carried
one W-40 Warhead and had a range of 10 miles. They were phased out due to technical
difficulties.
4. MGM-52 or “Lance” (Army) had 2,100 produced from 1965 to 1978. They could
carry a W-70 Warhead over a distance of 75 miles at a speed of 2,000 MPH.
Nuclear Warhead Capable SAM (Surface to Air Missiles).
1. MIM-14 “Nike Hercules”, (Army) had 134 batteries of four missiles each with a
spare guarding 30 U. S. cities from 1958 to 1974. (I saw the battery on an island in
Boston harbor near Quincy Mass. in 1972) They were capable of intercepting incoming
ballistic missiles 20 miles above the earth and for a range of 100 miles. They reached
a top speed of 3,000 MPH very quickly. (To intercept incoming ICBM traveling at 8,000
MPH) They carried one W-31 Warhead and later a W-71 Warhead.
2. SAM-N-6 or “Talos”, (Navy) had an unpublished number in service from 1959 to
1963. They were solid fueled and could carry a W-30 Warhead for a distance of 100
miles at a speed of 1,600 MPH. They were re-designated as RIM-8 Talos in 1963 and
served until 1979 as a ship borne SAM.
3. IM-99A or “Bomarc” (USAF), 700 built from 1960 to 1965. The Bomarc was the
only interceptor missile operated by the Air Force. It was solid fueled and had a range of
440 miles at a speed of 1,800 MPH. It carried one W-40 Warhead.
1. AGM-12 or “Bullpup” (Navy and Air Force), had a large supply of these solid
fueled weapons capable of carrying one W-45 Warhead for a distance of 10 miles at a
speed of 1,000 MPH.
2. The AGM-48 or “Skybolt” (Air Force) built 100 units from 1959 to 1963. They
were solid fueled and meant to be deployed on the B-52 bomber. They carried one W-59
Warhead for a distance of 300 miles at a speed of 9,500 MPH.
AIR LAUNCHED NUCLEAR CAPABLE CRUISE MISSILES
or ALCM.
1. AGM-86A/86B OR “ALCM” is the current stand off nuclear cruise missile which is
delivered to its’ launch point via one of our B-52 Air Force bombers. If you ever
wondered why B-52’s are still in operation these missiles are the reason. These missiles
are capable of delivering a nuclear warhead 1,500 miles and putting it on target with a
high degree of accuracy.
Further development of Air to Ground Missiles continues at a rapid pace. Many new
systems require the ability to precisely strike a target with a penetrating type weapon in
the case of hardened structures. Newer missiles are faster and more accurate do to the
refinement of guidance systems and the updating of computer components allowing the
missile guidance system to hold and process more target information and to make course
corrections in nanoseconds. During the Cold War we out spent the Soviets and in the end
spent them into the ground. The arms race bankrupted the Soviet economy in the late
eighties because we outspent them at a rate of two to one with a much higher reliability
factor! Do you actually believe we needed over twenty thousand gravity type nuclear
weapons to defeat the soviet bloc? I don’t think so. Remember what Eisenhower said near
the end of his term as President. “Beware of the military industrial complex”. He knew
that once the military and the defense industry became joined at the hip we would be off
on a juggernaut of new and improved weapons systems every time a marketing scheme
was developed in a sales strategy meeting. I do know that many of these later developed
bombs were the recycled components of older weapons with new and improved
electronics and trigger mechanisms. So in reality many of the older weapons components
were stockpiled and then declared obsolete and re installed in newer weapons. The
stockpiling of nuclear weapons was a cornerstone of the philosophy of MAD (Mutually
Assured Destruction). The only thing that escaped logic was that the stockpiling
accounted for close to 10,000 weapons at any given time in history but there were only
enough aircraft in the U. S. Military inventory to deliver 200 to 300 weapons at any given
time.
How would the massive amount of stockpiled weapons get delivered? Many of the first
strike aircraft in the air or on the ground would have been shot down by anti aircraft
missiles, some would run out of fuel, many bases in the U. S. would have been destroyed
by retaliation and many aircraft would get lost and go down in unfriendly territory due to
the effects of EMP (electromagnetic pulse). The stockpiling of that many weapons just
defies logic.
Chapter 9:
Highly enriched fuel rod bundles have a long useful life enabling ships to go un-refueled
for long periods of time. Some Naval Reactors range in size up to 550 Megawatts on our
larger submarines.
The first nuclear powered naval vessel in the world was the U. S. Submarine Nautilus
(SSN-571) which got underway on nuclear power in 1955 opening the way for large
numbers of naval ships to follow.
NAVAL REACTORS
Naval Reactors come in many shapes and power capacities (megawatts). At the outset of
the nuclear propulsion program in the 1950’s it was apparent that naval reactors had to be
small, powerful and safe to operate. The reactors that were developed were designated by
a three character alpha numeric code.
Submarine Reactor Models:
Ship Type Generation Manufacturer
S1C Reactor, or S=Submarine, 1=First Generation, C=Combustion Engineering Corp.
Prototype reactor used as test bed.
S1G Reactor, or S=Submarine, 1=First Generation, G=Genera Electric Corp.
Not installed in a submarine but shelved due to hazards of liquid sodium coolant system.
S1W Reactor, or S=Submarine, 1=First Generation, W=Westinghouse Corp.
Prototype not installed. The National Nuclear Test Station in Arco Idaho built it.
S2C Reactor, one was installed in “Tullibee” (SSN-597) as part of a very quiet
turboelectric power plant.
S2G Reactor, one was installed in the “Seawolf” (SSN-575) and was a liquid-sodium
cooled reactor.
S2W Reactor, one was installed in the “Nautilus” (SSN-571) and was a pressurized
water cooled reactor.
S2Wa Reactor, or S=Submarine, 2=Second Generation, W=Westinghouse Corp.
a=modified. It replaced the S2G in the “Seawolf” (SSN-575) a unique boat.
S3G Reactor, two were installed in the “Triton” (SSN-586) which as a large radar picket
Submarine.
S3W Reactor, three were installed as a vertical “U” tube steam plant designs in the
“Halibut” (SSN-587), “Skate” (SSN-578) and the “Sargo” (SSN 583) boats.
S4G Reactor, one replaced the S3G on the “Triton” (SSN-586) a unique boat.
S4W Reactor, two were installed in the “Swordfish” (SSN-579) and “Seadragon” (SSN-
584) boats.
S5G Reactor, one was installed in the “Narwhal” (SSN-671) a unique boat. It was a large
reactor that developed 90 megawatts.
S5W Reactor, were installed in many submarines:
6 for the “Skipjack” (SSN-585) Class boats.
5 for the “George Washington” (SSBN-598) Class boats.
14 for the “Thresher” “Permit” (SSN-593/594) Class boats.
5 for the “Ethan Allen” (SSBN-608) Class boats.
9 for the “Lafayette” (SSBN-616), Class boats.
8 for the “James Madison” (SSBN-627), Class boats.
12 for the “Benjamin Franklin” (SSBN-640), Class boats.
37 for the “Sturgeon” (SSN-637), Class boats.
1 for the “Parche” (SSN-683), a unique boat.
1 for the “Glenard P. Lipscomb” (SSN-685), a unique boat.
S6G Reactor, 62 were installed in the “Los Angeles” (SSN-688), Class boats.
S6W Reactor, 3 were installed in the “Seawolf” (SSN-21), Class boats.
S7G Reactor, was a land based prototype not installed in boats.
S8G Reactor, 18 were installed in the “Ohio” (SSBN-726), Class boats.
S9G Reactor, 9 have been installed in the “Virginia” (SSN-744), Class boats now
building with a total of 17 planned.
Blast Effect
The blast of a thermonuclear device is broken down into several percentages of energy
released:
40-50% of total energy is spent in the blast.
30-50% is thermal radiation (radiated heat).
5% is ionizing radiation (Alpha, Beta, Gamma and X-rays are lethal to all living tissue).
5-10% is residual radiation (dust and debris scattered upward and ionized then absorbed
by matter).
A factor of a nuclear detonation is the location in which it explodes. Underwater
detonations are less harmful to the atmosphere than an above ground or a contact
explosion. Nuclear weapons are effective in three ways;
Blast Effect=destroys structures and equipment.
