The following is a summary and article by AI based on a transcript of the video "How Close We've Come to Nuclear War". Due to the limitations of AI, please be careful to distinguish the correctness of the content.
00:00 | - Ever since the invention of nuclear weapons, |
---|---|
00:02 | humanity has almost accidentally destroyed itself |
00:05 | many times over. |
00:06 | This is a video about just some of those times. |
00:10 | (rocket whooshing) |
00:11 | It's about nuclear bombs |
00:12 | and missiles accidentally detonating. |
00:15 | It's about hydrogen bombs being lost. |
00:19 | And it's about false alarms that could have led |
00:22 | to the end of the world. |
00:24 | (bomb rumbling) |
00:27 | On the 17th of January, 1966, |
00:30 | a B-52 bomber was flying over the coast of Spain. |
00:35 | It was carrying four hydrogen bombs, |
00:38 | each one 75 times more powerful |
00:41 | than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima. |
00:44 | This sounds crazy, but in the mid 1960s, |
00:47 | during the height of the Cold War, |
00:48 | this was routine. |
00:50 | This was part of a military operation known as Chrome Dome |
00:54 | where bombers flew around the United States |
00:57 | and skirted the borders of the Soviet Union |
00:59 | with hydrogen bombs on board. |
01:02 | The thinking was that if the USSR initiated a first strike, |
01:06 | the US could rapidly retaliate |
01:08 | by having bombers already up in the air |
01:10 | and closer to their targets. |
01:12 | The flight took off from North Carolina |
01:15 | and crossed the Atlantic Ocean |
01:17 | with the plan to fly by the border of the Soviet Union |
01:19 | and return home. |
01:21 | The plane would be in the air for more than 24 hours. |
01:25 | The flight was so long, it required two mid-air refuelings. |
01:30 | But long flights and mid-air refuelings were commonplace. |
01:34 | Flights like this happened every day. |
01:36 | The first refuelling went smoothly. |
01:39 | After flying by the Soviet Union and turning around, |
01:42 | the plane needed to be refuelled again. |
01:44 | So at 10:30 a.m., over the coast of Spain, |
01:47 | above the small fishing village of Palomares, |
01:50 | the refuelling tanker pulled up in front of the B-52. |
01:54 | Larry Messinger, the pilot of the bomber, recalled. |
01:57 | - [Larry] We came up behind the tanker |
01:58 | and we were going a little bit too fast. |
02:03 | There's a procedure they have where the boom operator, |
02:06 | if you get in a dangerous position, |
02:09 | he calls, "Break away, break away, break away," |
02:12 | and you immediately cut the throttles and drop down below. |
02:16 | Well, there was no such call. |
02:18 | We were dropping down below the tanker |
02:21 | and all of a sudden something happened. |
02:24 | There was an explosion of some kind. |
02:27 | - The two planes collided. |
02:29 | The boom arm, which held the refuelling nozzle, |
02:31 | hit the B-52, breaking off its left wing. |
02:35 | The resulting explosion was big enough |
02:37 | that it was witnessed by another B-52 |
02:40 | which was flying a kilometre and a half away. |
02:43 | All four men on the refuelling tanker |
02:45 | and three of the seven on the B-52 |
02:48 | were killed in the accident. |
02:50 | The four bombs fell to earth. |
02:54 | Each one of them had a yield of 1.1 megatons of TNT, |
02:58 | about 75 times more powerful |
03:01 | than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima. |
03:05 | A hydrogen bomb gets most of its power |
03:07 | from the fusion of tritium and deuterium, |
03:09 | which are isotopes of hydrogen with extra neutrons. |
03:12 | When these isotopes fuse into helium, |
03:14 | a little bit of mass is lost, which is released as energy. |
03:18 | But it takes a tremendous amount of energy |
03:20 | to get that reaction started, |
03:22 | which is why a hydrogen bomb is actually three bombs in one. |
03:26 | A conventional bomb |
03:27 | which when detonated triggers the plutonium fission bomb |
03:31 | which then creates high enough temperatures and pressures |
03:33 | and releases enough energetic X-rays |
03:35 | to trigger the fusion reaction. |
03:38 | The conventional explosives in two of the four bombs |
03:41 | detonated on impact. |
03:43 | Fortunately, to trigger the fission reaction, |
03:46 | the explosion needs to be symmetrical. |
03:49 | But since the conventional explosives |
03:51 | detonated on impact with the ground, |
03:53 | the shockwave wasn't symmetrical |
03:55 | and so the fission and fusion bombs weren't set off. |
04:00 | Unfortunately, the conventional explosive |
04:02 | blew up the plutonium core, |
04:04 | contaminating a 2.6-square-kilometer area |
04:07 | of the Spanish coastline |
04:08 | with radioactive material. |
04:11 | The area is still contaminated with radioactive atoms |
04:14 | to this day. |
04:17 | - [Reporter] But after the crash the villagers were told |
04:19 | to eat no locally produced food |
04:21 | and there was an embargo on it in nearby markets. |
04:24 | - The third bomb was found intact in a nearby riverbed. |
04:28 | But the fourth bomb was missing. |
04:30 | - [Reporter] Somewhere out there |
04:31 | off the sunny coast of southern Spain |
04:33 | and H bomb is missing. |
04:35 | It's been missing now for over three weeks. |
04:37 | - Mr. Ambassador, how was your swim this morning? |
04:39 | Did you by any chance stub your toe on the bomb |
04:41 | while you were out there today? |
04:42 | - Wish I had. |
04:43 | - 29 US Army ships were involved in the search, |
04:46 | and it still took 81 days |
04:48 | for the bomb to finally be located and recovered. |
04:51 | I wanna say this again. |
04:53 | There was a hydrogen bomb that was 75 times more powerful |
04:57 | than the one dropped on Hiroshima, |
04:59 | and it was missing for nearly three months. |
05:02 | This is not an isolated incident. |
05:04 | It's common enough that the US military has a term |
05:07 | for accidents involving nuclear weapons. |
05:09 | - [Reporter] The D-Day clock thus begun ticking |
05:11 | with a potential Broken Arrow message |
05:12 | from Nellis Air Force Base. |
05:14 | - They call them Broken Arrows. |
05:16 | The Pentagon officially lists 32 such accidents |
05:19 | between 1950 and 1980. |
05:21 | Five of them occurred during operation Chrome Dome, |
05:24 | cases when a B-52 carrying hydrogen bombs crashed. |
05:28 | In 1961, the first year of operation Chrome Dome, |
05:32 | a B-52 had a fuel leak and it crashed over North Carolina. |
05:37 | Three members of the crew died in the accident. |
05:40 | It was carrying two 4-megaton bombs. |
05:44 | Both bombs fell to earth. |
05:46 | One had its parachute deploy |
05:48 | and it landed on the ground mostly intact. |
05:51 | The other slammed into a field and broke into pieces. |
05:55 | The good news is that the conventional explosives |
05:58 | did not explode, |
05:59 | so radioactive plutonium was not strewn |
06:01 | all over North Carolina. |
06:03 | The bad news |
06:04 | is that the conventional explosives didn't explode, |
06:06 | and so there was a chance |
06:08 | that the hydrogen bombs could be armed and ready to detonate |
06:11 | with full force. |
06:12 | Recalling the incident 52 years later, |
06:15 | Lieutenant Jack ReVelle, |
06:16 | who was responsible for the safe disposal of the bomb, said. |
06:19 | - [Jack] And as we started digging down, |
06:21 | trying to find the second bomb, |
06:23 | one of my sergeants says, |
06:25 | "Hey, Lieutenant, I found the arm safe switch." |
06:28 | And I said, "Great." |
06:30 | He says, "No, not great. |
06:32 | It's on arm." |
06:34 | - At the time, a spokesman for the Department of Defence |
06:36 | said that the bombs were unarmed |
06:38 | and could not have accidentally exploded. |
06:40 | But in a report declassified in 2013, |
06:43 | it was stated that the bomb was armed. |
06:46 | A single switch could have triggered the detonation. |
06:52 | By the way, the bomb is still there, |
06:54 | lodged about 50 metres under the field. |
06:57 | After the bomb fell on the field, |
06:59 | there was a flash flood, |
07:00 | which meant that it couldn't be recovered. |
07:03 | So to make sure that no one could dig up the bomb, |
07:05 | the US military placed a 120-meter diameter slab of concrete |
07:10 | over the whole area. |
07:12 | According to the Pentagon report, |
07:13 | there is no detectable radiation and no hazard in the area, |
07:17 | but a portion of one weapon containing uranium is missing. |
07:23 | There are dozens more events like this, |
07:25 | like the plane crash over Greenland in 1968. |
07:29 | The four hydrogen bombs it was carrying |
07:31 | burned up in the fire. |
07:33 | The decontamination of the surrounding area |
07:35 | took four months. |
07:37 | That same year, the Soviet K-129 submarine |
07:40 | sank in the Pacific Ocean, |
07:42 | killing all 98 of its crew. |
07:45 | It was also carrying three nuclear warheads. |
07:48 | Part of the submarine was covertly recovered by the CIA. |
07:52 | Another standout incident occurred in 1965, |
07:55 | about 100 kilometres off the coast of Japan. |
07:59 | A Douglas A-4 jet carrying at least one hydrogen bomb |
08:03 | fell off the aircraft carrier during a training exercise. |
08:06 | The plane, the bomb, and the pilot were never recovered. |
08:10 | So, for more than half a century, |
08:12 | there has been a 1-megaton hydrogen bomb |
08:15 | laying on the sea floor |
08:17 | four kilometres below the surface of the ocean. |
08:21 | It is one of at least six US nuclear weapons |
08:24 | that have been lost and never recovered. |
08:27 | In 1998, Alexander Lebed, |
08:29 | Russia's former Chief of National Security, |
08:32 | asserted that there are more than 100 |
08:34 | 1-kiloton nuclear bombs |
08:36 | that are unaccounted for. |
08:39 | The most well-known Broken Arrow event |
08:41 | happened in September 1980. |
08:44 | Inside a silo in rural Arkansas, |
08:47 | a team was conducting routine checks |
08:49 | on the Titan II intercontinental ballistic missile. |
08:52 | The missile was fueled, |
08:53 | ready to launch at a moment's notice. |
08:56 | In its nose cone sat a 9-megaton hydrogen bomb. |
09:01 | As one of the repairmen was walking around the silo, |
09:04 | the socket from his ratchet wrench fell off. |
09:07 | (ominous music) |
09:13 | It fell 24 metres, |
09:15 | hitting the fuel tank of the missile and puncturing a hole. |
09:20 | The highly flammable rocket fuel |
09:22 | began to leak into the silo. |
09:24 | The missile complex and surrounding area were evacuated, |
09:28 | but a number of military personnel remained on site |
09:30 | to try to diffuse the situation. |
09:33 | - The maintenance team |
09:35 | had an indication of an engine fire |
09:37 | and a rise in vapour concentration inside the silo. |
09:42 | - At 3:00 a.m., |
09:43 | about 8 1/2 hours after the puncture of the fuel tank, |
09:47 | the leaking fuel vapours ignited, resulting in an explosion. |
09:51 | This explosion led to one death and 21 injuries. |
09:55 | The 740-ton door keeping the silo sealed |
09:59 | flew more than 60 metres into the air. |
10:02 | It was recovered 200 metres away. |
10:06 | The warhead containing the hydrogen bomb |
10:08 | was also blown out of the silo, |
10:09 | landing some 30 metres away. |
10:12 | Luckily, it did not detonate. |
10:15 | And these are just the near misses that we know about. |
10:18 | Of the 32 Broken Arrow events listed by the Pentagon, |
10:21 | one which occurred in the spring of 1968 remains classified. |
10:26 | And there are likely many dozens more nuclear mistakes |
10:29 | and near misses the public knows nothing about |
10:33 | from every nation that has a nuclear arsenal. |
10:37 | The worry of a nuclear mishap |
10:39 | is not just the immediate damage done |
10:41 | by a hydrogen bomb explosion. |
10:43 | It's also the misunderstanding |
10:44 | and retaliatory strikes that could arise. |
10:47 | Imagine that in 1966, |
10:49 | instead of hydrogen bombs falling off the coast of Spain, |
10:52 | the plane crash occurred closer |
10:53 | to the border with the Soviet Union. |
10:57 | Humanity has been on the brink of nuclear war many times |
11:01 | and so far we've been lucky. |
11:04 | The closest we've likely ever come was in October 1962 |
11:08 | during the Cuban Missile Crisis. |
11:10 | The US Navy began dropping signalling charges into the water |
11:14 | to bring a Soviet submarine to the surface. |
11:16 | Tensions were high and the submarine |
11:19 | had not been in radio contact with Moscow for days. |
11:22 | The captain of the submarine decided that war had broken out |
11:25 | and he was about to launch a nuclear torpedo. |
11:29 | But the launch required the authorization of three men. |
11:32 | Two out of the three authorised the launch, |
11:35 | but Vasili Arkhipov did not. |
11:38 | A full-blown nuclear exchange |
11:39 | between the United States and the Soviet Union |
11:42 | was avoided by the rational decision of one person. |
11:47 | The historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr. later noted |
11:50 | that "this was not only the most dangerous moment |
11:52 | of the Cold War. |
11:54 | It was the most dangerous moment in human history." |
11:58 | And during the Cuban Missile Crisis, |
12:01 | with the tensions between the US and USSR |
12:03 | at an all-time high, |
12:05 | both countries still conducted high-altitude nuclear tests. |
12:09 | The US set off a 410-kiloton bomb |
12:12 | 50 kilometres above the Pacific Ocean |
12:14 | and a smaller 7-kiloton bomb |
12:16 | at an altitude of 147 kilometres. |
12:19 | Two of the 300 kiloton tests conducted by the Soviets |
12:22 | occurred in space. |
12:24 | It's pretty hard to justify these actions. |
12:27 | What if one of these tests was thought to be |
12:29 | a nuclear first strike leading to all-out war? |
12:33 | Because false alarms happen |
12:35 | for something a lot more innocuous |
12:37 | than nuclear tests in space. |
12:39 | On the 26th of September, 1983, |
12:42 | the Soviet satellite-based early warning system |
12:44 | detected the launch |
12:45 | of an intercontinental ballistic missile, |
12:47 | and their policy dictated |
12:49 | that if any inbound missiles were detected, |
12:52 | there was to be an immediate counter attack |
12:54 | against the United States. |
12:56 | This would've likely led to all-out war. |
12:59 | But the Soviet officer on duty |
13:01 | at the time of the detection, Stanislav Petrov, |
13:04 | was sceptical of the reading. |
13:06 | He reasoned that if there was a genuine first strike, |
13:08 | the US would launch hundreds of ICBMs simultaneously, |
13:11 | not just one. |
13:13 | The detection system then warned Petrov |
13:15 | of another four missiles headed towards the USSR, |
13:18 | but these two, he dismissed as a glitch. |
13:22 | Petrov was right. |
13:23 | He made the right decision |
13:24 | and his clear thinking likely saved millions of lives. |
13:28 | The warning system malfunctioned, |
13:30 | it confused sunlight reflecting off high-altitude clouds |
13:33 | for ballistic missiles. |
13:35 | After this incident, |
13:36 | Petrov took an early retirement |
13:38 | and later suffered a nervous breakdown. |
13:42 | Another close call happened on January 25th, 1995, |
13:46 | when scientists launched a rocket off the coast of Norway. |
13:49 | Their rocket was there to study the Northern Lights |
13:52 | but Russian radar picked up this launch |
13:54 | as it had a similar flight pattern and speed |
13:56 | as the submarine-launched Trident ICBM. |
13:59 | The incident was serious enough |
14:01 | that a briefcase containing the nuclear launch codes |
14:04 | was taken to the Russian President, Boris Yeltsin. |
14:08 | I think most people believe |
14:09 | the biggest threat posed by nuclear weapons |
14:12 | is their deliberate use. |
14:14 | There is this idea that as long as nations only have them |
14:17 | and don't use them, |
14:18 | they could act as a deterrent keeping us safer. |
14:21 | But all of these incidents demonstrate |
14:23 | that the real risk of nuclear weapons |
14:26 | is some freak accident. |
14:29 | So far, humanity has been lucky, |
14:31 | but how long until our luck runs out? |
14:36 | But there is hope. |
14:38 | In 1986, there were more than 70,000 nuclear weapons. |
14:42 | In 2022, that number had dropped to 12,705, |
14:47 | and more are being dismantled. |
14:51 | But as long as there are any nuclear weapons remaining, |
14:54 | the future of humanity is not safe. |
14:57 | (electronic beeping) |
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