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Authors: Eric Schlosser

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BOOK: Command and Control
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“It is not to our disadvantage”
:
Ibid.

a military aide carrying the “football”
:
The contents of the president's football were described in Bill Gulley, with Mary Ellen Reese,
Breaking Cover: The Former Director of the White House Military Office Reveals the Shocking Abuse of Resources and Power That Has Been the Custom in the Last Four Administrations
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1980). Despite its lurid subtitle, the book probably offers the most accurate description of the football at the time.

“any emergency order coming from the president”
:
See Carroll,
House of War,
p. 354–56. The quote is on page 355. For concerns about Nixon's finger on the button, see also Janne E. Nolan's fine book,
Guardians of the Arsenal: The Politics of Nuclear Strategy
(New York: New Republic Book, 1989), pp. 122–23. A number of the Joint Chiefs thought Schlesinger's remark was a warning that Nixon might attempt a coup d'état. See Mark Perry,
Four Stars: The Inside Story of the Forty-Year Battle Between the Joint Chiefs of Staff and America's Civilian Leaders
(Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1989), pp. 257–59.

The Wrong Tape

General William E. Odom, attended briefings on the SIOP
:
For his effort to change America's nuclear plans, see William E. Odom, “The Origins and Design of Presidential Decision-59: A Memoir,” in Sokolski,
Getting Mad
, pp. 175–96.

“Limited Nuclear Options” and “Regional Nuclear Options”
:
Ibid., pp. 176–77.

“At times I simply could not believe”
:
Ibid., pp. 180, 183.

“absurd and irresponsible”
:
Ibid., p. 194.

“the height of folly”
:
Ibid.

The SIOP now called for the Soviet Union to be hit with about ten thousand nuclear weapons
:
See “Retaliatory Issues for the U.S. Strategic Nuclear Forces,” Congress of the United States, Congressional Budget Office, June 1978, p. 6.

“Things would just cease in their world”
:
Sokolski,
Getting Mad
, p. 180.

Carter had met with the Joint Chiefs of Staff and asked
:
See Carroll,
House of War,
pp. 362–64, and Thomas Powers, “Choosing a Strategy for World War III,
Atlantic Monthly
, November 1982.

He thought that one or two hundred missiles
:
Right after taking office, President Carter asked Secretary of Defense Harold Brown to prepare a study of what would happen if the United States and the Soviet Union both possessed only 200 to 250 strategic missiles. The study addressed but failed to resolve one of the central questions of nuclear deterrence: How many weapons are enough? “Some have argued that the capability to destroy a single major city—such as Moscow or New York—would be sufficient to deter a rational leader,” the study said. “Others argue that a capability for assured destruction of 80 percent or more of the economic and industrial targets of adversaries is necessary and critical.” See Brian J. Auten,
Carter's Conversion: The Hardening of American Defense Policy
(Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press, 2008), p. 146; and “Memorandum for the President, Subject, Implications of Major Reductions in Strategic Nuclear Forces, From Harold Brown,” January 28, 1977 (
SECRET
/declassified), NSA, p. 2.

“the elimination of all nuclear weapons from this Earth”
:
Carter had also called for the abolition of nuclear weapons in December 1974, when announcing his candidacy for president. See Auten,
Carter's Conversion,
p. 95; and “Text of Inauguration Address,”
Los Angeles Times
, January 21, 1977.

“Why the Soviet Union Thinks It Could Fight and Win”
:
Richard Pipes, “Why the Soviet Union Thinks It Could Fight and Win,”
Commentary
, July 1977, pp. 212–34.