Thermal Radiation=even water heated to the temperature of the Sun will burn.
X-Rays
X-Rays are similar in character to Gamma Rays as they are both deep penetrating and
harmful to all living tissue. High doses of X-rays are just as harmful as Gamma Ray
exposure. The common type of X-rays used to peer into our bodies by the medical
establishment is a very miniscule amount and the shutter is opened only for a
microsecond to allow the rays to pass through your body or teeth. X-Rays emitted from
nuclear explosions are accompanied by Beta, Gamma, and Alpha Radiation and the
duration of exposure is much more long lived so the damage is more pronounced.
Beta Rays
Beta radiation is most commonly found in fallout particles. It is moderately penetrating
and if all exposed skin and clothing is laundered it will remove 95% of Beta radiation
thus reducing lethality. If exposure is lengthy and sufficient it will result in radiations
sickness. Beta Radiation is produced along with Gamma, Alpha and X-ray radiation in a
nuclear explosion.
Alpha Radiation
Alpha Radiation is not absorbed through the skin. It is only harmful is swallowed,
breathed in or comes in contact with an open wound. It is the least lethal of all radiation
as it cannot penetrate most common materials. If you are contacted by fallout particles a
simple shower will remove 95% of all Alpha radiation. It is produced along with Beta,
Gamma and X-rays in a nuclear explosion.
According U. S. Air Force and Navy press releases, we have a few “Incidents” or
“Broken Arrows” in our past.
According to the U. S. Department of Defense Directive number 5230.16 certified
current in 2003 and the U. S. Air Force Operation Reporting System policy 10-206 the
following terminology will be used in promulgating public information releases to the
media.
“Pinnacle”
An incident that denotes interest to the National Command Authority, and Department of
Defense in that it;
• Generates a higher level of military action.
• Causes a national reaction.
• Affects international relationships.
• Causes immediate widespread coverage in the news media.
• Is clearly against the national interest.
• Affects current national policy.
All of the following official U. S. Government Public Information reporting terms are
classified as “Pinnacle” with the exception of “Bent Spear”, “Faded Giant” and “Dull
Sword”.
“Bent Spear”
Refers to nuclear weapons incidents that are of significant interest but are not recognized
as “Pinnacle-Nucflash” or “pinnacle-Broken Arrow”.
“PINNACLE-Broken Arrow”
An accidental event that involves nuclear weapons or nuclear weapon components which
does not create the risk of nuclear war in that it;
• Involves a nuclear detonation.
• Involves a Non-Nuclear detonation or burning of nuclear weapon material.
• Radioactive contamination.
• Jettisoning of a nuclear weapon or nuclear weapon component.
• A public hazard either actual or implied.
“Pinnacle-Nucflash”
This refers to detonation or possible detonation of a nuclear weapon which creates a risk
of an outbreak of nuclear war. Events which may be classified Nucflash may include:
• Accidental, unauthorized, or unexplained nuclear detonation or possible
detonation.
• Accidental or unauthorized launch of a nuclear-armed or nuclear-capable missile
in the direction or, or having the capability to reach another nuclear-capable
country.
• Unauthorized flight of, or deviation from, an approved flight plan by a nuclear
armed or nuclear-capable aircraft with the capability to penetrate the airspace of
another nuclear-capable country.
• Detection of unidentified objects by a missile warning system or interference
(experienced by such a system or related communications) that appears
threatening and could create risk of nuclear war.
“Pinnacle-Emergency Disablement”
• Refers to operations involving the emergency destruction of nuclear weapons.
“Pinnacle-Emergency Evacuation”
• Refers to operations involving the emergency evacuation of nuclear weapons.
“Pinnacle-Empty Quiver”
• Refers to the seizure, theft, or loss of a nuclear weapon or nuclear component.
“Faded Giant”
• Refers to an event involving a nuclear reactor or other radiological accident,
which does not involve nuclear weapons.
“Dull Sword”
• Is an Air Force reporting term that marks reports of minor incident involving
nuclear weapons, components or systems, or which could impair their
deployment. This could include actions involving vehicles capable of carrying
nuclear weapons but with no nuclear weapons on board at the time of the
accident.
In retrospect there have been reported nuclear weapons accidents in our nuclear history
involving mechanical malfunctions, aircraft crashes and missiles gone awry.
We all know that technology has it’s weak points as the following random thoughts
postulate. As with any complex mechanism there are malfunctions, errors, glitches and
failures. If you own a computer, a car, an air conditioner or any other such device then
you understand that things happen. Example; The SS titanic was touted as unsinkable.
The Hubble telescope was touted as a perfect device for viewing the universe. So you see
my point here. If anything can go wrong it will at the worst possible moment. I would
characterize carrying nuclear weapons in aircraft as an accident waiting to happen. The
military code name for a lost nuclear weapon is “Broken Arrow”! The world has had its
share of them.
Here is the Published list:
1. On February 13, 1950 a U. S Air Force B-36 Bomber enroute from Eielson AFB
near Fairbanks Alaska to Carswell AFB near Fort Worth Texas while on a simulated
combat mission over the Pacific west of British Columbia Canada developed a
catastrophic mechanical problem eventually causing the aircraft to crash. Prior to
crashing on Vancouver Island the nuclear weapon the Bomber was carrying was
jettisoned (dropped) over the Pacific Ocean from a height of 8,000 feet. The high
explosive implosion trigger charge was seen to detonate on contact with the water but
since the weapon was not armed with a nuclear capsule there was no nuclear detonation.
This was the first “Dirty Bomb”. The bomb nor any parts were never recovered.
2. On April 11, 1950 at 9:38 PM a B-29 Bomber carrying a nuke crashed into a
mountain near Manzano New Mexico after takeoff from Kirtland AFB in New Mexico.
The bomb was destroyed in the crash but did not detonate because the detonator was not
installed. Whew!
3. On July 13, 1950 a B-50 Bomber from Biggs AFB near El Paso Texas on a flight to
Ohio flew into the ground at Lebanon Ohio destroying the nuclear weapon on board but it
did not have a nuclear detonator installed.
4. On August 4, 1950 at what is now Travis AFB an Air Force B-29 crashed with an
unarmed nuclear weapon aboard. The resulting detonation of the conventional explosive
killed nineteen and injured over 60 people in a trailer park nearby as well as destroying
the trailer park. This was the second “Dirty Bomb”.
5. On November 10, 1950 a B-50 flying over the Pacific jettisoned a nuclear weapon
which was destroyed by the conventional explosive but no nuclear detonator was
installed. This was the third “Dirty Bomb”.
6. On March 10, 1956 over the Mediterranean Sea, a flight of four B-47’s from
McDill AFB in Florida on simulated combat mission lost one aircraft in cloud cover with
no trace of the two nuclear trigger capsules on board ever being found. No bombs were
on the aircraft.
7. On July 27, 1956 a U. S. Air Force Bomber crashed into a storage bunker containing
3 each Mark 6 Nuclear Weapons at Lakenheath RAF base in the United Kingdom.
The fire damaged the bombs but they did not detonate. The nuclear explosion would
have rendered most of the British Isles uninhabitable had all three weapons
detonated!
8. On March 10, 1957 an Air Force B-47 in route to Europe with two nuclear weapon
trigger capsules aboard vanishes over the Atlantic Ocean. No traces were ever found.
9. On May 22, 1957 a B-36 ferrying a nuclear weapon from Biggs AFB Texas to
Kirtland AFB in New Mexico mistakenly dropped the bomb over the desert in New
Mexico. The high explosive trigger charge detonated and completely destroyed the
bomb casing making a crater 25 feet in diameter and 12 feet deep. The radiation was
measured as significant inside the crater but negligible outside the crater. The nuclear
trigger capsules had not been inserted so there was no nuclear detonation. This was the
fourth “Dirty Bomb”!
10. On July 26, 1957 an Air Force C-124 transport looses power in two of its four
engines and jettisons two nuclear weapons in an undisclosed area of the Atlantic
Ocean off the East Coast of the United States. They have never been found!
11. On January 31, 1958 A B-47 with one nuclear weapon on board crashed on a
runway at an Air Force Base in Europe burning for seven hours and contamination was
minimal. No explosion occurred.
