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#22
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"james_anatidae" wrote in message ...
I was wondering at about what point that the United States going to war with the Soviet Union become an almost certain act of mutual destruction. I'm assuming it sometime in 1960's or 70's, since what I've seen of the Soviet nuclear capability before that point doesn't seem to be all that threatening. It looks like they would have been really bad for us Americans, but not unsurvivable. Depends on where you are. Much of the WWII doctrine carried over into the Cold War, the Soviets seeing nuclear weapons as a way of clearing the enemy out of a retricted front area without all that probing necessary under the conventional weapons useage. It was only after about 20 years that they realized that sword was not singled edged, those who survived would want to strike back. The Soviets stationed a large number of SS-11s at Tatishchevo in an attempt to create a theater force until the road mobile SS-20s and follow-ons were available. We countered with Pershing IIs. The Soviets believe that a conventional war in Europe might escalate to the nuclear level despite their oft-repeated commitment to no first-use of nuclear weapons, the Soviets have developed extensive plans either to preempt a NATO nuclear strike by launching a massive attack, or to launch a massive first strike against prime NATO targets should their conventional operations falter. |
#23
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"Nick P. Norwood" wrote in message news:HzA_b.143$44.130@newsfe1-win...
"ZZBunker" wrote in message . The war with the CCCP became suicidal, about 40 years before nuclear weapons were even invented, in about 1900. So...almost a decade before the Soviet Union existed....An interesting viewpont. The Soviet Union was nothing but a moronic European Spy Ring and Political legality created by retatded Russian Lawyers and Josef Stalin. The CCCP was created by Lenin et al. Nick P. Norwood |
#24
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"james_anatidae" wrote in message ...
I was wondering at about what point that the United States going to war with the Soviet Union become an almost certain act of mutual destruction. I'm assuming it sometime in 1960's or 70's, since what I've seen of the Soviet nuclear capability before that point doesn't seem to be all that threatening. It looks like they would have been really bad for us Americans, but not unsurvivable. I think October 23, 1961 is a watershed date. That is the day that the Soviet Union exploded the Tsar Bomba, the largest bomb ever exploded. Note that the yield of this bomb did not represent the technical limit on the yield of a hydrogen bomb. It is my understanding that there is no known limit. Instead, the Tsar Bomba represents a kind of political limit in a historical context. After the Tsar Bomba, the politicians on both side put on the brakes. |
#25
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![]() "Tom Adams" wrote in message om... "james_anatidae" wrote in message ... I was wondering at about what point that the United States going to war with the Soviet Union become an almost certain act of mutual destruction. I'm assuming it sometime in 1960's or 70's, since what I've seen of the Soviet nuclear capability before that point doesn't seem to be all that threatening. It looks like they would have been really bad for us Americans, but not unsurvivable. I think October 23, 1961 is a watershed date. That is the day that the Soviet Union exploded the Tsar Bomba, the largest bomb ever exploded. Note that the yield of this bomb did not represent the technical limit on the yield of a hydrogen bomb. It is my understanding that there is no known limit. Instead, the Tsar Bomba represents a kind of political limit in a historical context. After the Tsar Bomba, the politicians on both side put on the brakes. The Tsar bomb is blamed for an ozone hole. Maximizing a hydrogen bomb and detonating it might be game over for us all. |
#26
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![]() "Jack Linthicum" wrote in message om... (Peter Stickney) wrote in message ... In article , "George Z. Bush" writes: Peter Stickney wrote: BMEWS was the response to the threat of ICBMs coming over the Pole. But, in some ways, we were still further along than the Soviets wer in building and deploying useful ICBMs and SLBMs. Kruschev was great at showing off spactacular feats of missilery, and veiled, and not so veiled threats to use his missiles, but that wasn't backed up by what was in the field. Consider, if you will, that if the Soviets had had a viable ICBM or SLBM force in 1962, they wouldn't have tried putting the short-range missiles in Cuba. That whole business grew out of the Soviet's knowledge that they couldn't effectively strike. (Either First Strike or Second Strike) That was all very interesting, and certainly did much to refresh flagging memories. However, it still didn't resolve the starting date for MAD, because it ignored the ongoing SAC airborne alerts and the nuclear armed subs roaming the oceans. I personally have the feeling that the MAD