To achieve a 95 percent certainty of wiping them out
:
President Kennedy's former science adviser, Jerome Wiesner, outlined how difficult it would be for the Soviet Union to win a nuclear war against the United States. “Even after a surprise attack,” Wiesner observed, “
U.S. strength would actually be slightly greater than the Soviet Union's.”
Indeed, if all the land-based missiles in the United States were destroyed, its submarine-based missiles could still hit the Soviet Union with 3,500 equivalent megatons—almost ten times the explosive force that the Kennedy administration had once thought sufficient to annihilate Soviet society. For these calculations, see Jerome Wiesner, “Russian and American Capabilities,”
Atlantic Monthly
, July 1982.

somewhere between two and twenty million Americans
:
According to a study conducted in 1979 for the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, a Soviet attack on missile silos and submarine bases in the United States would kill between two and twenty million people within a month. The wide range of potential fatalities was due to the unpredictability of fallout patterns, which would be largely determined by the wind, rain, and other weather conditions at the time of the attack. See “A Counterforce Attack Against the United States,” in “The Effects of Nuclear War,” Office of Technology Assessment, Congress of the United States, May 1979, pp. 81–90. The mortality estimates can be found on page 84.

a “countervailing strategy”
:
In July 1980, President Carter endorsed a new and top secret “Nuclear Weapons Employment Policy.” Known as Presidential Directive/NSC-59, it called for a shift in targeting—a renewed emphasis on counterforce, limited war, and the destruction of Warsaw Pact forces while they moved on the battlefield. It sought to “countervail,” to resist with equal strength, any Soviet attack. It also sought to provide Carter with the ability to launch on warning. See Odom, “The Origins and Design of Presidential Decision-59,” and “Presidential Directive/NSC-59,” July 25, 1980 (
TOP SECRET/SENSITIVE/
declassified), NSA.

The MX missile system embodied the strategic thinking
:
For the clearest description of the Carter administration plan for the MX, see “MX Missile Basing,” Congress of the United States, Office of Technology Assessment, September 1981. And for a sense of the missile debates at the time, see John D. Steinbruner and Thomas M. Garwin, “Strategic Vulnerability: The Balance Between Prudence and Paranoia,”
International Security
, vol. 1, no. 1 (Summer 1976), pp. 138–81; William C. Potter, “Coping with MIRV in a MAD World,”
Journal of Conflict Resolution
, vol. 22, no. 4
(1978), pp. 599–626; Wayne Biddle, “The Silo Busters: Misguided Missiles, the MX Project,”
Harper's,
December 1979; and William H. Kincade, “Will MX Backfire?,”
Foreign Policy
, no. 37 (Winter 1979–1980), pp. 43–58.

scattered across roughly fifteen thousand acres
:
See “MX Missile Basing,” pp. 64-65.

Eight thousand miles of new roads
:
Cited in ibid., p. 61.

About a hundred thousand workers would be required
:
Cited in ibid., p. 75.

The total cost of the project was estimated to be at least $40 billion
:
Ibid., pp. 13–14.

the computers at the NORAD headquarters
: For the November false alarm, see “NORAD's Missile Warning System: What Went Wrong?,” Comptroller General of the United States, Report to the Chairman, Committee on Government Operations, House of Representatives, Comptroller General of the United States, MASAD-81-30, May 15, 1981; “Report on Recent False Alerts from the Nation's Missile Attack Warning System,” U.S. Senate, Committee on Armed Services, Ninety-sixth Congress, First Session, October 9, 1980; and Scott D. Sagan,
The Limits of Safety: Organizations, Accidents, and Nuclear Weapons
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1993), pp. 225–31.

about four times a day
:
There were 1,544 “routine” missile display conferences in 1979. Cited in “Report on Recent False Alerts,” p. 4.

triggered by forest fires, volcanic eruptions
:
Ibid.

a Threat Assessment Conference . . . once or twice a week
:
Ibid., p. 5.

a Missile Attack Conference had never been held
:
Ibid.

A technician had put the wrong tape into one of NORAD's computers
:
According to a subsequent investigation, “test scenario data was inadvertently fed into the online missile warning computers which generated false alarms.” One could also argue that it was right tape—inserted in the wrong place at the wrong time. See “NORAD's Warning System: What Went Wrong?,” p. 13. See also A. O. Sulzberger, Jr., “Error Alerts U.S. Forces to a False Missile Attack,
New York Times
, November 11, 1979.