12. “The Tybee Bomb” On February 5, 1958 an Air Force F-86 fighter collides with
an Air Force B-47 strategic bomber at 3:38 AM over the Atlantic Ocean near Savannah
Georgia. The F-86 crashes in the ocean after the pilot ejects safely. The B-47 is
damaged and attempts to land at Hunter Air Force Base in Georgia but the crew is fearful
of a crash that may set off the MK 15, 1 megaton bomb contained in the bomb bay. A
decision is made to jettison the device. The bomb is dropped into the area of Tybee
Island Georgia near Savannah. (See the Prologue of this book) The official report on
the crash issued b the Air Force could not determine if the weapon had the trigger
mechanism installed or not. It has never been found!
13. On March 11, 1958, A B-47 accidentally dropped a nuclear weapon over Mars
Bluff South Carolina The conventional high explosive trigger detonated and left a
crater 75 feet wide and 35 feet deep. Nuclear material was scattered over a wide
area. The Fifth “Dirty Bomb”!
14. On November 4, 1958, A B-47 catches fire on take off and crashes. One
crewmember is killed and the high explosive trigger device explodes in the fire scattering
nuclear material and causing a crater 35 feet in diameter. The Sixth “Dirty Bomb”!
15. On November 4, 1958, at Dyess AFB in Abilene Texas a B-47 catches fire on
takeoff, the crew ejects but one is killed. The aircraft crashes with one nuclear weapon
aboard and the conventional explosive detonates leaving a crater and contamination over
a large area. The Seventh “Dirty Bomb”.
16. On November 26, 1958 at Chenault AFB Louisiana a B-47 catches fire on the
ground destroying the nuclear weapon aboard but does not detonate the conventional
explosive. Contamination was minimal.
17. On January 24, 1961 a B-52 carrying two each 24 megaton weapons crashes near
Goldsboro North Carolina. After the ensuing fire is extinguished it is discovered that on
one bomb five of the six fail safe switches had failed leaving only one to prevent nuclear
detonation. If it had detonated the explosion would have been 1,800 times more
powerful than the Hiroshima bomb. Of course, the Air Force claims there were no
nuclear detonators aboard either bomb. But in the aftermath of this incident all new
safety protocols were implemented along with a redesigned fail safe switch system
for all U. S. nuclear weapons.
18. On March 14, 1961 a B-52 from Mather AFB near Sacramento California
experienced a rapid depressurization of the crew cabin and started a rapid descent over
Yuba City California. During the maneuvering excess fuel was expended and a tanker
was called for but did not arrive in time and the all the crew except Bomber was
abandoned at 10,000 feet by the pilot who rode it down to 4,000 feet steering it away
from population centers. The aircraft crashed in a remote area. Both weapons on board
were damaged but the new safety devices prevented any explosion.
19. On June 4, 1962, a Thor ICBM on a test flight over the Pacific range is detonated
due to a malfunction and a nuclear warhead falls into the Pacific.
20. On June 20, 1962, another Thor ICBM malfunctions and blows up dropping the
nuclear warhead into the Pacific.
21. On April 10, 1965 a nuclear weapon armed Navy A-4 Bomber rolls off the U. S.
Aircraft Carrier Ticonderoga and sinks in 16,000 feet of water near Japan.
22. On January 17, 1966, a B-52 Bomber is involved in a midair collision over
Palomares Spain and drops four nuclear weapons. The conventional explosive triggers
detonate on two of the devices and scatters radioactive material over a wide area. The
Eighth and Ninth “Dirty Bombs”!
23. On January 21, 1968, a B-52 from Plattsburg AFB New York crashes while
attempting an emergency landing at Thule Air Force Base, Greenland. The conventional
explosive charges in the four nuclear weapons aboard detonate spreading radiation over a
36 square mile area. The Tenth, Eleventh, Twelfth and Thirteenth “Dirty Bombs”!
24. On September 20, 1980 an Air Force Missile Technician drops a wrench which
damaged a fuel line on a Titan-II ICBM in its silo. The resulting fire and explosion
throws off the 740 ton blast door on top of the silo and propels the 9 megaton
warhead 600 feet into the air killing one and injuring 21.
25. August 2006, The U. S. Air Force shipped Minuteman III nuclear warhead triggers to
Taiwan instead of helicopter parts.
26. August 2007, The U. S. Air Force lost track of 6 nuclear cruise missile warheads for
36 hours. They were found on a B-52 parked in a regular security area of an Air Force
Base in Louisiana.
The above list is only the United States nuclear accidents that were, made public. And, as
you can see, we got better at nuclear weapon safety with experience. 1958 was a bad year
for so called accidents. I did not mention the numerous nuclear accidents the Russians
have had over the years because the information on them is sparse and I want to be as
factual as possible. There were many disasters at sea involving nuclear powered
submarines with heavy loss of life. The only silver lining in that cloud is that the reactors
and possible nuclear tipped missiles and torpedoes are buried under miles of sea water
and out of reach of most salvage attempts. Hopefully the reactors were “Scrammed” (shut
down).
The Russians have had some spectacular submarine disasters and of course they neither
confirm nor deny the presence of nuclear weapons on their subs.
There have been numerous unreported accidents involving dropped nuclear weapons or
missiles misfiring on Navy ships. I have only reported what can be confirmed through
news sources and official press releases.
Chapter 12:
In the U. S. Navy and Marine Corps Awards Manual, personnel in service in the Cuban
Quarantine Operation between January 3rd, 1961 and October 23rd, 1962 were awarded
the “Navy Expeditionary Medal” and the “Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal” was
authorized for all branches serving in the Cuban Quarantine from October 24th, 1962
through December 31st, 1962. The area of these operations was described as the area
between 12 degrees North Latitude to 28 degrees North Latitude and from 66 degrees to
84 degrees West Longitude or Cuban Littoral Waters. People risked their lives during this
time and the United States risked its’ very existence. I grew up in Mayport Florida which
is just outside the fence of Naval Station Mayport. My Father was a Supervisor in the
DOD Security Department there. I remember as a boy watching military cargo aircraft
unloading mysterious containers at the farthest end of the main runway out of sight of
prying eyes. I saw numerous combat armed Marines surrounding the area as well as DOD
security personnel and when the containers were loaded onto trucks the entire convoy
moved slowly with a heavily armed escort to the piers to load the containers onto Navy
ships. This scene was played out every time a fleet or aircraft carrier group was about to
sail and it did not take a genius to figure out that they were loading. This was
commonplace in the sixties at the height of the cold war. The Soviet leadership under
Premier Kruschiev was belligerent and provoked us at every turn so it would have been
foolish for our government to put its military assets in harm’s way without significant
nuclear strike capability. After all, we knew the soviets were trying to establish a base in
the Western Hemisphere (historically Cuba was first and then Granada and now
Venezuela) from where to threaten us just as we were threatening them from Europe
(Turkey, Italy and the Med) with out tactical and intermediate range missiles.
A sobering thought was postulated in the 1980’s before the Soviet Union broke up by
writer Oskar Morgenstern in his book, “The Question of National Defense”.
“Some day there will be an accidental explosion of a nuclear weapon, a pure accident,
which has nothing whatsoever to do with military or political plans, intentions, or
operations. The human mind cannot construct something that is infallible. Accordingly,
the laws of probability virtually guarantee such an accident—not because the Soviet
Union is relaxing any of the conscientious precautions designed to prevent one, or
because the Soviet Union is necessarily getting more careless with warheads, but simply
because sheer numbers of weapons are increasing….Nuclear weapons will surely spread
throughout the world. They may become available in international trade; even that is not
to be excluded. With thousands of nuclear weapons in existence, the danger of a nuclear
accident in the world is unquestionably increasing”.
Morgenstern’s scenario is sobering enough, but the present global political climate is so
unstable I don’t sleep as well as I used to knowing Pakistan and India are nuclear armed
and that there are nukes on the black market for sale and Iran would do anything to be
able to obliterate Israel. I worry that some terrorist group will get their hands on one or
more and use them against us. Some enterprising group could just find the nuclear
weapons we have lost and use them against us. I know our own government can’t find
them but a well funded effort with the right equipment could and have a very potent
weapon to use against us if they were successful. We can build a space station and send
robots to Mars but we can’t find a few lousy nuclear weapons we lost! Go figure. Now
that the whole world knows about our lost nukes thanks to satellite TV, I am as frightened
now as I was back in the military when I was briefed on how we came so very close to
nuclear war in 1962. I did not appreciate the seriousness of the Cuban Missile Crisis then,
but I do now!