doctrine evolved from recognition of those SAC policies by the Soviets, which would place the date at or before construction of the DEW line. All guesswork on my part. What do you think? Well, just my opinion, of course, but I think that the MAD thinking didn't occur until the mid '60s. It really didn't get set in stone until it was decided to limit the deployment of the Spartan/Safeguard ABM system, which occurred before the negotiation of the ABM Treaty which occurred in 1972. The Soviets, of course, had been trying with all possible strength to get systems in place to deliver their nukes all through the 1950s. As I pointed out before, air-breathers - Bombers and Cruise Missiles, weren't going to cut it, at least in our mutual perceptions. (Since it never got tried for real) The Soviets put more efforts into their ICBM projects than we did, but their progress wasn't as fast as they wished, so they propagandized the hell out of it, making themselves look much more powerful than they were, and hoped that we either wouldn't find out, or wouldn't call the bluff. (All that Missile Gap stuff in the 1960 election, for example.) So the Soviets had been trying to present a credible force for quite a while, but weren't really there. All through the 1950s, the Soviets didn't have any confidence in their ability to put bombs on target, The idea of MAD, which is more a Western conceit, rather than a bilateral policy, didn't come about until the Soviets had a significant and reliable ICBM force. This didn't happen until the mid '60s, at best, with their development of storable-fuel ICBMs, and the Yankee Class Ballistic Missile Subs. That feeling of inferiority, after all, was what drove Kruschev to try to put the short and medium range missiles in Cuba in 1962. They knew that they were going to come off second best against what we had, and counted on holding the initialtive and being agressive to make the differnece. It didn't work that way, and that's the main reason why Khruschev was chucked out - he scared the Supreme Soviet more than he scared us. (And mind you, he was plenty scarey) There's no definite indication tha the Soviet Heirarchy ever really bought into the idea of MAD. The Soviets, don't forget, were perfectly willing to trade vast numbers of their population for their system's survival. The communization of the Ukraine, and the scorched-earch strategies used in WW 2 are ample examples of that. "Soviet Hierarchy" is a bit difficult to evaluate. Khruschev however definitely did buy into the idea. The kernel of MAD was there in the 1950s, part of the massive retaliation concept that begat the doomsday bomb idea which put a lot of SAC colonels in analysis or homes. http://www.airpower.maxwell.af.mil/a...97/parrin.html "MAD, of course, is an evolutionary defense strategy based on the concept that neither the United States nor its enemies will ever start a nuclear war because the other side will retaliate massively and unacceptably. MAD is a product of the 1950s' US doctrine of massive retaliation, and despite attempts to redefine it in contemporary terms like flexible response and nuclear deterrence, it has remained the central theme of American defense planning for well over three decades. I think this is getting "assured destruction" a bit backward. It is related to "massive retaliation", and like MR it promises devastating consequences. But devastating firepower was inherited from the 50s, with 20,000 Mt in the US arsenal. Assured destruction was McNamara's strategy to *restrain* U.S. nuclear firepower to something with some arguably sane and affordable basis. MR never defined what level of destruction was *required* to deter the CCCP, it was a "give'em all we've got" type of thing. McNamara defined a level of destruction against which U.S. weapons programs could be measured: 20-33% of the Soviet population (and, unlike WWII, this would be mostly made up of the *entire* population of the major cities, even including Party members), and 50-75% of industry. And it turned out that this required only 300 equivalent megatons. Remember when McNamara propounded this the USAF wanted to build 10,000 Minuteman missiles. What they got was "only" 1000, or about 1100 equivalent from this weapon system alone. It was never the idea of the U.S. that AD should be MAD, if the U.S. could have prevented the CCCP from acquiring AD capability (short of preemptive nuclear war) it would have. Problem was, the US couldn't, any more than the CCCP could deny this capability to the US. An interest in ABM weapons in the late 60s gave way, once MIRVing began and the realization set in that this would be a very costly arms race in which both sides would lose. That is, both sides would remain vulnerable despite staggering expenditures in ABM weapons, since the significantly less costly (but still expensive) counter-deployment of MIRVs would defeat it. Bankrupt, vulnerable, and instead of sitting on a pile of 20,000 warheads, they would be sitting on maybe 200,000. Hence the ABM treaty. Carey Sublette |
#27
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Comments:
1) It is true that there is no theoretical limit to the size of a TNW. The practical limit is when the bomb vents to space rather than expanding across the surface of the earth. Big bombs are impractical since they blow the hell out of the hypocenter (spot directly under the bomb) but the radius of destruction increases as the cube root of the bomb's yield. One could take the same amount of critical material and make numerous smaller bombs and achieve a much greater area of destruction by carefully distributing them over the target zone. 2) I should think doctrine on the possible use of nuclear weapons took a serious hit when a real sober look was taken of the two nuclear accidents the USSR experienced - Chelyabinsk and Chernobyl. The USSR never ever achieved the capability to feed all its people from its own resources and what fallout from numerous nuclear weapons would do to the arable lands of the Ukraine really doesn't bear thinking about. 3) FWIW I spent those Cold War years in Air Defense Command as an 86D, 102 and 104 pilot on active air defense alert, usually every third day, from 1954 through 1967, when I went to TAC and the F4. One got a real serious attitude about the Air Defense mission back then. Walt BJ |
#28
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(WaltBJ) wrote:
Comments: 1) It is true that there is no theoretical limit to the size of a TNW. The practical limit is when the bomb vents to space rather than expanding across the surface of the earth. Big bombs are impractical since they blow the hell out of the hypocenter (spot directly under the bomb) but the radius of destruction increases as the cube root of the bomb's yield. One could take the same amount of critical material and make numerous smaller bombs and achieve a much greater area of destruction by carefully distributing them over the target zone. Yes, but when the Soviet Union was first developing their ICBM's, they had all that launch potential but little accuracy. They had to use large warheads in order to make sure they hit their targets. As they developed better technology, though, the accuracy improved and they began MRV-ing and then MIRV-ing those huge missiles. IMO a nuclear war became suicidal between the US and USSR when the Soviets began fielding a decent sized ICBM fleet. They would have had to use a "launch on warning" command or our more accurate missiles would have destroyed theirs in their silos, but from that point on both sides had the capability to destroy the other. Once the Soviets sent enough missiles to sea in subs, though, MAD became a certainty. John Lansford -- The unofficial I-26 Construction Webpage: http://users.vnet.net/lansford/a10/ |
#29
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![]() "WaltBJ" wrote in message om... Comments: 1) It is true that there is no theoretical limit to the size of a TNW. The practical limit is when the bomb vents to space rather than expanding across the surface of the earth. Big bombs are impractical since they blow the hell out of the hypocenter (spot directly under the bomb) but the radius of destruction increases as the cube root of the bomb's yield. One could take the same amount of critical material and make numerous smaller bombs and achieve a much greater area of destruction by carefully distributing them over the target zone. The fundamental reason why 'Ivan', the Tsar Bomba, had no relevance to the strategic balance was that it was undeliverable against the U.S. The weight of this bomb - 27 tonnes - was nearly equal to the Tu-95's maximum payload, and two and a half times its normal weapon load. Range of the Tu-95 was already marginal for attacking the U.S. even with a normal bomb load. Even worse, since the bomb's dimensions - 2 meters wide and 8 meters long - were larger than the bomb bay could accommodate part of the fuselage had to be cut away, and the bomb bay doors removed. The bomb was partially recessed in the plane, but not enclosed, with over half of it protruding in flight. A deployed version of a Tsar Bomba carrier would of course had a bulging bomb bay enclosure added, but this would have further reduced range from the drag. 2) I should think doctrine on the possible use of nuclear weapons took a serious hit when a real sober look was taken of the two nuclear accidents the USSR experienced - Chelyabinsk and Chernobyl. The USSR never ever achieved the capability to feed all its people from its own resources and what fallout from numerous nuclear weapons would do to the arable lands of the Ukraine really doesn't bear thinking about. The U.S. similarly vulnerable to this effect from the eastward fallout plumes of strikes on the Montana and Wyoming missile fields. In Stalin's day of course he would have grown radioactive wheat and fed it to the population. It would have saved them from starvation and immediate death, but given them a lifespan much reduced from normal. 3) FWIW I spent those Cold War years in Air Defense Command as an 86D, 102 and 104 pilot on active air defense alert, usually every third day, from 1954 through 1967, when I went to TAC and the F4. One got a real serious attitude about the Air Defense mission back then. And this would not have helped those Tu-95s at all. Carey Sublette |
#30
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