The computers at NORAD had been causing problems
:
See “NORAD's Information Processing Improvement Program—Will It Enhance Mission Capability?,” Controller General of the United States, Report to the Congress, September 21, 1978.

the Honeywell 6060 computers were already obsolete
:
See “NORAD's Warning System: What Went Wrong?,” p. 8.

despite protests from the head of NORAD that they lacked sufficient processing power
:
See “NORAD's Information Processing Improvement Program,” pp. 13–14.

“due to the lack of readily available spare parts”
: Ibid., p. 7.

Many of the parts hadn't been manufactured by Honeywell for years
:
Ibid.

twenty-three security officers . . . stripped of their security clearances
:
See “AF Guards Disciplined in Drug Probe,”
Washington Post
, January 17, 1980.

“FALSE ALARM ON ATTACK SENDS FIGHTERS INTO SKY”
:
See “False Alarm on Attack Sends Fighters into Sky,”
New York Times
, November 10, 1979.

Zbigniew Brzezinski . . . was awakened by a phone call
:
For the details of Brzezinski's early-morning call, see Robert M. Gates,
From the Shadows: The Ultimate Insider's Story of Five Presidents and How They Won the Cold War
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 2006), pp. 114–15. Gates tells the story well but conflates the cause of the June false alarm with that of the previous one in November. I tried to confirm the story with Brzezinski, who declined to be interviewed for this book. But he did discuss the incident with Admiral Stansfield Turner, the director of the CIA at the time. See Stansfield Turner,
Caging the Nuclear Genie: An American Challenge for Global Security
(New York: Westview Press, 1997), p. 17.

2,200 missiles were heading toward the United States
:
See Gates,
From the Shadows
, p. 114; Turner,
Caging the Nuclear Genie
, p. 17; Sagan,
Limits of Safety,
pp. 231–32.

a defective computer chip in a communications device
:
See “Report on Recent False Alerts,” p. 7.

The faulty computer chip had randomly put the number 2
:
Ibid.

at a cost of forty-six cents
:
Cited in “Missile Alerts Traced to 46 Item,”
New York Times
, June 18, 1980.

Bob Peurifoy became concerned
:
Peurifoy interview.

“It's our stockpile. We think it's safe.”
:
Peurifoy interview. Stevens confirmed that response.

“the magnitude of the safety problems”
:
This quote comes from a document that Peurifoy used during briefings on nuclear weapon safety at Sandia. On a single page, he assembled quotations from the Department of Defense, the Air Force, and others asserting that the American nuclear stockpile was safe. The original sources, from which the quotes have been drawn, are on file at Sandia. I feel confident that these quotes are accurate. On page 116 of “Origins and Evolution of S
2
C,” Stevens writes that the Pentagon's response to the Fowler Letter “can be characterized as mostly delaying actions in the guise of requiring safety studies of each of the weapons involved.”

“The safety advantages gained by retrofitting”
:
Quoted in “Sandia briefing document.”

Modification of any current operational aircraft
:
Quoted in ibid.

a six-digit code with a million possible combinations
:
See “Command and Control Systems for Nuclear Weapons,” p. 40.

the Air Force put a coded switch in the cockpit
:
Ibid., p. 12.

The combination . . . was the same at every Minuteman site
:
Bruce G. Blair first disclosed this fact in 2004, and the easy-to-remember combination was confirmed for me by a Sandia engineer.

cost . . . was about $100,000 per weapon
:
Peurifoy interview.

cost about $360 million
:
Ibid.

“My dissenting opinion will be brief”
:
The cartoonist was Sidney Harris and the cartoon originally appeared in
Playboy,
March 1972,
p. 208.

BOOK: Command and Control
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ads

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