In the fall of 1962 I was attending sophomore classes at Duncan U. Fletcher High School
in Jacksonville Beach, Florida. At the age of fifteen I was into football, girls and all
things military. The nation was in a dither that fall because of the buildup of naval forces
for the proposed invasion of Cuba. My mother was the Postmaster for the local Mayport
post office which handled all of the Navy mail.
As I grew up near Mayport Naval Station I was enthralled by its’ many fascinating
aspects. Having been raised in the area I saw the naval base grow and in 1962 it was a
very busy place on normal days. When the Cuban Missile crisis heated up to a boil it was
pure organized chaos. Being 15 and big for my age I was allowed to roam in many areas
where normal civilians couldn’t go due to my familiarity with everyone in DOD Security.
The building pressure of the Blockade and Missile crisis had been the topic of
conversation all over the neighborhood and the Nation. In Tom Hightower’s Barber Shop
between 2nd Avenue and 3rd Avenue North on 1st Street in Jacksonville Beach the men
were all speaking in reverent tones of our military might which was evident on the ocean
nearby. I counted so many military vehicles on the roads I lost count and became
disinterested. While doing my research for this book I found Department of Defense
documents which listed 232 U. S. Navy ships that took an active part in the build up to
and the actual blockade of the Island Nation of Cuba.
The Navy was the principle player in our military efforts due to Cuba being surrounded
by water.
The seriousness of the situation can be seen in the following list of vessels assigned to the
crisis by the Department of Defense.
Aircraft Carriers: 11
Crusiers: 12
Destroyers: 87
Destroyer Escorts: 18
Amphibious Landing Ships: 28
Tankers: 11
Ammunition Ships: 7
Troop Transports: 12
Supply Ships: 15
Command & Control Ships: 4
Mine Sweepers: 7
Submarines: 20
There were 8,000 U. S. Marines on those ships ready to land in Cuba. There were 12,000
Army Airborne troops ready to parachute into Cuba and three divisions (18,000 troops) of
reserve troops from various infantry and armor brigades standing by at various nearby
locations. The Florida Keys were packed with military hardware and troops ready for a
full scale invasion. My Aunt lived in Marathon in the Keys and had a “Hawk” anti
aircraft missile battery placed in her business parking lot.
I remember waking up one morning in November to find tanks and military trucks parked
up and down Palmer Street in front of my house. In the vacant lot next door were rows of
tents with troops milling about eating from C-ration cans. I went to Atlantic Beach with
my Mom to run errands and remember seeing Navy ships anchored offshore in the
Atlantic as far as I could see. I counted many aircraft carriers among all the anchored
ships plus the four that were moored to Mayport Naval Station piers. The air was filled
with helicopters and fixed wing aircraft of all shapes and sizes. The civilian airports were
packed as well having been commandeered for military aircraft parking areas. There were
military convoys on all the main roads heading in different directions.
I remember climbing the sand hill next to the old Mayport Lighthouse and it looked like
there were dozens of cruisers and destroyers plus assorted auxiliary ships docked in the
base along with the aircraft carriers.
At 15 I didn’t understand the implications of all that military power. I thought it was very
cool but did not understand at the time that we were one mistake away from nuclear
annihilation! In hindsight I did think we were going to war but at that age I just couldn’t
grasp the implications. As I write this now I have the luxury of the accumulated
knowledge that I have gleaned from various sources. All of which indicate that I should
have been terrified. Our government had been making moves against the Castro regime
and against the Soviet Union that were truly provocative in anyone’s view. The Cuban
Missile crisis was the culmination of the moves and countermoves executed by the Soviet
government and our government. It all started when Castro overthrew Cuban President
Fulgencio Batista. Batista gave up the reins of power in Cuba on January 1st, 1959 by
ceremonially turning over the government of Cuba to the Council of Ministers.
Shortly thereafter Batista and his family boarded a plane to the Dominican Republic and
safety. At that moment Fidel Castro was the leader of the Cuban people. Castro had been
fighting the U. S. backed and Mafia financed government of Batista for many years.
In 1953 Castro and his merry band of revolutionaries were captured and put in prison for
their part in a raid on a Cuban Army barracks. Castro grew popular in prison and when he
got out he was heralded as the savior of the Cuban people.
The popularity of Castro grew so much there were many people in the U. S. who thought
he was the answer to the corruption in the Batista government. There are still many
misguided folks in America who think he is a godsend and not the butcher he really is.
The adage of “One mans’ terrorist is another mans’ patriot” comes to mind. Once Castro
took over he started to turn against American interests in Cuba. He publicly aligned his
government with the Soviet Union. The American populace became concerned about a
communist regime so close to our shores and making itself a thorn in our side. President
Eisenhower quietly set in motion a CIA operation to train and equip the Cuban refugees
who came to America to escape Castro’s regime as guerrilla fighters charged with
overthrowing him and his government.
This group was known as “Alpha 66”. When President Kennedy was elected in
November of 1960 the Bay of Pigs invasion was already well along in the planning stages
at Foggy Bottom (CIA HQ in Langley VA). Kennedy inherited it from the Eisenhower
administration and the CIA. Eisenhower saw to it that Kennedy was briefed on the
“Black Op” that would later be called the “Bay of Pigs”!
There had been no love lost between the Kennedy campaign and the Eisenhower
administration during the 1959 presidential campaign. One of Kennedy’s campaign
platforms was a widely touted “Missile Gap” as he called it between the U. S. and the
Soviet Union. President Eisenhower knew there was no such thing as a “Missile Gap” but
because of national security concerns he couldn’t make the number of nuclear arms
possessed by each country a matter of public knowledge. Eisenhower stewed over the
“young whippersnapper” as he referred to JFK in private. As he was getting ready to
leave office Ike said sarcastically,
“We have a new genius in our midst, who is incapable of making any mistakes and
therefore deserving of no criticism whatsoever”! Ike once described the loss of that
election as his own greatest defeat.
In retrospect I think the incoming Kennedy administration was inexperienced and ill
equipped to handle such a time bomb as was the global political scene at the time. Soviet
Premier Kruschiev knew this and was intent to challenge the neophyte Kennedy in the
game of global domination.
The presence of Soviet Missiles in Cuba had the potential to be the trigger that would
cause a nuclear war that would end life as we knew it and the handling of such a delicate
situation should not be left in the lap of an administration still wet behind the ears. Many
foreign policy blunders were made and weakness on our part was perceived by the Soviet
leadership.
In my opinion, we are all lucky we survived! International mischief was afoot from
March of 1960 on as the CIA planned operations against Cuba. The seed had been sown
for a series of events which when seen in hind sight were guaranteed to provoke a
response of deadly seriousness from the soviets.
Move and counter move were enacted across Europe, Africa and South America as we
and the Soviets sparred. All it would have taken would have been a mistake made on
either side that would have been seen as a first strike by the other side!
I don’t think the average American could ever grasp how close we came in that time
frame to all out nuclear war with an adversary almost as powerful as we were. It would
have meant the end of all planetary life as we knew it.
Thank God someone blinked!
Chapter 13:
Our Testing.
At the outset of the nuclear arms race from 1945 to 1949 the United States tested 6
nuclear weapons and we used two on the Japanese. The Soviets during this time frame
tested only one. By the 1960 to 1969 time frame we were testing 42.8 nuclear weapons
per year for a total of 428 in that decade. They were conducted mostly in Nevada, New
Mexico, the South Pacific and underground. There are three distinct types of nuclear
weapons tests:
Atmospheric, where the weapon detonates above ground.
Underground, where the weapon detonates under ground.
Underwater, where the weapon detonates under water.
The Soviets tested 232, the UK tested 5, France tested 31 and China tested 10.
The decade of 1960 to 1969 was the most prolific testing period in history. Some tests
were performed off of South Africa but the number and yield cannot be confirmed.
We did our last testing in the 1990 to 1999 period and haven’t tested any since. The
Russians tested one in the 90’s. The new kids on the block India and Pakistan each tested
6 weapons in the 90’s.
