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Authors: Eric Schlosser

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Bob Peurifoy led a team at Sandia that was trying to create
a “wooden bomb”—a nuclear weapon that wouldn't require frequent maintenance or testing, that could sit on a shelf for years, completely inert, like a plank of wood, and then be pulled from storage, ready to go. Peurifoy had heard about a new kind of battery that didn't need to be recharged. “
Thermal batteries” had been invented by a Nazi rocket scientist, Georg Otto Erb, for use in the V-2 missiles that terrorized Great Britain during the Second World War. Erb revealed how the batteries worked during an interrogation by American intelligence officers after the war. Instead of employing liquid electrolytes, a thermal battery contained solid ones that didn't generate any electricity until they reached a high internal temperature and melted. Peurifoy thought that thermal batteries would be an ideal power source for a nuclear weapon. They were small, rugged, and lightweight. They had
a shelf life of at least twenty-five years, if not longer. And they could produce large amounts of current quickly, after being ignited by an electric pulse. The main drawback of a thermal battery, for most civilian applications, was that it couldn't be reused or recharged. But Peurifoy didn't consider that to be much of a problem, since the batteries in a nuclear weapon needed to work only once.

At about the same time that thermal batteries were being added to America's atomic and hydrogen bombs, another important design change was being developed at Los Alamos. A weapon “boosted” by tritium and deuterium gas would use much less fissile material to produce a large explosion. Right before the moment of detonation, these hydrogen gases would be released into the weapon's core. When the core imploded, the gases would fuse, release neutrons, multiply the number of fissions, and greatly increase the yield. And because the fissile core would be hollow and thin, a lesser amount of explosives would be needed to implode it. As a result, boosted weapons could be light and small. The first widely deployed hydrogen bomb, the Mark 17, was about twenty-five feet long and weighed roughly forty thousand pounds. The Mark 17 was so big and heavy that the Air Force's largest bomber could carry only one of them. The Strategic Air Command hoped to replace it eventually with the Mark 28, a boosted weapon. The Mark 28 was eight to twelve feet long, depending on its configuration, and weighed just two thousand pounds. It was small enough and light enough to be delivered by a fighter plane—and a single B-52 could carry at least four of them.

The military advantages of boosted weapons were obvious. But the revolutionary new design raised a number of safety concerns. The nuclear core of a boosted weapon wouldn't be stored separately. It would be sealed inside the weapon, like the pit within a plum. Boosted, “sealed-pit” weapons would be stored fully assembled, their cores already surrounded by high explosives, their thermal batteries ready to ignite. In many respects, they'd be wooden bombs. And that is what could make them, potentially, so dangerous during an accident.

The first sealed-pit weapon scheduled to enter the stockpile was
the Genie, a rocket designed for air defense. Conventional antiaircraft weapons seemed inadequate for destroying hundreds of Soviet bombers during a thermonuclear attack. Failing to shoot down a single plane could mean losing an American city. The Air Force believed that detonating atomic warheads in the skies above the United States and Canada would offer the best hope of success—and that view was endorsed in March 1955 by James
R. Killian, the president of MIT, who headed
a top secret panel on the threat of surprise attack. At the height of American fears about a bomber gap, atomic antiaircraft weapons promised to counter the Soviet Union's numerical advantage in long-range bombers, much the same way tactical nuclear weapons were supposed to compensate for the Red Army's greater troop strength in Europe. The Genie would be carried by Air Force fighter-interceptors. It had a small, 1.5-kiloton warhead and a solid-fueled rocket engine. Unlike conventional air defense weapons, it didn't need a direct hit to eliminate a target. And it could prove equally useful against a single Soviet bomber or a large formation of them.

Once the enemy was spotted, the fire-control system of the American fighter plane would calculate the distance to the attacker and set the timer of the Genie's warhead. The fighter pilot would launch the Genie, its rocket motor would burn for about two seconds, and the weapon would shoot toward the target at about three times the speed of sound. The Genie's nuclear warhead would detonate when the timer ran out. The ensuing fireball would destroy any aircraft within about one hundred yards, and the blast wave would cause severe damage at an even greater distance. But the burst of radiation released by the explosion would pose the most deadly threat to Soviet aircrews. The Genie could miss its target badly and still prove effective. It had
a “lethal envelope” with a radius of about a mile, and the “
probability of kill” (PK) within that envelope was likely to be 92 percent. The Soviet aircrew's death from radiation might take as long as five minutes—a delay that made it even more important to fire the Genie as far as possible from urban areas. Detonated at a high altitude, the weapon produced little fallout and didn't lift any debris from the ground to form a mushroom cloud. After the bright white flash, a circular cloud drifted from the point of detonation, forming an immense smoke ring in the sky.

The Air Force wanted the Genie to be deployed by January 1, 1957. But first the Atomic Energy Commission had to determine whether the weapon was safe. Thousands of Genies would be stored at American airfields. Moreover, thousands of Nike missiles, as well as hundreds of BOMARCS, armed with small nuclear warheads, would soon be deployed in and around dozens of American cities. All of these weapons had been designed to
explode in the skies above North America; their detonation on the ground would be catastrophic. “
The Department of Defense has a most urgent need for information pertaining to the safety of nuclear weapons,” an AEC official wrote in a top secret memo, as the Genie's deployment date approached. In the decade or so since the first atomic bomb was dropped, the subject of nuclear weapon safety had received little attention. The bombs had always been stored and transported without their nuclear cores. What would a fuel fire, a high-speed collision, or shrapnel from a nearby explosion do to a sealed-pit weapon? The AEC hurriedly began a series of tests to find out.

Project 56 was the code name for an AEC safety investigation of sealed-pit weapons secretly conducted in a remote valley at the Nevada Test Site. Computers still lacked the processing power to simulate the behavior of a nuclear weapon during an accident, and so actual devices had to be used. Under normal conditions, a sealed-pit weapon would fully detonate when all the explosive lenses surrounding its core went off at once, causing a symmetrical implosion. The AEC's greatest concern was that an imperfect, asymmetrical implosion—caused, for example, by a bullet setting off some of the high explosives—could produce a nuclear yield.

The Project 56 tests focused on what would happen if one of the explosive lenses were set off at a single point. It was thought almost impossible for more than one bullet or more than one piece of shrapnel to strike a weapon at different points, simultaneously, during an accident. The velocity of these high explosives was so fast that a lens would go off within microseconds of being struck, allowing no time for something else to hit. If the weapon's high explosives went off at a single point, the nuclear core might simply blow to pieces, without producing any yield. That's what the scientists of Project 56 hoped to observe: weapons that were “
one-point safe.” But the core might also implode just enough to cause a nuclear detonation.

Between November 1955 and January 1956, the nuclear components of four weapon designs underwent safety tests in the Nevada desert. Each device was placed inside a small wooden building—and then a single detonator was set off. Three of the designs passed the test; a one-point
detonation didn't produce any yield.
The fourth design failed the test, surprising everyone with a substantial detonation. The Genie's warhead was among those pronounced one-point safe. But Project 56 revealed that a nuclear detonation wasn't the only danger that a weapon accident might pose. The core of the Genie contained plutonium—and when it blew apart, plutonium dust spread through the air.

The risks of plutonium exposure were becoming more apparent in the mid-1950s. Although the alpha particles emitted by plutonium are too weak to penetrate human skin, they can destroy lung tissue when plutonium dust is inhaled. Anyone within a few hundred feet of a weapon accident spreading plutonium can inhale a swiftly lethal dose. Cancers of the lung, liver, lymph nodes, and bone can be caused by the inhalation of minute amounts. And the fallout from such an accident may contaminate a large area for a long time. Plutonium has a half-life of about twenty-four thousand years. It remains hazardous throughout that period, and plutonium dust is hard to clean up. “
The problem of decontaminating the site of [an] accident may be insurmountable,” a classified Los Alamos report noted a month after the Genie's one-point safety test, “and it may have to be ‘written off' permanently.”

The AEC debated whether to remove plutonium from the Genie's core and use highly enriched uranium instead. In one respect, uranium-235 seemed to be safer. It has a half-life of about seven hundred million years—but emits radiation at a much lower rate than plutonium, greatly reducing the inhalation hazard. And yet a Genie with a uranium core had its own risks. Norris Bradbury, the director of Los Alamos, warned the AEC that such a core was “
probably
not
safe against one-point detonation.” Given the choice between an accident that might cause a nuclear explosion and one that might send a cloud of plutonium over an American city, the Air Force preferred the latter. Handmade, emergency capability Genies were rushed into production, with cores that contained plutonium.

Once Soviet bombers were within range, air defense weapons like the Genie had to be fired immediately. Any delay in authorizing their use could allow some planes to reach their targets. Toward the end of 1955, the Joint Chiefs of Staff sought permission to use atomic air defense weapons—
without having to ask the president.
They argued that if such authority was “predelegated,” the military could respond instantly to an attack. Secretary of Defense Wilson backed the Joint Chiefs, arguing that
it was “critical” for the Air Force to have some sort of advance authorization.

Harry Truman had insisted, repeatedly, that the president of the United States should be the only person allowed to order the use of a nuclear weapon. But the nature of the Soviet threat had changed, and President Eisenhower had more faith in the discipline of the American military. In April 1956, Eisenhower signed a predelegation order that authorized the use of atomic weapons for air defense within the United States and along its borders. The order took effect the following December, after rules of engagement were approved by the secretary of defense. Those rules allowed American planes to fire Genies at
any Soviet aircraft that appeared “hostile.” Air Force commanders were granted wide latitude to decide when these nuclear weapons could be used. But the Joint Chiefs demanded “
strict command control [sic] of forces engaged in air defense.” The Genies had to be kept locked away in storage igloos, never to be flown over the United States, until the nation was under attack.

For years the Department of Defense had refused to discuss where America's nuclear weapons were deployed. “We will neither confirm nor deny” was the standard response whenever a journalist asked if atomic or hydrogen bombs were kept at a specific location. The policy was justified by the need for military secrecy—and yet the desire to avoid controversy and maintain good public relations was just as important. When atomic bombs were first transferred to SAC bases in French Morocco,
the French government wasn't told about the weapons. But the deployment of Genies at air bases throughout the United States was announced in an Air Force press release. According to a secret Pentagon memo, publicity that stressed the safety and effectiveness of the new weapon “should have
a positive effect on national morale.” And information about the Genie's lethal radius might be discouraging for Soviet aircrews.


The possibility of any nuclear explosion occurring as a result of an accident involving either impact or fire is virtually non-existent,” Secretary of Defense Wilson assured the public. His press release about the Genie
didn't mention the risk of plutonium contamination. It did note, however, that someone standing on the ground directly beneath the high-altitude detonation of a Genie would be exposed to less radiation than “
a hundredth of a dose received in a standard (medical) X-ray.” To prove the point, a Genie was set off 18,000 feet above the heads of five Air Force officers and a photographer at the Nevada test site. The officers wore summer uniforms and no protective gear. A photograph, taken at the moment of detonation, shows that two of the men instinctively ducked, two shielded their eyes, and one stared upward, looking straight at the blast. “
It glowed for an instant like a newborn sun,”
Time
magazine reported, “then faded into a rosy, doughnut-shaped cloud.”

•   •   •

I
N
J
ANUARY
1957
THE
SECRETARY
of the Air Force, Donald A. Quarles, visited Sandia to attend briefings on the latest sealed-pit weapons.
Quarles left the meetings worried about the safety of the Genie, and he was unusually qualified to pass judgment. He'd served for two years as assistant secretary of defense for research and development, helping to select new weapon systems, guiding the Pentagon's investment in new technologies, and contemplating the future of warfare. He'd also spent a year as president of Sandia, immersed in the minutiae of atomic bombs. Small, wiry, brilliant, and intense, a high school graduate at the age of fifteen who later studied math and physics at Yale, Quarles felt the weight of his job, his place at the very epicenter of the arms race.
He rarely took vacations and could often be found at his Pentagon office, late into the night, six or seven days a week. Only a handful of people understood, as well as Quarles did, how America's nuclear weapons worked—and how the military planned to use them.

BOOK: Command and Control
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