The total for all testing since we entered the nuclear age in 1945 is as follows:
United States………..1,030 nuclear tests of which 815 were underground.
Russia/USSR………….715 ………………………496……………………
UK……………………...45 ………………………..24……………………
France…………………210 ………………………160 …………………...
China……………………43 ……………………….22 …………………...
India…………………….. 7 …………………………6 …………………..
Pakistan…………………..6 ……………………….. 6 …………………..
Total Worldwide…… 2,056 ……………………… 714 ………………….
I realize the testing of nuclear weapons is necessary to prove the science but with 1,342
above ground tests didn’t we put a lot of radioactive material into the atmosphere? The
underground tests turn vast underground sites into molten glass and solid blocks of
radioactive debris that will remain hot for 300 years or more. I think the reason we
stopped testing was a consensus that the weapons work and the race was over in respect
to the major nuclear powers. The stoppage of testing also coincides with the collapse of
the Soviet Union and the Eastern Bloc nations. Although the USSR only had warheads in
territories it could trust such as the Ukraine it ran into trouble with the retrieval of the
weapons when independent minded leaders in these territories wanted to become instant
atomic powers. No one can guarantee that all of the soviet nuclear weapons have been
accounted for! We just have no way of knowing who has them and how amny are
missing!
The first U. S. Nuclear Weapon test was conducted in New Mexico on July 16, 1945 and
was code named “Trinity”. Many tests followed in the New Mexico and Nevada deserts
where there exist vast areas of land that will be uninhabitable for centuries due to nuclear
residual radiation. The last test was conducted underground in Nevada on September 22,
1992 and was code named “Divider”.
In the time span from 1945 to 1992 the total of nuclear weapon tests inside and outside
the U. S. continental borders stands at 1,030 of that number the great majority of tests
were CONUS or inside the Continental United States. Most tests were conducted at
White Sands New Mexico or the Nevada Test Site both above and below ground. Some
other tests were conducted in the Pacific Ocean on atolls owned by the U. S. after WWII.
The true thermonuclear weapons era got off to a rousing start in America with the
inception of the test series known as “Operation Castle” which was conducted in what
has been called the Pacific Proving Ground. These tests were high yield weapon design
tests used to perfect the optimum yield and blast effect. Lithium enriched with LI-6 was
an important factor in these high yield tests. Lithium enriched in Li-6 was discovered by
the physicists Ulam and Teller in 1951.
It is used in fusion weapons to increase yield. Many tests were experiments with
cryogenic nuclear fuels like lithium deuteride proved to be far more of an explosive yield
than anticipated. The use of “dry” non-cryogenic lithium deuteride caused a spectacular
and disastrous blast that was kept secret for many years.
The time line of some of the U. S. tests is listed here in chronological order, (these are not
all the tests).
Atmospheric Nuclear Test Code Name
Trinity, was the first nuclear explosion (1 shot) on earth on16 July 1945 at Alamogordo
NM.
Crossroads, was the first underwater nuclear detonations (2 shots) in 1946 at the Pacific
Proving Ground.
Sandstone, was the first test to use levitated cores ( 3 shots) in 1948 at the Pacific
Proving Ground.
Ranger, was the first test (5 shots) at the Nevada Test Site in 1951.
Greenhouse, was the first test using a boosted fission weapons (4 shots) at the Pacific
Proving Ground in 1951.
Buster-Jangle, was the first test with troops on the ground nearby (7 shots) at the Nevada
Test Site in 1951.
Tumbler-Snapper, was a test of new designs ( 7 shots) at the Nevada Test Site in 1952.
Ivy, was a test of the first hydrogen bomb (Mike) ( 2 shots) in November 1952 at the
Pacific Proving Ground.
Upshot-Knothole, was the first test of a nuclear cannon projectile (11 shots) in 1952 at
the Nevada Test Site.
Castle, (Bravo) was the largest yield nuclear detonation ever at that time of (6 shots) in
March 1954 at the Pacific Proving Ground.
Teapot, was the first tests of Lawrence Livermore designed devices, (14 shots) were
made at the Nevada Test Site in 1955.
Wigwam, was the first deep underwater nuclear test for submarine vulnerability in 2,000
feet of water with one shot in 1955 in the Pacific Ocean.
Project 56, was a safety test of combat designed equipment (4 shots) in 1955 at the
Nevada Test Site.
Redwing, was a test of three stage designed thermonuclear weapons (17 shots) in 1956 at
the Pacific Proving Ground.
Plumbbob, was a series of controversial tests exposing troops to radiation (29 shots) in
1957 at the Nevada Test Site.
Project 57, 58 and 58A, were a series of tests (5 shots) to test safety of designed
equipment in 1957-58.
Hardtack I, was a series of tests (35 shots) in the Pacific Proving Ground in 1958.
Argus, was a secret series of (3 shots) at high altitude over the South Atlantic Ocean in
1958.
Hardtack II, was a series of tests (37 shots) at the Nevada Test Site in 1958.
Dominic, was a series of tests of missile warhead tests (36 shots) at Johnston Island,
Christmas Island and over the South Pacific in 1962-63.
Storax, was a series (48 shots) of crater making experiments at the Nevada Test Site in
1962-63.
Sunbeam, was a series (4 shots) of tests of small tactical warheads at the Nevada Test
Site in 1962.
Many underground tests followed in Nevada and New Mexico.
On December 20th 1951 the experimental reactor at Arco Idaho came on line and
produced the first usable electricity generated via a nuclear fission reactor. It is now a
national historic site. It is called the EBR-1 site and is open for tours. It was used to light
the streets in Arco as a side benefit of being an experimental reactor test site for nuclear
propulsion of aircraft.
During the early life of nuclear reactors the United States Government experimented with
reactors to determine if electricity could be generated efficiently. In the 1950’s this idea
came to fruition in the town of Arco Idaho. In 1955 a reactor dubbed the Experimental
Breeder Reactor-1 or X-39 was run on a ground test stand (it was meant to be the power
plant for an atomic aircraft) in an experiment called the Heat Transfer Reactor
Experiment Number 1, (HTRE-1).
Because of the immense weight of these reactors due to the shielding required for crew
safety they were only tried in actual aircraft on a limited basis. The nationally registered
historic site in Arco Idaho consists of the aircraft power plant, comprised of one reactor, a
radiation shield, two X-39 engines, ducting, controls and instrumentation. This entire
apparatus is called the core test facility because it was designed to accept different types
of reactor cores as they were designed and perfected. In 1956 the engines were operated
successfully but required so much shielding as to make them un-flyable due to weight.
In 1957 with successive core designs HTRE-2 and HTRE-3 assembled and fired up with
less shielding the design produced enough thrust to theoretically sustain flight at 460
miles per hour for 30,000 miles.
Radiation levels were unacceptable and caused contamination over a 1,500 acre area. The
engineers finally realized that aircraft power via nuclear reactors was not feasible in the
current form. From the early days of nuclear generating and propulsion experiments we
now employ 104 separate operating nuclear power plants in the United States. These
plants are usually owned and operated by Utility Companies which also own coal, gas or
oil fired electric generating plants. There are a few companies that are sole owners of
nuclear plants only such as Entergy of Jackson Mississippi and Exelon of Chicago which
are both small utilities. In the U. S. we have many reactors but they are old and not as
efficient as new designs. Compared to the rest of the world there currently exists little
nuclear infrastructure in the United States for the generation of electricity.
At this writing there is only one steel company in the world that has the capacity and
expertise to cast the 42-foot, egg shaped reactor vessels used to house the core of the
reactor. That company is Japan Steel Works. They currently have a four year backlog of
orders for reactor core vessels. There is little hope for a new steel casting company to
arise and take some of the load off the Japanese. It is ironic that the United States
pioneered the use of nuclear energy in reactor design and operation and weapons, two of
which were used in anger on the only country on earth with a company capable of casting
nuclear reactor core vessels. There is a clamoring among the countries of the world to
build and operate nuclear power plants to alleviate the tremendous dependency we all
have on oil and to remediate the damage done to the environment by the burning of oil
for power. Although human kind has used the available natural materials at hand for
warmth, light and cooking since primitive man discovered fire. There has always been a
tradeoff or cost. Depletion on the forests for firewood, pollution and out of control fires
resulted from primitive campfires. When coal was discovered as a fuel and was readily
available in certain regions it replaced much of the wood fired sources of energy.
All energy stored in material is derived from the Sun. The Sun causes trees to grow. The
Sun baked our planet in its early formation into a ball of energy trapped in the terrestrial
layers.
Only 700 years ago the world was lit and heated by wood fires on every continent.
Mankind then progressed to coal (our most abundant and most polluting fuel) and we still
use coal in many electrical power plants. It’s cheap and it’s everywhere but it is the single
most damaging energy source on the planet. Smoke from coal fired industry is estimated
by the EPA to hasten the deaths of 30,000 Americans each year.
There is a very long word in the medical dictionary which is
“Pneumonoultramicroscopicsuperscilioconeosis” which is the clinical name for “Black
Lung” disease brought on by exposure to coal dust, coal smoke, and particulate fallout of
microscopic coal byproduct particles from the air. In China the death toll from
unregulated industrial coal fired plants is a well guarded state secret. But what do the
Chinese care about a few hundred thousand deaths in a nation whose population is
nearing two billion! In the heavily industrialized parts of China the snow is brown (much
like Pittsburg Pennsylvania back in the 1940’s) before our EPA air quality regulations
took hold. I have seen the pictures of Pittsburg back then in the winter of 1940 with the
snow colored brown after it fell through the clouds of pollution from the coal fired
industrial steel plants.
I’m sure the seed that Einstein planted (E=MC2) was never envisioned to cause such
lasting fear and dread among scientists and concerned citizens. Nuclear energy in any
form is dangerous if not handled correctly. The same can be said of fire derived from the
rapid oxidation of any fossil fuel, solar energy, hydroelectric, wind, etc. Once any fuel
(heat source) is transformed into an energy form it becomes dangerous. Many believe that
nuclear energy is to be feared because of its ability to cause mass destruction. This is a
valid concern in the field of nuclear weapons but not in the field of nuclear reactors.
When Einstein postulated his theory, the sheer simplicity grabbed physicists all over the
world and shook them to the core. For the first time mankind would be able to convert
latent energy in small amounts of fissionable material into vast amounts of energy
through a chemical reaction which caused heat. U-235 and U-238 are constantly breaking
down on an atomic level into smaller particles which in a controlled environment causes
heat. This is the process that causes radioactivity.
Since U-235 has almost all broken down, by now it only comprises one seventh of one
percent of all of the known natural uranium in the world. The fears and dreads of the
masses are unfounded and not based on scientific facts.
When you remove all of the unscientific hype the Chernobyl disaster was caused by a
very poorly designed reactor with carbon moderators which absorb the emissions from
the reacting pile of rods. In this particular case Russian technicians in the control room
got into a physical altercation over the use of the reactor and fought over switches and
levers they were controlling. The direct cause was improper psychological screening of
reactor personnel) This one act caused series of blunders that lead to the overheating of
the core which set fire to the carbon moderators causing a four day fire that melted most
of the piping and systems in the building which partially melted the reactor vessel that in
turn split open exposing the core to water and debris. The smoke carried the radioactive
particles up and over vast regions of Europe downwind. Because the Chernobyl facility
was not built to western standards of safety there were no firefighting systems in place
for such an event.
Plus there was no containment building built over the reactor building as are required
here in the U. S. and other western nations. If there had been a containment building over
the Chernobyl Reactor there would not have been a disaster. The firefighters and
technicians would have still died but the world outside would not have been harmed or
notified. Keep in mind that there is no OSHA in Russia! Carbon modified reactors are
inherently dangerous. Most of the people that died at Chernobyl were fire fighters and
technicians who were not equipped to fight a fire in such a hazardous ionizing radiation
charged environment.
The Facts:
Fact 1. The “Castle Bravo” hydrogen bomb test on February 28th 1954 in the South
Pacific Ocean spewed more radioactive material into Earth’s atmosphere than all other
nuclear detonations and accidents in world history have. That one test gone awry caused
the contamination of one percent of the Earth’s surface. Since the surface area of the
Earth is 197,000,000 square miles the contamination spread over 1,970,000 square miles
as it drifted around the Earth.
Fact 2. In 2007 the total output from all 104 U. S. operating nuclear generating plants
was 806,486,978 million watts. Yet the U. S. lags behind many European Nations in
nuclear generation per capita. 31 U. S. states have nuclear generating plants. They are
constantly on line unless they are shut down for mandatory safety inspections or for other
regulated inspection or maintenance periods. No pollution from these plants ever reaches
the environment because there is no pollution output from the nuclear generation of
electricity. Only waste steam and hot water are emitted.
The anti-nuke crowd will cry and wring their hands at the thought of all of those spent
fuel rods collecting in storage water pools at the plants waiting for transport to Yucca
Mountain Nevada. If the anti-nuke crowd ever stops the current legal action designed to
keep us from safely transporting the spent fuel rods and other low level contaminated
materials to Yucca Mountain this problem be solved. Yucca Mountain Nevada has been
chosen as the underground repository for the safe storage of radioactive materials by the
Department of Energy. Currently at the operating nuclear generating plants the spent fuel
rods are kept in metal drums under a layer of 3 feet of water in pools of water at the
plants. (3 feet of water prevents the escape of any ionizing radiation from low grade spent
fuel rods).
The 31 states that have nuclear generating plants are as follows:
1. Alabama has five (5) plants.
They are named Brown’s Ferry 1, 2, & 3 plus Joseph M. Farley 1 & 2.
Total 2007 output was 34,325,127 Megawatts.
2. Arizona has three (3) plants.
They are named Palo Verde 1, 2, & 3.
Total 2007 output was 26,782,391 Megawatts.
3. Arkansas has two (2) plants.
They are Arkansas Nuclear 1 & 2.
Total 2007 output was 15,486,102 Megawatts.
4. California has four (4) plants.
They are named San Onofre 2 & 3, Diablo Canyon 1 & 2.
Total 2007 output was 35,792,490 Megawatts.
5. Connecticut has two (2) plants.
They are named Millstone 2 & 3.
Total 2007 output was 16,386,142 Megawatts.
6. Florida has five (5) plants.
They are named Turkey Point 3 & 4, Crystal River 3 and St. Lucie 1 & 2.
Total 2007 output was 29,289,289 Megawatts.
7. Georgia has four (4) plants.
They are named Vogtle 1 & 2, Edwin I. Hatch 1 & 2.
Total 2007 output was 32,544,998 Megawatts.
8. Illinois has eleven (11) plants.
They are named Clinton, Dresden 2 & 3, Quad Cities 1 & 2, Braidwood 1 & 2, Byron 1
& 2, Bryon 1 & 2 and LaSalle County 1 & 2.
Total 2007 output was 95,728,845 Megawatts.
9. Iowa has one (1) plant.
It is named Duane Arnold.
Total 2007 output was 4,518,875 Megawatts.
10. Kansas has one (1) plant.
It is named Wolf Creek 1.
Total 2007 output was 10,369,136 Megawatts.
11. Louisiana has two (2) plants.
They are named Waterford 1 and River Bend 1.
Total 2007 output was 17,077,572 Megawatts.
12. Maryland has two (2) plants.
They are named Calvert Cliffs 1 and 2.
Total 2007 output was 14,353,192 Megawatts.
13. Massachusetts has one (1) plant.
It is named Pilgrim 1.
Total 2007 output was 5,119,789 Megawatts.
14. Michigan has four (4) plants.
They are named Palisades, Fermi 2, D. C. Cook 1 & 2.
Total 2007 output was 31,516,953 Megawatts.
15. Minnesota has three (3) plants.
They are named Monticello, Prairie Island 1 & 2.
Total 2007 output was 13,106,000 Megawatts.
16. Mississippi has one (1) plant.
It is named Grand Gulf 1.
Total 2007 output was 9,358,784 Megawatts.
17. Missouri has one (1) plant.
It is named Callaway.
Total 2007 output was 9,371,955 Megawatts.
18. Nebraska has two (2) plants.
They are named Fort Calhoun and Cooper.
Total 2007 output was 11,041,532 Megawatts.
19. New Hampshire has one (1) plant.
It is named Seabrook 1.
Total 2007 output was 10,763,884 Megawatts.
20. New Jersey has four (4) plants.
They are named Oyster Creek 1, Salem 1 & 2 and Hope Creek 1.
Total 2007 output was 32,010,376 Megawatts.
21. New York has six (6) plants.
They are named Indian Point 2, Nine Mile Point 1 & 2, James Fitzpatrick, Ginna and
Indian Point 3.
Total 2007 output was 42,452,854 Megawatts.
22. North Carolina has five (5) plants.
They are named Brunswick 1 & 2, Shearon Harris 1, and McGuire 1 & 2.
Total 2007 output was 40,044,705 Megawatts.
23. Ohio has two (2) plants.
They are named Perry 1 and Davis-Besse.
Total 2007 output was 15,764,049 Megawatts.
24. Pennsylvania has nine (9) plants.
They are named Peach Bottom 2 & 3, Beaver Valley 1 & 2, Susquehanna 1 & 2, Limerick
1 & 2 and Three Mile Island 1.
Total 2007 output was 77,366,316 Megawatts.
25. South Carolina has seven (7) plants.
They are named H. B. Robinson 2, Oconee 1, 2, & 3, Catawba 1 & 2 and Summer.
Total 2007 output was 53,199,914 Megawatts.
26. Tennessee has three (3) plants.
They are named Sequoyah 1 & 2 and Watts Bar 1.
Total 2007 output was 28,700,371 Megawatts.
27. Texas has four (4) plants.
They are named Comanche Peak 1 & 2 and South Texas Project 1 & 2.
Total 2007 output was 41,024,255 Megawatts.
28. Vermont has one (1) plant.
It is named Vermont Yankee 1.
Total 2007 output was 4,703,728 Megawatts.
29. Virginia has four (4) plants.
They are named Surry 1 & 2 and North Anna 1 & 2.
Total 2007 output was 27,268,475 Megawatts.
30. Washington has one (1) plant.
It is named Columbia Generating Station.
Total 2007 output was 8,108,560 Megawatts.
31. Wisconsin has three (3) plants.
They are named Point Beach 1 & 2 and Kewaunee.
Total 2007 output was 12,910,319 Megawatts.
This international list grows every year and with China reaching out for all the energy it
can get it is the fastest growing market for nuclear reactor provided electricity. The latest
statistics I could find are from 2004 and indicate there were 435 reactors operating
worldwide that year of which we own 23.9% or 104 reactors.
We are loosing ground as the rest of the world reduces their dependency on fossil fuels by
going nuclear. The worldwide per capita production of electricity ranks as follows. As of
2004 the list ia as follows.
1. France generates 78.1% or 62,466 MW from 57 nuclear plants.
2. Lithuania 72.1% or 3,000 MW from 2 plants.
3. Slovakia 55.2% or 2,580 MW from 6 plants.
4. Belgium 55.1% or 5,824 MW from 7 plants.
5. Sweden 51.8% or 9,819 MW from 11 plants.
6. Ukraine 51.1% or 11,880 MW from 13 plants.
7. Bulgaria 41.6% or 3,760 MW from 6 plants.
8. Switzerland 40% or 3,200 MW from 5 plants.
9. Armenia 38.8% or 408 MW from 1 plant.
10. Slovenia 38.8% or 664 MW from 1 plant.
11. South Korea 37.9% or 13,716 MW from 16 plants.
12. Hungary 33.8% or 1,840 MW from 4 plants.
13. Germany 32.1% or 21,931 MW from 19 plants.
14. Czech Republic 31.2% or 1,760 MW from 4 plants.
15. Japan 29.3% or 45,907 MW from 53 plants.
16. Finland 26.6% or 2,400 MW from 4 plants.
17. Spain 22.9% or 7,400 MW from 9 plants.
18. USA 19.9% or 102,162 MW from 104 plants.
19. UK 19.4% or 14,620 MW from 33 plants.
20. Russia 15.6% or 22,316 MW from 30 plants.
21. Canada 15% or 15,795 MW from 21 plants.
22. Romania 10.1% or 708 MW from 1 plant.
23. Argentina 8.2% or 1,005 MW from 2 plants.
24. South Africa 6.6% or 1,930 MW from 2 plants.
25. Mexico 5.2% or 1,350 MW from 2 plants.
26. Netherlands 3.8% or 481 MW from 1 plant.
27. Brazil 3% or 1,966 MW from 2 plants.
28. India 2.8% or 3,180 MW from 14 plants.
29. Pakistan 2.4% or 462 MW from 2 plants.
30. China 2.2% or 2,268 MW from 3 plants.
We, here in the U. S. are the descendants of the scientists who invented nuclear reactors
and nuclear weapons and we rank 19th in the world. Why? I believe our government has
bent to the political pressure of the anti nuke faction fueled by a sensation oriented media
profit oriented global oil suppliers and environmental groups. This disinformation is
crippling our progress. We should be number one on the list and we should lead the world
in nuclear reactor design and construction. But, alas we are 19th. China is starting out in
the cellar and climbing fast with the help of the Canadians, Russians and Japanese and
will surpass all nations in twenty years. China is building nuclear powered generating
plants at the rate of one completed every 20 months! I repeat my earlier mantra. There is
no OSHA in China or Russia to stifle growth in nuclear energy production. Yes, there is
danger in nuclear energy production but there are far more oil refinery fires and coal mine
disasters per year than there are nuclear accidents!
The simple fact is more people die in Sushi Bar Fugu poisoning incidents than do in
Nuclear Accidents per year. No matter how you slice this loaf of bread it is readily
apparent to any logical person that we are running out of fossil fuels at an alarming rate.
We do have vast amounts of coal but the technology and equipment needed to scrub coal
fired power plant emissions clean of pollutant gasses and solids is prohibitively expensive
and requires intensive maintenance and up grades. The Engineering Sciences Department
at Western Kentucky University is conducting scale model experiments in cutting edge
emissions scrubber technology for coal fired plants with long term goals of developing
less costly and more efficient coal fired emissions control systems for the future so we
can utilize our vast coal reserves.
Chapter 15:
The five alert sites (Site E through I) were transferred to the U. S. Air Force Air Materiel
Command in the late 50’s by Sandia Labs and were taken over by five Air Force
Squadrons numbered 3080th through the 3084th Aviation Depot Wing ADW. The HQ of
this command was located at Wright Patterson AFB in Ohio.
At the time of this writing an extensive reorganization of the U. S. Military storage
practices and locations is underway at the direction of the National Command Authority
(Read Secretary of Defense by direction of the President).
As mandated by the Start II Treaty the U. S. will have no more than 5000 total nuclear
warheads and bombs in the strategic stockpile. The remainder, some 7,500 individual
warheads and bombs will be dismantled and buried underground.
The Brookings Institution study tallied up the cost of the U. S. Nuclear Arms Program
from 1940 to 1996 and collected data from all sources inside and outside the U. S.
Government. The conclusion was that in those 56 years the U. S. Taxpayer footed the bill
for $5,800,000,000.00, (Five point Eight Trillion USD), which averages out to
$1,035,714,285.71, (One point Zero Three Five Billion USD), each year and
$2,837,573.39, (Two point Eight Three Seven Million USD) per day!
The Manhattan Project alone cost $20 Billion in WWII Dollars. The total number of U. S.
Nuclear weapons produced from 1945 to 1990 is 70,000 each of all types.
As of 1997 12,500 Nukes remained in our stockpile and of that number 8,750 were
deployable, 2,500 were in ready reserve and 1,250 were awaiting disassembly and
deactivation (burial). From 1956 to 1957 (At the height of the Cold War) the U. S. Army
requested 151,000 warheads from DOD procurement. As of this writing there is
approximately 43 metric tons of Plutonium remaining in U. S. weapons archive, inactive
or disassembled & buried.
As of 1997 the states with the most nuclear weapons contained within their borders are;
New Mexico……………………………………………………………….2,450 weapons.
Georgia…………………………………………………………………….2,000 weapons.
Washington State…………………………………………………………. 1,650 weapons.
Nevada…………………...……………………………………………….. 1,350 weapons.
North Dakota…………….…………………………………………………1,140 weapons.
Total…………………..…………………………………………………8,590 weapons.
Many of the Navy’s nuclear weapons are at sea on ships and submarines.
This is one reason the Navy will not confirm or deny the presence of nuclear weapons on
its’ ships if asked by the media. No one in the Federal government can tell us what the
final cost of the Yucca Mountain Repository will be as cost adjustments continue as we I
write. As an engineer I can tell you it will be a staggering final cost due to inflation in
materials and fuel costs.
The DOE has proposals on the table to spend 4.5 billion dollars per year on stewardship
of nuclear weapons in the U. S. stockpile. We are currently spending 35 billion per year
in research and development, maintenance, cleanup and storage costs for our nuclear
defense arsenal. A study done in 1964 stated that 400 megatons of nuclear weapons
would be enough to deter any attacker by the doctrine of Mutually Assured Destruction.
At that time the U. S. possessed 17,000 megatons in the arsenal. In today’s global
political climate we must maintain our defense system at peak readiness. However I
believe a comprehensive study must be conducted to ascertain all the possible scenarios
that may face our nation in the future and plan our nuclear force capability around those
results. If we only needed 400 megatons of weapons in 1964 to deter our enemies then
that amount adjusted to present day likely scenarios with a 25% reserve should be
maintained. We must not over develop our nuclear capability because we are rapidly
approaching a annual federal budget tipping point between national defense priorities and
social entitlement spending. We can not afford all things for all purposes in this nation
and expect our society to last. We will exhaust our funds quickly if we try to fund all
projects without a balance. I don’t mind paying my fair share of taxes if I get a reasonable
return on my investment. If I am reasonably sure this nation can defend itself against all
enemies and that the citizens will be provided for then I think we have reached an
understanding. A happy medium must be found and maintained.
Chapter 17:
In any WMD the design of and intended use of the weapon is for maximum destruction
of infrastructure and maximum casualties. There are three main types of WMD weapons.
1. Nuclear Weapons,
A. Military nuclear warheads and bombs which explode due to a nuclear chemical
reaction.
B. Dirty bombs composed of nuclear material exploded and scattered by a
conventional explosive such as TNT, Amonium Nitrate, or a chemical explosive.
C. The deliberate breeching of a nuclear facility or power plant via the use of
conventional explosives or a projectile such as an aircraft.
D. The deliberate distribution of nuclear material or waste of sufficient yield to cause
physical harm or infrastructure access denial.
2. Biological Weapons,
A. Any biologically harmful element composed of microorganisms capable of causing
harm to humans or animals or the food supply chain. These biological weapons can be
distributed via air, water, consumables, direct contact or mail.
3. Chemical Weapons,
A. A chemical element such as a gas, vapor, powder, or liquid which when disbursed
causes harm to humans, animals or food supply. The gas used in World War I was
Chlorine. It caused severe burning of the mucus membranes and causes bleeding into the
lungs. On contact with skin it causes burns.
The only way to protect yourself and your loved ones from these weapons is to plan
ahead. If you have the capability to install a shelter on your property it must be:
1. Underground to protect from blast effect.
2. It must be windowless to protect from the light pulse from a nuclear
detonation.
3. It must be of a material that will block radiation from penetration into the
area where people will be.
4. It must have a heavy door on the one access point that is secured from the
inside.
5. It must have a two week supply of non-perishable food and water for each
person.
6. To protect from biological and chemical weapons it must have a self
contained air supply uncontaminated by outside air.
7. First aid supplies and medications including prescriptions.
8. Human waste disposal capability, containers and cleaning supplies.
9. Sleeping accommodations.
10. Portable battery operated or crank operated lights, LED lights last longer
and use less battery power) and radios.
11. Tools for making repairs to essential equipment.
12. A written plan and instructions (internet sources) on dealing with WMD
effects.
13. Small arms and ammunition for protection from looters or other threats.
14. Radiation detection equipment.
15. Breathing masks and hooded plastic rain suits and rubber gloves for
venturing outside.
16. Reading material and a log book or journal with pens and pencils.
Survival is simple with a little engineering, planning and expense. What is your life and
the lives of your loved ones worth?
When I built my home in Kentucky eleven years ago I designed into the plans a 10 foot
by 10 foot concrete bunker. I located it in the most underground corner of my all poured
and steel reinforced concrete basement and installed a three inch thick insulated steel
plated door. I placed a 100 pound cylinder of compressed air into the bunker for
pressurization in case of biological or chemical attack.
I can seal the inner seam of the door with duct tape and put an overpressure inside the
room to keep contaminants from entering.
The room contains drinking water, first aid supplies, fire extinguisher, chemical toilet,
canned food, candles, flashlights, radiation detection equipment and a double bunk bed. It
will keep me and my wife alive for at least two weeks no mater what form of WMD
attack or accident occurs. The walls and ceiling are 8” thick poured concrete with many
steel reinforcing bars as well as the 12” thick floor. When I located the building site of the
home I notched out the side of a rock and clay hill with a bulldozer and placed the
basement completely underground on three sides. This affords the basement area with
great blast protection as the walkout wall of the basement faces southeast. If you go to
http://members.aol.com/rafleet/hazmaps.htm you will find FEMA generated hazardous
condition maps for earthquakes, tornados, hurricanes and nuclear blast and fallout
predictions. This will help in determining where you want to build your house. It is also
essential that you determine at what compass bearing and distance the nearest military
bases and population centers are located in relation to your home location. Remember,
you don’t have to be deep underground unless you are near a prospective target ground
zero in an attack. Just being mostly underground in a strong structure made from a steel
shell or steel reinforced concrete will provide adequate protection in nuclear war. My
friend in Purvis Mississippi recently installed a steel ball type shelter in his yard for less
than $8,000. He is very happy with it.
Air supply must also be considered as the outside air will become contaminated with
radiation carrying particulates in a nuclear scenario or chemical/biological agents which
are lethal if inhaled. Dust from a nuclear explosion will be the main ingredient in fallout.
Breathing in contaminated particles is a death sentence. It is essential that some sort of
breathing protection be provided.
The minimum should be an ANSI 95 rated particulate mask whenever you are exposed to
outside air in a nuclear scenario. If you go to the website www.safetycentral.com you will
find a variety of masks used for biological, chemical and nuclear protection. A wet hankie
will not do in these situations. My home is equidistant from the U. S. Army Base at Fort
Knox Kentucky and the Blue Grass Army Depot (Chemical, Biological and Nuclear
Weapons Storage) facility. My home is 56 miles from each target area.
These bases will certainly be targets of our enemies. If you live in an area with a water
table (ground water) near the surface you can build a mounded shelter in your back yard
from readily available prefabricated shelter dealers. There are basic things you can do to
be prepared. These are located at the web site www.ki4u.com/survive/index.htm which
explains everything you need to know on how to survive a nuclear attack. Another
excellent web site is www.alpinesurvival.com where you will find all your WMD
survival supplies including shelter designs and plans.
There are many companies in existence that will help you build what you need or you can
consult with an engineer with military construction experience who can help you.
Secrecy is essential in building your shelter. Don’t let the general public or your
neighborhood know what you are building. If you have to get county or city government
approval then ask them to keep the plans quiet. The less people who know you have a
bomb shelter the better. If nuclear war breaks out you don’t want them all showing up at
your shelter entrance begging for you to let them in. This is one of the many reasons you
need to have adequate small arms to protect yourself, your family and your means of
survival. You have to adopt a “survive at any cost” philosophy or you will perish along
with the rest of humanity. The possibility of a WMD attack gets more and more likely as
we move forward in time. There are no actions being taken by any government in the
world to stop rogue nations from getting nuclear, biological or chemical weapons, other
than talk or diplomacy. The United Nations is inept and lead by fools who want to make
nice with everyone or control all of our carbon footprints. Our government here in the
United States is incompetent to the nth degree due to its’ sheer size and complexity.
We are basically on our own and if we want to survive we must take a leadership role in
our own individual and family survival.
Shortages of food, fuel and water are happening now so the future doesn’t look good. The
best case scenario is that when the war for survival starts either by some rogue nation
using a crude WMD or some nation coveting another’s resources. At least we in the know
will be prepared and self reliant enough to survive.
Peace!
GLOSSARY: