Lex Fridman Podcast - #420 – Annie Jacobsen: Nuclear War, CIA, KGB, Aliens, Area 51, Roswell & Secrecy
Episode Date: March 22, 2024Annie Jacobsen is an investigative journalist and author of "Nuclear War: A Scenario" and many other books on war, weapons, government secrecy, and national security. Please support this podcast by ch...ecking out our sponsors: - HiddenLayer: https://hiddenlayer.com/lex - BetterHelp: https://betterhelp.com/lex to get 10% off - Policygenius: https://policygenius.com/lex - NetSuite: http://netsuite.com/lex to get free product tour EPISODE LINKS: Nuclear War: A Scenario (book): https://amzn.to/3THZHfr Annie's Twitter: https://twitter.com/anniejacobsen Annie's Website: https://anniejacobsen.com/ Annie's Books: https://amzn.to/3TGWyMJ Annie's Books (audio): https://adbl.co/49ZnI7c PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (07:37) - Nuclear war (12:21) - Launch procedure (18:00) - Deterrence (21:34) - Tactical nukes (30:59) - Nuclear submarines (33:59) - Nuclear missiles (41:10) - Nuclear football (50:17) - Missile interceptor system (54:34) - North Korea (1:01:10) - Nuclear war scenarios (1:10:02) - Warmongers (1:14:31) - President's cognitive ability (1:20:43) - Refusing orders (1:28:41) - Russia and Putin (1:33:48) - Cyberattack (1:35:09) - Ground zero of nuclear war (1:39:48) - Surviving nuclear war (1:44:06) - Nuclear winter (1:54:29) - Alien civilizations (2:00:04) - Extrasensory perception (2:13:50) - Area 51 (2:17:48) - UFOs and aliens (2:28:15) - Roswell incident (2:34:55) - CIA assassinations (2:53:47) - Navalny (2:56:12) - KGB (3:02:48) - Hitler and the atomic bomb (3:06:52) - War and human nature (3:10:17) - Hope
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following is a conversation with Annie Jacobson, an investigative journalist, Pulitzer
Prize finalist, and author of several amazing books on war, weapons, government secrecy,
and national security, including the books titled Area 51, Operation Paperclip, The Pentagon's
Brain, Phenomena, Surprise Kill Vanish, and her new book, Nuclear War. BetterHelp for securing your mind, Policy Genius for securing your insurance on all fronts,
and NetSuite for securing the awesomeness of your business.
See what I did there?
Choose wisely, my friends.
Also, if you want to get in touch with me for whatever reason, including to work with
our amazing team, go to LexFoodman.com slash contact.
And now onto the full ad reads.
As always, no ads in the middle.
I try to make these interesting,
but friends, if you skip them, if you must,
I shall forgive you in this life or the next,
both this life and the next, I will forgive you.
But you should still check out the sponsors.
I enjoy their stuff.
Maybe you will too.
This episode is brought to you by Hidden Lair,
a platform that provides security for your
machine learning models.
This episode with Andy Jacobson is terrifying on many fronts.
It's terrifying because you get to see just how close we are to the brink of self-destruction,
just how few people are involved in saying, yes, launch nuclear war, just how few people are involved in saying yes, launch nuclear war. Just how easy it
is for little mistakes, little misunderstandings to lead to nuclear war. And on this point
of hidden layer of cybersecurity, just how easy it is to hack a system that creates misinformation that results in nuclear war. Cybersecurity, the attack and the
defense is really the story of the 21st century. This is where the battles will be fought. This is
where suffering may be created or alleviated or prevented. So this is a really, really,
really important field and it's not talked about enough.
There's a sexy field of sort of AI safety
where you talk about kind of the existential risk,
the ethical risk, all of that kind of stuff
of artificial intelligence as it becomes
smarter and smarter and smarter.
But sometimes it's the stupid stuff.
It's the vulnerabilities.
The stupid stuff is not the so stupid stuff.
It's the basic. The stupid stuff is not the so stupid stuff.
It's the basic capacity of an intelligent system to be hacked.
So I'm a really big fan of hidden layer doing this kind of work of helping businesses figure
out which are the secure models, which are not, which are the basic steps to take the
low hanging fruit of it all.
Visit hidden layer.com slash Lex to learn more about how hidden
layer can accelerate your AI adoption in a secure way.
This episode is also brought to you by BetterHelp, spelled H-E-L-P, help. This is about securing
your mind. I've been getting attacked more and more on the internet, such is the way
of the internet, friends. But it's important to figure out systems for yourself.
This is in your own private life, even when just getting bullied in school by a few people.
First of all, you should learn how to fight, how to do jiu-jitsu, how to strike all those kinds of things.
But that's besides the point.
all those kinds of things. But that's besides the point. But the big thing you should learn to prepare yourself for the world is how to secure your mind in a way that doesn't callous it,
make it cynical, or make it unable to feel the beauty and the pain of the world. And yet,
make it so it doesn't descend in the depths of darkness as the human mind can.
Make it so it doesn't descend in the depths of darkness as the human mind can
Talk therapy can help with this a better help is one of my favorite things because of just how easy it is to do
It's available everywhere. They helped millions of people
Check them out a better help comm slash flex and save in your first month. That's better help comm slash flex
This episode is also brought to you by policy genius, a marketplace for insurance, all kinds of insurance,
life, auto, home, disability, all of that,
and it gives you really nice tools for comparison.
I'm a huge fan of tools for comparing stuff,
whenever I'm shopping for anything,
whenever I'm researching anything.
I would love it if there's a kind of pros and cons thing
for every idea in the world.
Just really nice pros and cons websites for very sort of heated political topics, very
popular political topics.
But I would love it if there was that kind of pros and cons analysis and ratings and
all that kind of stuff for very nuanced conversations.
In general, there's also places, I think it's
called like manifold markets, where you can bet on the outcome of different
ideas. It's a pretty cool way to explore different possibilities about the future
but also to in so doing to debate different topics. I love it. So whenever
somebody does that kind of thing well and Policy Genius does it well, the
comparison, I really celebrate it.
You should go check it out.
With Policy Genius, you can find life insurance policies
that start at just $292 per year for $1 million of coverage.
Head to policygenius.com slash Lex,
or click the link in the description
to get your free life insurance quotes
and see how much you could save.
That's policygenius.com slash flex.
This episode is also brought to you by NetSuite,
an all-in-one cloud business management system.
37,000 companies make the switch to NetSuite.
They help manage the different modules of a company.
It's the machine inside the machine.
And they create the language
where the different modules of a company
can find a common language, a standard of communication.
They manage HR, financials, e-commerce, all that kind of stuff.
They're messy stuff.
They make the messy simple and efficient.
If you're running a company, you should use the right tools for that.
The machine inside the machine should be good such that the metal machine of capitalism
can do its work to bring about a better world
to the degree it does.
And when it fails, we can point that out and government can step in and call it bullshit.
It's a beautiful thing we have going on.
Democracy overseeing the beautiful machinery of business that creates incredible stuff,
but doesn't cross the line of unethical behavior.
And that's the dance of it all.
Capitalism, democracy, humanity.
It's beautiful, really.
But at the low level of the machinery of a single company, NetSuite is the thing you
should be using.
Now through April 15th, NetSuite is offering a one of a kind flexible financing plan called
netsuite.com slash Lex. That's netsuite.com slash Lex.
This is a Lex Friedman podcast. To support it, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now, dear friends, here's Annie Jacobson. Let's start with an immensely dark topic, nuclear war.
How many people would a nuclear war
between the United States and Russia kill?
So I'm coming back at you with a very dark answer
and a very big number.
And that number is five billion people.
You go second by second, minute by minute, hour by hour,
what would happen if the nuclear war started?
So there's a lot of angles on which I would love to talk to
you about this.
At first, how would the deaths happen in the short term and
the long term?
So to start off, the reason I wrote the book
is so that readers like you could see
in appalling detail just how horrific nuclear war would be.
And as you said, second by second, minute by minute,
the book covers nuclear launch to nuclear winter. I purposely
don't get into the politics that lead up to that or the national security maneuvers or the posturing
or any of that. I just want people to know nuclear war is insane. And every source I interviewed for this book from Secretary of Defense, you know, all retired,
nuclear sub-force commander, STRATCOM commander, FEMA director, except on and on and on, nuclear weapons engineers,
they all shared with me the common denominator that nuclear war is insane.
You know, first millions, then tens of millions,
then hundreds of millions of people will die
in the first 72 minutes of a nuclear war.
And then comes nuclear winter
where the billions happen from starvation.
And so the shock power of all of this is meant
for each and every one of us to say, wait, what?
This actually exists behind the veil of national security.
Most people do not think about nuclear war on a daily basis, and yet hundreds of thousands
of people in the nuclear command and control are at the ready in the event
it happens.
But it doesn't take too many people to start one.
In the words of Richard Garwin, who was the nuclear weapons engineer who drew the plans
for the Ivy Mike thermonuclear bomb, the first thermonuclear bomb ever exploded in 1952.
Garwin shared with me his opinion that all it takes
is one nihilistic madman with a nuclear arsenal
to start a nuclear war.
And that's how I begin the scenario.
What are the different ways it could start?
Like literally who presses a button and what, literally, who presses a button?
And what does it take to press a button?
So the way it starts is in space, meaning the U.S. Defense Department has a early warning
system and the system in space is called Sibbers.
It's a constellation of satellites that is keeping an eye on all of America's enemies
so that the moment an ICBM launches, the satellite in space, and I'm talking about one-tenth
of the way to the moon, that's how powerful these satellites are in geosync, they see the hot rocket exhaust on the ICBM in a fraction of a second after
it launches, a fraction of a second.
And so there begins this horrifying policy called launch on warning, right?
And that's the US counterattack, meaning the reason that the United States
is so ferociously watching for a nuclear launch somewhere around the globe is so
that the nuclear command and control system in the US can move into action to
immediately make a counterstrike. Because we have that policy, launch on warning,
which is exactly like it says.
It means the United States will not wait
to absorb a nuclear attack.
It will launch nuclear weapons in response
before the bomb actually hits.
So the president, as part of the launch on warning policy has six
minutes. I guess can't launch for six minutes but at six minute mark from that
first warning the president can launch. And that was one of the most remarkable
details to really nail down for this book when I was
reporting this book and talking to Secretary of Defense, for example, who are the people
who advise the president on this matter, right?
You say to yourself, wait a minute, how could that possibly be?
And so let's unpack that, right?
So in addition to the launch on warning concept, there's this other insane concept called
sole presidential authority.
You might think in a democracy that's impossible, right?
You can't just start a war.
Well, you can just start a nuclear war if you're the commander in chief, the president
of the United States.
In fact, you're the only one who can do that.
We can get into later why that exists.
I was able to get the origin story of that concept from Los Alamos.
They declassified it for the book.
But the idea behind that is that nuclear war will unfold so fast, only one person can be
in charge, the president.
He asked permission of no
one, not the Secretary of Defense, not the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, not the US Congress. So built into that is this extraordinary speed. You
talk about the six-minute window and some people say, oh that's ridiculous, how
do we know that six-minute window? Well, here's the best sort of, you know, hitting the nail on the head
statement I can give you, which is in President Reagan's memoirs, he refers to this six-minute
window and he says, he calls it irrational, which it is. He says, how can anyone make a decision
to launch nuclear weapons based on a blip on a radar scope, his words, to unleash
Armageddon. And yet that is the reality behind nuclear war.
Just imagine sitting there, one person, because the president is a human being, sitting there,
just got the warning that Russia launched.
You have six minutes.
You know, I meditate on my immortality every day and here you would be sitting and meditating,
contemplating not just your own mortality,
but the mortality of all the people you know, loved ones.
Just imagining, what would be going through my head
is all the people I know and love, like personally,
and knowing that there'll be no more, most likely,
and if they somehow survive,
they will be suffering and will eventually die.
I guess the question that kept coming up is,
how do we stop this?
Is it inevitable that it's going to be escalated
to a full-on nuclear war that destroys everything?
And it seems like it will be.
It's inevitable.
In the position of the president,
it's almost inevitable that they have to respond.
I mean, one of the things I found shocking
was how little apparently most presidents
know about the responsibility that literally lays at their feet, right?
So you may think through this six-minute window, I may think through this six-minute window,
but what I learned, like for example, former Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta was really helpful in explaining this to me because before
he was SEC DEF, he served as the Director of the CIA. And before that, he was the White House Chief
of Staff. And so he has seen these different roles that have been so close to the President.
But he explained to me that when he was the White House chief of staff
for President Clinton, he noticed how President Clinton didn't want to ever really deal with the
nuclear issue because he had so many other issues to deal with. And that only when Panetta became Secretary of Defense, he told me, did he really realize the weight of all
of this? Because he knew he would be the person that the president would turn to were he to be
notified of a nuclear attack. And by the way, it's the launch on warning. It's the ballistic missile seen from outer space
by the satellite.
And then there also must be a second confirmation
from a ground radar system.
But in that process, which is just a couple minutes,
everyone is getting ready to notify the president.
And one of the first people that gets notified by NORAD or by
STRATCOM or by NRO, these different parties that all see the early warning data. One of the first
people that's notified is the Secretary of Defense as well as the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff because those two together are going to brief the president about, you know,
sir, you have six minutes to decide.
And that's where you realize the immediacy of all of this is so counter to imagining the scenario.
And again, all the presidents come into office, I have learned, understanding the idea of
deterrence, this idea that we have these massive arsenals of nuclear weapons pointed at one
another ready to launch so that we never have nuclear war.
But what we're talking about now is what if we did?
What if we did?
And what you've raised is like this really spooky, eerie subtext of the world
right now because many of the nuclear armed nations are in direct conflict with other nations. And
for the first time in decades, nuclear threats are actually coming out of the mouths
of leaders.
This is shocking.
So deterrence, the polite implied assumption
is that nobody will launch and if they did,
we would launch back and everybody would be dead.
But that assumption falls apart completely.
The whole philosophy of it falls apart
once the first launch happens.
Then you have six minutes to decide, wait a minute,
are we going to hit back and kill everybody on Earth?
Or do we turn the other cheek
in the most horrific way possible?
Well, when nuclear war starts,
there's no like battle for New
York or battle for Moscow. It's just literally, you know it was called in the
Cold War push-button warfare, but in essence that is what it is.
Let's get some numbers on the table if you don't mind, right? Because when
you're saying like wait a minute we're just hoping that it holds, right? Let's
just talk about Russia and the US, the arsenals that are literally pointed at one
another right now, right?
So the United States has 1,770 nuclear weapons deployed, meaning those weapons could launch
in as little as 60 seconds and up to a couple minutes.
Some of them on the bombers might take an hour or so.
Russia has 1,674 deployed nuclear weapons.
Same scenario, their weapons systems are on par with ours.
That's not to mention the 12,500 nuclear weapons amongst the nine nuclear armed nations.
But when you think about those kind of arsenals of just between the United States and Russia,
and you realize everything can be launched in seconds and minutes, then you realize the
madness of mad, that this idea that no one would launch because it would
assure everyone's destruction. Yes, but what if someone did? And in my interviews
with scores of top-tier national security advisors, people who advise the
president, people who are responsible for these decisions if they had to be made. Every single one of them said it could happen.
They didn't say this would never happen.
And so the idea is worth thinking about because I believe that it pulls back the veil on a fundamental security
that if someone were to use a tactical nuclear weapon,
oh well, it's just an escalation.
It's far more than that.
So to you, the use of a tactical nuclear weapon,
maybe you can draw the line between a tactical
and a strategic nuclear weapon that could be a catalyst.
Like that's a very difficult thing to walk back from. Oh my God, almost certainly. a strategic nuclear weapon that could be a catalyst.
That's a very difficult thing to walk back from.
Oh my God, almost certainly.
And again, every person in the national security
environment tells, will agree with that, right?
Certainly on the American side.
Strategic weapons, those are like big weapons systems.
America has a nuclear triad. We have our ICBMs, which are the silo-based
missiles that have a nuclear warhead in the nose cone, and they can get from one continent
to the other in roughly 30 minutes. Then we have our bombers, B-52s and B-2s that are
nuclear capable.
Those take travel time to get to another continent.
Those can also be recalled.
The ICBMs cannot be recalled or redirected once launched.
That one is a particularly terrifying one.
So land launched missiles, rockets with a warhead can't be recalled.
Cannot be recalled or redirected.
And speaking of how little the president generally know,
as we were talking a moment ago,
President Reagan in 1983 gave a press conference
where he misstated that submarine-launched ballistic
missiles could be recalled.
They cannot be recalled.
So that gives you, here's the guy in charge of the arsenal if
it has to get let loose and he doesn't even know that they cannot be recalled. So this is the kind
of misinformation and disinformation and you know, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres recently
said when he was talking about the conflicts rising around the world,
he said, we are one misunderstanding, one miscalculation away from nuclear Armageddon.
So just to sort of linger on the previous point of tactical nukes.
So you're describing strategic nukes, land launched, bombers, submarine launched.
What are tactical nukes?
That's the triad, right?
We have the triad and Russia has the triad.
Tactical nuclear weapons are smaller warheads that were designed to be used in battle.
That is what Russia is sort of threatening to use right now.
That is this idea that you would, you know, make a decision on the battlefield
in an operational environment to use a tactical nuclear weapon.
You're just sort of upping the ante.
But the problem is that all treaties are based on this idea of no nuclear use, right? You cannot cross
that line. And so the what would happen if the line is crossed is so devastating to even consider.
I think that the conversation is well worth having among everyone, you know, that is in a power of position.
As the UN Secretary General said, this is madness, right? This is madness.
We must come back from the brink.
We are at the brink.
Can we talk about some other numbers?
So you mentioned the number of warheads.
So land launched, how long does it take to travel across the ocean?
From the United States to Russia,
from Russia to the United States,
from China to the United States, approximately how long?
When I was writing an earlier book on DARPA,
the Pentagon Science Agency,
I went to a library down in San Diego called the
Giesel Library to look at Herb York's papers. Herb York was the first chief
scientist for the Pentagon for DARPA, then called ARPA. And I had been trying
to get the number from the various agencies that be to answer, like, what is the exact
number and how do we know it? And like, does it change? And, you know, as technology advances,
does that number reduce? All these kinds of questions, and no one will answer that question
on an official level. And so much to my surprise, I found the answer in Herb York's like dusty
archive of papers. And this is information that was jealously guarded.
I mean, it's not necessarily classified,
but it certainly wasn't out there.
And I felt like, wow, Herb York left these behind
for someone like me to find, right?
And what the process, he wanted to know
the answer to your question. And as the guy in charge of it all.
So he hired this group of scientists who then and still are in many ways like the supermen scientists of the Pentagon.
And they're called the Jason scientists. Many conspiracies about them abound.
I interviewed their founder and have interviewed many of them.
But they whittled the number down to seconds, okay?
Specifically for Herb York, and it goes like this,
because this is where my jaw dropped and I went, wow, okay?
So 26 minutes and 40 seconds from a launch pad
in the Soviet Union to the East Coast.
It happens in three phases, very simple and interesting to remember because then suddenly
all of this makes more sense.
Boost phase, mid-course phase, and then terminal phase.
Boost phase, five minutes.
That's when the rocket launches.
You just imagine a rocket going
off the launch pad and the fire beneath it. Again, that's why the satellites can see
it. Okay. Now it's becoming visual. Now it makes sense to me. Right? Five minutes and
that's where the rocket can be tracked. And then imagine learning, wait a minute, after
five minutes, the rocket can no longer be seen from space.
The satellite can only see the hot rocket exhaust.
Then the missile enters its mid-course phase, 20 minutes.
And that's the ballistic part of it, where it's kind of flying up between 500 and 700 miles above the Earth
and moving very fast and with the earth
Until it gets very close to its target and the last 100 seconds are terminal phase. It's where the warhead
reenters the atmosphere and
detonates
26 minutes and 40 seconds now in my scenario I open with North Korea launching a one megaton
nuclear warhead at Washington DC. That's the nihilistic madman maneuver. That's the bolt out
of the blue attack that everyone in Washington will tell you they're afraid of. And North Korea
of. And North Korea has a little bit different geography. And so I had MIT professor emeritus Ted Postal do the math. 33 minutes from a launch pad in Pyongyang to the East Coast of the United
States. You get the idea. It's about 30 minutes. But hopefully now that allows readers to suddenly see all this as a real,
you almost see it as poetry, as terrible as that may sound. You can visualize it and suddenly it
makes sense. And I think the sense-making part of it is really what I'm after in this book because
I want people to understand the one hand, it's incredibly
simple. It's just the people that have made it so complicated. But it's one of those things that can
change all of world history in a matter of minutes. We just don't as a human civilization
have experience with that. But it doesn't mean it'll never happen.
It can happen just like that.
I mean, I think what you're after, and I couldn't agree more with, is like, why is this fundamentally annihilating system,
a system of mass genocide, as John R know, in the book refers to it.
Why does it still exist?
You know, we've had 75 years since there have been two superpowers with the nuclear
bomb.
So that threat has been there for 75 years and we have managed to stay alive.
One of the reasons why so many of the sources in the book
agreed to talk to me, people who had not previously gone on the record about all of this, was because
they are now approaching the end of their lives. They spent their lives dedicated to preventing
nuclear World War III.
And they'll be the first people to tell you
we're closer to this as a reality than ever before.
And so, the only bright side of any of this
is that the answer lies most definitely in communication.
So there's a million other questions here.
I think the details are fascinating and important to understand.
So one, you also say nuclear submarines.
You mentioned about 30 minutes, 26, 33 minutes, but with nuclear submarines, that number can
be much, much lower.
So how long does it take for a warhead to, a missile to reach the East Coast
of the United States from a submarine?
Just when you thought it was really bad,
and then you kind of realize about the submarines.
I mean, the submarines are what are called
second strike capacity, right?
And you know, it was described,
submarines were described to me this way.
They are as dangerous to civilization,
and let me say a nuclear armed nuclear
powered submarine is as dangerous to civilization as an asteroid. Okay? They
are unstoppable. They are unlocatable. The former chief of the nuclear submarine
forces, Admiral Michael Connor, told me it's easier to find a grapefruit sized object in space
than a submarine under the sea. Okay? So these things are like hell machines and
they're moving around throughout the oceans, ours, Russia's, China's, maybe North
Korea's constantly. And we now know they're sneaking up
to the East and West Coast of the United States
within a couple hundred miles.
How do we know that?
Why do we know that?
Well, I found a document inside of a budget
that the Defense Department was going to Congress
for more money recently and showed maps
of precisely where these submarines,
how close they were getting to the Eastern seaboard.
So, wait, wait, wait.
So nuclear subs are getting within 200 miles?
Couple hundred miles, yes.
They weren't precise on the number,
but when you look at the map, yep.
And that's when you're talking about under 10 minutes
from launch to strike.
Undetectable.
And they're undetectable.
The map making is done after the fact because of
a lot of underwater surveillance systems that we have. But in real time, you cannot find a
nuclear submarine. And just the way a submarine launches goes 150 feet below the surface to
launch its ballistic missile. I mean, it comes out of the missile tube and with
enough thrust that the thrusters, they ignite outside the water and then they move into boost.
And so the technology involved is just stunning and shocking. And again,
trillions of dollars spent so that we never have a nuclear war.
But my God, what if we did?
As you write, they're called the handmaidens
of the apocalypse.
What a terrifying label.
I mean, one of the things you also write about,
so for the land launched ones,
they're presumably underground.
So the silos, how long does it take to go from like
pressing the button to them emerging
from underground for launch?
Is that part detectable or it's only the heat?
So what's interesting about the silos,
America has 400 silos, right?
We've had more, but we have 400,
and they're underground, and they're called Minutemen, right? After the Revolutionary
War heroes. But the sort of joke in Washington is they're not called Minutemen for nothing
because they can launch in one minute, right? So the president orders the launch of the ICBMs. ICBM stands for Intercontinental
Ballistic Missile. He orders the launch and they launch 60 seconds later. And then they
take 30 some odd minutes to get to where they're going. The submarines take about 14 or 15 minutes
from the presidential, from the launch command to actually launching.
And that has to do, I surmise, with the location of the submarine, its depth.
Some of these things are so highly classified and others, other details are shockingly available
if you look deep enough or if you ask enough questions and you can go from one document
to the next to the
next and really find these answers. Not to ask top secret questions but to what degree do you think
the Russians know the locations of the silos in the U.S. and vice versa? Lex, you can you and I can
find the location of every silo right now. They're all there and before they were there on on you know
Google they were there in maps because we're a democracy and we make these things known,
okay. Now what's tricky is that Russia and North Korea rely upon what are called
road mobile launchers, right. So Russia has a lot of underground silos, you know,
all of the scenario takes you through these different facilities that really do exist and they're all sourced with how many weapons they have and their launch procedures
and whatnot.
But in addition to having underground silos, they have road mobile launchers and that means
you could just have one of these giant ICBMs on a 22 axle truck that can move stealthily around the country so that it can't be targeted
by the US Defense Department. We don't have those in America because presumably the average American
isn't going to go for the ICBM road mobile launcher driving down the street in your town or city. Which is why
the Defense Department will justify we need the second strike capacity
capability the submarines right because you know the I mean the wonky stuff that
is worth looking into as if you really dig the book and are like wait a minute
it's all footnoted where you can learn more
about how these systems have changed over time
and why more than anything,
it's very difficult to get out of this catch-22 conundrum
that we need nuclear weapons to keep us safe.
That is the real enigma
because the other guys have them, right? And the
other guys have sort of more sinister ways of using them or at least that's
what the nomenclature out of the Pentagon will always be when anyone tries
to say we just need to really think about full disarmament.
You've written about intelligence agencies. How good are the intelligence
agencies on this?
How much does CIA know about the Russian launch sites
and capabilities and command and control procedures
and all this and vice versa?
I mean, all of this because it's decades old
is really well known.
If you go to the Federation of American Scientists, they have a team led by a
guy called Hans Christiansen who runs what's called the Nuclear Notebook. And he and his team every
year are keeping track of this number of warheads on these number of weapons systems. And because of
the treaties, the different signatories to the treaty all report these numbers. Of course, the different intelligence community,
people are keeping track of what's being revealed
honestly and reported with transparency and what is being hidden.
The real issue is the new systems that Russia is working on right now.
We are moving into an era
whereby the threat of actually having new weapons systems
that are nuclear capable is very real
because of the escalating tensions around the world.
And that's where the CIA, I would guess,
is doing most of its work right now.
So most of your research is kind of looking at
the older versions of the system. CIA I would guess is doing most of its work right now. So most of your research is kind of looking at
the older versions of the system.
And presumably there's potentially secret development
of new ones, hopefully.
Which violates treaties.
So yes, that is where the intelligence agencies,
but you know, at a point, it's overkill,
literally and figuratively, right? People are up in arms about these
hypersonic weapons. Well, we have a hypersonic weapons program, you know, Falcon, Google
Blackswift, right? This is Lockheed's doing, you know, DARPA exists to create the vast weapons
systems of the future. That is its job. It has been doing that since its creation in 1957.
I would never believe that we aren't ahead of everyone.
Call me, you know, over-informed or naive, one or the other.
That would be my position because DARPA works
from the chicken or the egg scenario, you know?
That like, once you learn about something,
once you learn Russia has created this, you know? Once you learn about something, once you learn Russia's created this typhoon submarine, which
may or may not be viable, it's too late if you don't already have one.
We'll probably talk about DARPA a little bit.
One of the things that makes me sad about Lockheed, many things make me sad about Lockheed,
but one of the things is because it's very top secret, you can't show off all the incredible engineering
going on there. The other thing that's more philosophical, DARPA also, is
that war seems to stimulate most of our, not most, but a large percent of our
exciting innovation in engineering.
But that's also the pragmatic fact of life on Earth, is that the risk of annihilation is a great motivator
for innovation, for engineering and so on.
But yes, I would not discount the United States
in its ability to build the weapons of the future,
nuclear included. Again, terrifying. Can you tell me about the nuclear football, as it's
called?
I think Americans are familiar with the football, at least anyone who sort of follows national
security concepts, because it's a satchel. It's a leather satchel that is always with a
military aid in Secret Service nomenclature, that's the Mil-Aid, and he's
trailing around the president 24-7, 365 days a year, and also the vice president
by the way, with the ability to launch nuclear war in that six-minute window all the time.
That is also called the football, and it's always with the president.
To report this part of the book, I interviewed a lot of people in the Secret Service that
are with the president and talk about this.
The director of the Secret Service, a guy called Lou Merletti, told me a story that I just really
found fascinating. He was also in charge of the president's detail, President Clinton this was,
before he was director of the Secret Service. And he told me the story about how, he said,
the football is with the president at all times, period. Okay. They were traveling to Syria and Clinton was
meeting with President Assad and they got into an elevator, Clinton and the Secret Service
team and one of Assad's guys was like, no, you know, like about the mill aid. And Lou
said it was like a standoff because there was no way they were not going to have
the president with his football in an elevator.
And it kind of sums up, for me anyways, you realize what goes into every single one of
these decisions.
You realize the massive system of systems behind every item you might just
see in passing and glancing on the news as you see the mill aid carrying that satchel.
Well, what's in that satchel? I really dug into that to report this book.
What is in that satchel?
Okay. Well, okay. First of all, that is, you know, people always say, it's incredibly classified.
I mean, people talk about UFOs. It's incredibly, I mean, come on, guys, that is nothing burger, right?
You want to know what's really classified, what's in that football, right? What's in that satchel?
But the PED, Presidential Emergency Action Directives, right? Those have never been leaked.
No one knows what they are.
What we do know from one of the mill aides who spoke on the record, a guy
called Buzz Patterson, he describes the president's orders, right? So if a nuclear
war has begun, if the president has been told there are nuclear missiles, one or
more, coming at the United States, you have to launch in a counter attack, right?
The red clock is ticking,
you have to get the blue impact clock ticking.
He needs to look at this list to decide
what targets to strike and what weapon systems to use.
And that is what is on, according to Buzz Patterson,
a piece of like sort of laminated plastic.
He described it like a Denny's menu.
And from that menu, the president chooses targets and chooses weapon systems.
And it's probably super old school, like all, uh, top secret systems are, because
they have to be tested over and over
and over and over and over.
Yes, and it's non-digital.
Non-digital.
It might literally be a Denny's menu from hell.
Right, and there's a, meanwhile,
I learned this only in reporting the book.
There is a identical black book
inside the STRATCOM bunker in Nebraska.
So let me, three command bunkers are involved when nuclear war begins, right?
There's the bunker beneath the Pentagon, which is called the National Military Command Center.
Then there is the bunker beneath Cheyenne Mountain, which everyone has, you know, many
people have heard of because it's been made famous in movies, right?
That is a very real bunker.
And then there is a third bunker
which people are not so familiar with,
which is the bunker beneath strategic command in Nebraska.
And so it's described to me this way.
The Pentagon bunker is the beating heart.
The Cheyenne Mountain bunker is the brains.
And the STRATCOM bunker is the muscle.
The STRATCOM commander will receive word from the president, launch orders, and then directs
the 150,000 people beneath him what to do,
okay, from the bunker beneath STRATCOM.
That's before he gets the orders,
then he has to run out of the building
and jump onto what's called the doomsday plane.
We'll get into that in a minute.
Let me just finish the, I mean, but again,
these are the details.
This is like, these are the systematic sequential details
that happen in seconds and minutes.
And reporting them, I never cease to be amazed
by what a system it is.
A follows B, it's just numerical, right?
Yeah, but as we discuss this procedure,
each individual person that follows that procedure
might lose the big picture of the whole thing.
I mean, especially when you realize what is happening,
that almost out of fear, you just follow the steps.
Yep, okay, so imagine this,
imagine being the president, you got
that six minute win. You have to, you're looking at your list of strike options. You're being briefed
by your chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and your SECDF. And this other really spooky detail,
in the STRATCOM bunker, in addition to the nuclear strike advisor who can answer
very specific questions if the president's like, wait a minute, why are we striking that
and not that, there's also a weather officer. And this is the kind of human detail that
kept me up at night. Because that weather officer is in charge of explaining to the president really fast how many people are going to die
and how many people are going to die in minutes, weeks,
months and years from radiation fallout.
Because a lot of that has to do with the weather system.
Yes.
Yes. And so these kinds of, the humanness,
you know, balanced out with the mechanization of it all,
is, it's just really grotesque.
So the Doomsday Plane from Stratcom, what's that, where's it going? It's just really grotesque. So the doomsday plane from STRATCOM, what's that?
Where's it going?
It's on it.
Right.
Okay, ready?
It's gonna fly in circles.
That's where it's going.
It's flying in circles around the United States of America
so that nuclear weapons can be launched from the air
after the ground systems are taken out nuclear weapons can be launched from the air
after the ground systems are taken out by the incoming ICBMs,
or the incoming submarine-launched ballistic missiles.
This has been in play since the 50s.
These are the contingency plans
for when nuclear war happens.
So again, going back to this absurd paradox, nuclear war will never happen.
Mutual assured destruction, that is why deterrence will hold.
Well, I found a talk that the deputy director of STRATCOM gave to a very close-knit group
where he said, yes, deterrence will hold, but if it fails,
everything unravels.
And think about that word unravels, right?
And the unraveling is, you know,
the doomsday plane launches.
The STRATCOM commander jumps in, he's in that plane,
he's flying around the United States,
and he's making decisions
because the Pentagon's been taken out.
At 9-11, by the way, Bush was in the doomsday plane. He's making decisions because the Pentagon's been taken out.
At 9-11, by the way, Bush was in the Doomsday Plane. Bush had to make decisions quickly,
but not so quickly,
not as quickly as he would have
needed to have done if there's a nuclear launch.
I mean, six minutes.
It basically happens in three acts.
There's the first 24 minutes, the
next 24 minutes, and the last 24 minutes. And that is the reality of nuclear
weapons.
What is the interceptor capabilities of the United States. How many nuclear missiles can be stopped?
I was at a dinner party with a very informed person, right?
Like somebody who really should have known this.
And this is when I was considering writing
and reporting this book and he said to me,
oh, Annie, that would never happen
because of our powerful interceptor system. Okay?
Well, he's wrong. Let me tell you about our powerful interceptor system. First of all,
we have 44 interceptor missiles, total period, full stop. Let me repeat, 44. Okay? Earlier we were talking about Russia's 1670 deployed nuclear weapons. How are those
44 interceptor missiles going to work, right? And they also have a success rate of around
50%. So they work 50% of the time. There are 40 of them in Alaska, and there are four of them at Vandenberg Air Force Base
in Santa Barbara, okay?
And they are responsible at about nine minutes
into the scenario, right?
After the ICBM has finished that five minute boost phase
we talked about, now it's in mid-course phase,
and the ground radar systems have identified,
yes, this is an incoming ICBM. And now the interceptor missiles have to launch, right?
It's essentially shooting a missile with a missile. Inside the interceptor, which is just a big giant rocket. In its nose cone, it has what's called
the aptly named exo-atmospheric kill vehicle, okay?
There's no explosives in that thing.
It's literally just going to take out the warhead,
ideally, with force.
So one of them is going like, you know, Mach 20.
I mean, the speeds at which these two moving objects, with force. So one of them is going like, you know, mock 20.
I mean, the speeds at which these two moving objects
hurtling through space are going is astonishing.
And the fact that interception is even possible
is really remarkable, but it's only possible
50% of the time.
Is it possible that we only know about 44,
but there could be a lot more?
No, impossible.
That I would be willing to bet.
And how well tested are these interceptors?
Well, that's where we get the success rate
that's around 50% because of the tests, right?
And actually the interceptor program is,
are you ready for this?
It's on strategic pause, right?
Right now, meaning the interceptor missiles are there,
but developing them and making them more effective
is on strategic pause because they can't be made
more effective, right?
People have these fantasies that we have a system
like the Iron Dome and they see this in current events
and they're like, oh, our interceptors would do that.
It's just simply not true.
Why can't an Iron dome like system be constructed
for nuclear warheads?
We have systems I write about called the THAAD system,
which is ground based, and then the Aegis system,
which is on, you know, vessels.
And these are great at shooting down some,
you know, some rockets, but they can only shoot them
sort of one at a time.
You cannot shoot the mother load as it's coming in.
Those are the smaller systems, right?
The tactical nuclear weapons.
And by the way, our THAAD systems are all deployed overseas
and our Aegis systems are all out at sea.
And again, reporting that, I was like, wait, what?
You know, you have to really hunker down.
Are we sure about this?
People really don't wanna believe this.
It's an actual fact.
After 9-11, Congress considered putting Aegis missiles and maybe even THAAD systems along
the west coast of the United States to specifically deal with the threats against nuclear-armed
North Korea.
But it hasn't done so yet.
And again, you have to ask yourself, wait a minute, this is insanity.
One nuclear weapon gets by any of these systems and it's full out nuclear warfare.
That's not the solution.
More nuclear weapons is not the solution.
I'm looking for a hopeful thing here about North Korea.
How many deployed nuclear warheads does North Korea have?
Does the current system, as we described it, the
interceptors and so on have a hope against the North Korean attack? The one that you
mentioned people are worried about.
So North Korea has 50, let's say 50 nuclear weapons right now. Some NGOs put it at more than 100. It's impossible to know
because North Korea's nuclear weapons program has no transparency. They're the only nuclear
armed nation that doesn't announce when they do a ballistic missile test. Everyone else
does. No one wants to start a nuclear war by accident. Right? So if Russia's going to
launch an ICBM, they tell us.
If we're going to launch one, and I'm talking test runs here, you know, with a dummy warhead,
we tell them, not North Korea.
That's a fact.
Okay?
So we're constantly up against the fear of North Korea.
In this scenario, I have the incoming North Korean one megaton weapon coming in and the interceptor system tries
to shoot it down. So there's not enough time. And this, by the way, I ran through by all,
generals from the Pentagon who run these scenarios for NORAD, right? And confirmed all of this as fact. This is the situation, right? So in the scenario,
I have the nuclear ICBM coming in, the interceptor missiles try to shoot down the warhead. The
capability is not like what's called shoot and look. There's not enough time to go like,
and we're going to try to get it. We missed it. Okay, let's go for another one.
So you have to go, poof, poof, poof, poof, right?
So in my scenario, we fire off four,
which is about what I was told would one to four,
because you're worried about the next one
that's gonna come in.
You're gonna use up 10% of your missile force,
of your interceptor force on one, and all four miss,
and that's totally plausible.
Right.
and all four myths, and that's totally plausible.
Right.
How likely are mistakes, accidents, false alarms, taken as real, all this kind of stuff in this picture?
So like you've, we've kind of assumed
the detection works correctly.
How likely is it possible, like anywhere,
you described this long chain of events that can happen.
How possible is it just to make a mistake,
a stupid human mistake along the way?
There have been at least six known, like absolute,
like oh my God, close calls,
how thank God this happened type scenarios.
One was described to me with an actual personal participant, secretary, former Secretary of Defense, Bill Perry, right?
And he described what happened to him in 1979.
He was not yet Secretary of Defense.
He was the Deputy Director of the Research and Engineering,
which is like a big job at the Pentagon.
And it was the night watch fell on him essentially, right?
And he gets this call in the middle of the night.
He's told that Russia has launched not just ICBMs,
but submarine-launched ballistic missiles
are coming at the United States.
And he is about to notify the president
that the six-minute window has to begin
when he learns it was a mistake.
The mistake was that there was a training tape
with a nuclear war scenario, right?
We haven't even begun to talk about the nuclear war
scenarios that the Pentagon runs.
An actual VHS training tape had been incorrectly inserted
into a system at the Pentagon.
And so this nuclear launch showed up at
that bunker beneath the Pentagon and at the bunker beneath STRATCOM because
they're connected as being real and then it was like oh whoops it's actually a
simulation test tape and Perry described to me what that was like,
the pause in his spirit and his mind and his heart
when he realized I'm about to have to tell the president
that he needs to launch nuclear weapons.
And he learned just in the neck of time
that it was an error.
And that's one of five examples.
Can you speak to maybe, is there any more color
to the feelings he was feeling?
Like what's your sense?
And given all the experts you've talked to,
what can be said about the seconds that one feels
once finding out that a launch has happened,
even if that information is false information?
For me personally, that's the only firsthand story
that I ever heard because it's so rare
and it's so unique and most people
in the national security system, at least in the past,
have been loathed to talk about any of this, right?
It's like the sacred oath, it's taboo.
It's taboo to go against the system of systems that is, you know,
making sure nuclear war never happens. Bill Perry was one of the first people who did this. And a
lot of it, I believe, at least in my lengthy conversations with him, we had a lot of Zoom
calls over COVID when I began reporting this. And he had a lot to do with me feeling like I could write this book from a human point of view
and not just from the mechanized systems.
Because, and I only lightly touch upon this because it's such a fast sweeping scenario,
but Perry, for example, spent his whole life dedicated to building weapons of war, only
later in life to realize this is madness.
And he shared with me that it was that idea about one's grandchildren inheriting these these nuclear arsenals and the lack of, you know, wisdom that comes with their origin stories,
right? When you're involved in it in the ground up, apparently, it has, perhaps you're a different
kind of steward of these systems than if you just inherit them and they are, you know, pages in a manual.
Mm-hmm, people forget.
You mentioned the kind of nuclear war scenarios
that the Pentagon runs.
I'd love to, what do you know about those?
I mean, again, they are very classified, right?
I mean, it was interesting coming across
in from levels of classification I didn't even know existed,
like ECI, for example, is exceptionally controlled information.
But the Pentagon nuclear war gaming scenarios, they're almost all still classified.
One of them was declassified recently, if you can call it that. I show an image of it in the book
and it's just basically like almost entirely redacted
and then like there'll be a date, you know,
or it'll say like phase one.
And that one was called proud profit.
But what was incredible about the declassification process
of that is it allowed a couple of people
who were there to talk about it, okay? And that's
why we have that information. And I write about proud profit in the book because it was super
significant in many ways. One, it was happening right in 1983. It was an insane moment in nuclear
arsenals. There were 60,000 nuclear weapons. Right now there's 12,500. So we've come a
long way, baby, right, in terms of disarmament. But there were 60,000. And by the way, that
was not the ultimate high. The ultimate high was 70,000. Okay? This is insane. And Ronald
Reagan was president and he orders this war game called Proud Prophet. And everyone that mattered was involved.
They were running the war game scenarios.
And what we learned from his declassification
is that no matter how nuclear war starts,
there was a bunch of different scenarios
with NATO involved, without NATO,
with all different scenarios,
no matter how nuclear war starts, it ends in Armageddon.
It ends with everyone dead.
I mean, this is shocking when you think about that,
coupled with the idea that all that has been done
in the 40 some odd years since is,
okay, let's just really lean in even harder to this theoretical phenomena of deterrence.
Because that's all it is.
It's just a statement, Lex.
Like, deterrence will hold.
Okay, well, what if it doesn't?
Well, we know from proud profit what happens if it doesn't.
That almost always, so there's no mechanisms
in the human mind and the human soul that stops it.
In the governments they've created,
it just keeps, the procedure escalates always.
I mean, here's a crazy nomenclature jargon thing for you.
Ready?
Escalate to deescalate.
That's what comes out of it.
Think about what I just said. Escalate to deescalate. Okay That's what comes out of it. Think about what I just said.
Escalate to de-escalate.
Okay, so someone strikes you with a nuclear weapon,
you're gonna escalate it, right?
General Hyten recently said he was STRATCOM commander,
if he was sort of saber rattling with North Korea
during COVID and he said,
they need to know if they launch one nuclear weapon,
we launch one.
If they launch two, we launch two. But it's actually more than that. They nuclear weapon, we launch one. If they launch two, we launch two.
But it's actually more than that.
They launch one, we launch 80.
Yeah. Okay?
That's called escalate to deescalate.
Like pound the you know what out of them
to get them to stop.
But I mean, there is, to make a case for that,
there is a reason to the madness
because you want to threaten this gigantic response.
But when it comes to it, the seconds before,
there is still a probability that you'll pull back.
Which brings us to the most terrifying facts
that I learned in all of that and
that has to do with errors, right? Not just, not errors of like we spoke about a
minute ago with a simulation test tape. I'm talking about if one
madman, one nihilistic madman were to launch a nuclear weapon as I write
in this scenario and we needed to escalate to
de-escalate. We needed to send nuclear weapons at, let's say, North Korea as I do in my scenario.
Well, what is completely unknown to 98% of the planet is that not only do the Russians have a
very flawed satellite system so that they cannot
interpret what is happening properly. But there is an absolutely existential flaw
in the system which Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta confirmed with me, which is
that our ICBMs do not have enough range. If we launch a counterattack against, say, North Korea, our ICBMs must fly
over Russia. They must fly over Russia. So imagine saying, oh, no, no, these 82 warheads
that are going to actually strike the northern Korean Peninsula
are not coming for you, Russia, our adversary right now that we're sort of
saber-rattling with. Just trust us. And that is where nuclear war unfolds into
Armageddon. And that hole in national security is shocking. And as Panetta told me, no one wants to discuss it.
And if one nuclear weapon does reach its target,
I presume communication breaks down completely.
Or like there's a high risk of breakdown of communication.
Well, let's back up.
We are both presumptuous to assume
that communication could even happen
prior to and let me give you a very specific example. During the Ukraine War, okay, if
perhaps you remember, I think it was in November of 2022, news reports erroneously stated that
a Russian rocket, a Russian missile had hit Poland, a NATO country,
right? It turned out to be a mistake, but for several hours, this was actually the information
that was all over the news, breaking news, okay?
Thirty-six hours later, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Mark Milley,
gave a press conference and talked about this and admitted that he could not
reach his Russian counterpart during those 36 hours. He could not reach him. How are you going
to not have an absolute Armageddon-like furor with nuclear weapons in the air,
if people can't get on the phone during a ground war.
I'd like to believe that there's people in major nations
that don't give a damn about the bullshit of politics
and can always just pick up the phone.
Sort of very close to the top but not at the very top
and just cut through the bullshit of it
in situations like this.
I hope that's true.
I doubt it is and let me tell you why.
Most, and neither you nor I are political
from what I gather, right?
So I just write about POTUS, President of the United States.
I don't, you have no idea what my politics are because they shouldn't matter. No one should be
for nuclear war or no one should be for nuclear, you know, national insecurity. Yes, you want to
have a strong nation. But once you get into politics, then you're talking about sycophants. And the more a political leader becomes divisive, becomes polemic, the more his platform is
predicated on hating the other side, either within his own country or with alleged enemy
nations, the more you surround yourself, as we see in the current day with sycophants, with people who will tell you not only what they think you want to hear but what
will help them to hold on to power. So you don't have wise decision-makers. Long
gone are the days where we had presidents who had advisors on both sides
of the aisle. That's really important
Because you want to you want to have differing opinions, but as things become more
Vipress both here in the United States and
In nuclear-armed nations all bets are off at whether your advisors are going to give you good advice
Who are the people around the president of the United States that give advice in this six minute window?
How many of them, just to, maybe you could speak
to the detail of that, but also to the spirit
of the way they see the world.
How many of them are warmongers?
How many of them are kind of big picture,
peace, humanity type of thinkers?
Well, again, we're talking about that six minute window.
So it's not exactly like you can,
let me put a pot of coffee on
and really tell me what you think.
And we can strategize here, right?
You have your sec def and your chairman,
maybe the vice chairman.
And okay, we haven't even begun to talk about the fact
that at the same time, these advisors
also have a parallel concern
and that's called continuity of government.
Okay? So while they're trying to advise on the nuclear counter-strike in response to the incoming
nuclear missile, they have to be thinking, how are we going to keep the government functioning
when the missiles start hitting, when the bombs start going off. And that is about getting yourself out of the Pentagon,
let's say, getting yourself to one of these nuclear bunkers
that I write about at length in the book.
So how much can you ask of a human, right?
Because it comes down to a human.
The Secretary of Defense is a human.
And imagine that job while trying to advise the president.
And then there's also a really interesting term
which I learned about called jamming the president,
which is often understood in Washington
that the military advisors would,
we don't know if this is legit,
we've never seen it put to the test,
but jamming the president means the military advisors
are gonna push for a really aggressive counterattack
immediately.
And again, you're the president who's not really
been paying attention to this because he has many other
things to deal with.
Speed is not conducive to wisdom.
Can you speak to the jamming the president?
So your sense is the advisors would,
by default, be pushing for aggressive counterattack? That is a term in sort of the national security,
nuclear command and control, historical documentation,
that many of the people that you might call
the more dovish type people are, you know, worried about that the more hawkish people are going to,
the military advisors, right, are gonna be jamming
the president to make these decisions about which targets,
not if, but what.
Right, which targets.
The argument will be about which targets, not about if.
Yes.
I hope that even the warmongers would, at this moment,
because what underlies the idea of you wanting to go to war?
It's power, it's like wanting to destroy the enemy
and be the big kid on the block.
But with nuclear war, it just feels like that falls apart.
Do you think warmongers actually believe they can win a nuclear war?
Well, you've raised a really important question that we look to the historical record for
that answer, right?
Because astonishingly, all of this began, like when Russia first got the bomb in 1949, the powers that be, and I write about them in the book,
is in a setup for the moment of launch, right? It's called how we got here, right? And you see,
and I cite declassified documents from some of these early meetings where nuclear war plans were being laid out. And absolutely back in the 1950s,
the generals and the admirals that were running the nuclear command and control system believed
that we could fight and win a nuclear war despite hundreds of millions of people dying. This was the prevailing thought.
And only over time did the kind of concept come into play that, no, we can never have
a nuclear war.
It's the famous Gorbachev and Reagan joint statement, a nuclear war cannot be won and
must never be fought. But before that, many people believed that it could be won
and they were preparing for that.
Not to be political and not to be ageist,
but do cognitive abilities and all that kind of stuff
come into play here.
So if so much is riding on the president,
is there tests that are conducted?
Is there regular training procedures on the president that you're aware of? Do you know?
I don't think that has anything to do with ageism. I think it has to do with,
I think it's an earnest question, a really powerful one. And if people were to ask that question of themselves or their sort of,
you know, dinner party guests or their family around the dinner table guests,
you might come to a real good conclusion about how bad our political system is and how bad our
presidential candidates are. Because why on earth there would be two candidates, one of whom has
cognitive problems and the other of whom has judgment problems.
These are the two biggest issues with a nuclear launch, judgment and cognition.
So where's the young-ish, thoughtful, forward-looking, wise, dedicated civil servant
running for president.
I know that sounds fantastical, but I wish it weren't.
So that's one of the things you should really think about
when voting for president is this scenario
that we've been describing, these six minutes.
Imagine the man or woman sitting there
for six minutes waiting for the pot of coffee.
But I think about that issue with any war, right?
I mean, prior to writing Nuclear War, a scenario,
I previously wrote six books on military and intelligence programs designed to
prevent nuclear war. And I believe the president as commander in chief should be of the highest
character possible because the programs, the wars that we have fought since World War II have all
been, you know, how many octogenarian sources have I interviewed? I'm talking about Nobel laureates
and weapons designer and spy pilots and engineers in general. They've all said to me with great
pride, you know, we prevented World War III, nuclear World War
III, right? And that, but that idea that the commander-in-chief and everyone in the, in,
within the national security apparatus should be making really good decisions about, about war.
It's the oldest cliche in the world that, you know, the, the wars are fought by the young kids. And
that is, it's not a cliche, it's true.
And so the character part about the president
should be in play whether we're thinking about nuclear war
or any war, in my opinion.
Well, I agree with you, first of all,
but it feels like when nuclear war,
one person becomes exponentially more important.
With regular war, the decision to go to war or not,
advisors start mattering more, there's judgment issues.
You can start to make arguments for
sort of more leeway in terms of what kind of people
we elect.
It seems like with nuclear war, there's no leeway.
It's like one person can resist this,
the jamming, the president force, the warmongers,
the use, like, all the calculation involved in considering
what are the errors, the mistakes,
the missiles flying over Russia,
the full dynamics of the geopolitics going on in the world.
Consider all of humanity, the history of humanity,
the future of humanity, all of it just loaded in
to make a decision.
Then it becomes much more important
that your cognitive abilities are strong
and your judgment abilities against,
against powerful, wise people,
just as a human being are strong.
So I think that's something to really, really consider
when you vote for president.
But to which degree is it really on the president
versus to the people advising?
Oh no, it's on the president.
The president has to make the call.
And that six-minute window happens so fast.
I mean, the president is going to be being moved
for part of that time.
The Secret Service is going to be up against STRATCOM.
STRATCOM's saying, we need the launch orders.
And the Secret Service is going to be saying,
we need to move the president.
So it's not as much that he's delegating the issues. It's more like the issue is being postponed because there is only one issue
for the president to say these targets, you know, for him to choose from the Denny's like menu.
Okay, this is what we're going to go with. And then this astonishing thing happens. The president
pulls, you know, takes out his wallet. He has a card in it that's colloquially
called the biscuit. And that card with the codes matches up an item in the briefcase
in the football that then is received by an officer underneath the bunker, underneath
the Pentagon in that bunker. It's a call and response, Lex. It's like, you know, alpha, zeta, right? That's it. And then
back so that the individual in the bunker realizes they are getting the command from the president.
And then that order is passed to STRATCOM. And STRATCOM, the commander of STRATCOM,
and I interviewed a former commander of STRATCOM,
commander of STRATCOM then follows orders,
which is, delivers the launch orders to the nuclear triad.
And what's done is done.
What would you do if you were the commander of STRATCOM
in that situation?
What would you do?
Because I, like my gut reaction right now,
if you just throw me in there, I would refuse orders.
Okay, so good question.
I asked that exact question to one of my very helpful
sources on the book, Dr. Glenn McDuff, who is at Los Alamos and who for a while was the
classified, they have a museum that's classified within the lab, and he was the historian in
charge of it, right? So he's a nuclear weapons engineer, he worked on Star Wars during the
Reagan era, and he does a lot having to do with the history of Los Alamos. And the, by the way, the Oppenheimer movie,
really, because I've reported on nuclear weapons for, you know, 12 years now, and Oppenheimer
movie had a very, to me, positive impact on Los Alamos's transparency with people like me.
They had a real willingness to share information. I think before perhaps they
were on their heels feeling they needed to be on the defensive, but now they're much more
forthcoming. They were super helpful. I can tell you the origin story of the football,
which they declassified for the book. But I asked this question to Dr. Glenn MacDuff, right? Like in a different manner, I said, is there a chance that the STRATCOM commander
would defy orders?
And he said,
Annie, you have a better chance winning Powerball.
Why do you think?
What's his intuition behind that?
You don't wind up a STRATCOM commander
unless you are someone who follows orders.
You follow orders.
You don't think there's a deep humanity there?
Because his intuition is about everything we know so far,
but this situation has never happened
in the history of Earth.
Well, this is, all right, so you're raising
a really tricky,
interesting conundrum here because during COVID,
when President Trump and the leader of North Korea
were kind of locked in various relationships
with one another, good, bad, threatening,
non-threatening, friendly, just bananas, you might say,
like not
presidential behavior. If you were someone watching C-SPAN like I do,
nerding out on what STRATCOM was actually saying about all this, you
noticed that STRATCOM commanders were speaking out publicly to Congress more so than I had ever seen before.
And this issue came up, would you defy presidential orders?
So the caveat I would say to Macduff's president's behavior to be unreliable, to
be non-presidential, then dot dot dot.
But now you're into some really radical territory? Well, I mean, fundamentally, it feels like,
just looking at all the presidents of the United States
in my lifetime, it feels like none of them are qualified
for this six minutes.
So like I could see, you know, I could see
as being the commander of Strachan
being like this guy, basically respecting no president.
I know you're supposed to be the commander in chief,
but in this situation, saying like, I mean everybody,
Bush, Obama, Trump, Biden, if I was the commander
of Strachan I'd be like, what does this guy know about any of this?
I would defy orders.
I mean, in this situation,
when the future of human civilization hangs in the balance,
I mean, to be the person that says yes, launch,
no matter what, I just can't see a human being on earth being able to do that
in the United States of America.
That's a hell of a decision.
Like this is it.
That's it.
Well, but now you've raised a great important
presentation essentially,
because what you're saying is people be aware, right?
Be aware of like why you're voting or why certain individuals are being escalated to
even being able to run for president.
What does that mean?
Why are people in America not more involved as citizens?
Do we have a responsibility for that?
Because you've opened up the door for people to understand, okay, the ultimate thing is
the nuclear launch decision.
So if a person can't be trusted with that,
everything spiral, everything unravels from there.
Also, I wanna look up who's the commander of STRATCOM now.
Speaking of which, you've interviewed a lot of experts
for this book.
Is there some commonalities about the way,
you've talked about this a little bit,alities about the way,
you've talked about this a little bit, but in the way they see this whole situation,
what scares them the most about this whole system
and the whole possibility of nuclear war?
I first learned about nuclear weapons
from a guy called Al O'Donnell,
who appears in my earlier
books because I interviewed him for over a period of four and a half years
because he was an engineer who actually wired nuclear bombs in the 1950s. He was
a member of the Manhattan Project in 1946, worked on Operation Crossroads, the
first explosions of nuclear bombs after the war ended,
after World War II ended, and went on to arm, wire, and fire 186 out of the 200 some odd
atmospheric nuclear tests that the United States did before this was banned. And so I learned from him the power of these weapons, right?
And I learned from him this very almost nationalistic idea
about how important it was to have nuclear weapons.
And while I learned a lot about his human side,
I also saw the side of him that was very Cold War warrior, right?
And then, so he was kind of the first and then, I don't know, there's been a hundred
people that have been directly involved in nuclear weapons along the way.
Billy Waugh, who was my subject of my main sort of central figure in a book I wrote about
the CIA's paramilitary called Surprise, Kill, Vanish.
And Waugh halo jumped a tactical nuclear weapon into the Nevada test site with a small team,
almost unknown to anyone, right?
Only recently declassified.
And so his position was like, tactical nuclear weapons may end up being used. So I'm trying to speak here to the scope of different people I have interviewed over the
years, right?
And what has happened is as I've gotten closer to the present day, you know, in arrears,
there seems to be a growing movement from some of these cold warriors off the position
of nuclear weapons make us great and strong toward something must be done to reduce this
threat.
How much do you know in the same way
that you know about the United States,
how much do you know about the Russian side?
Maybe the Chinese side, Indian, Pakistan, all of this.
Like how their thinking differs, perhaps.
Yes, well, for that you wanna go to the experts, right?
So for Russia, for example, there's a guy called Pavel Podvig, who is probably the West's
top expert on Russian nuclear forces.
He works in parallel with the UN.
He also studied in Moscow.
And he interviewed, so my information comes from him, right?
Like you do all the footwork to know what questions to ask
and then you take the very specific questions to him.
And I learned from him about how the Russian command
and control goes down.
And it's very similar to ours because America and Russia
have been at sort of nuclear dueling with one another for 75 years now.
And so everything we have, they have, right? With the exception of we have a great satellite
system and they have a super flawed one. There's this called Tundra. And even Pavel Podvig admitted
that there are serious flaws in Tundra. The Russian satellite system, for example, can mistake sunlight for flames, can mistake
clouds for a nuclear launch.
This is a fact, okay?
And what was interesting in interviewing him was also this recent very, very dangerous
shift in Russian nuclear policy, which is this.
Many Russian experts will tell you that Russia has always maintained that it never had a
launch on warning policy.
Now, I don't know if I believe that's true, but I'm just telling you what they say.
And this is coming from the generals, the Cold War generals in Soviet Russia saying,
oh, no, no, no, we would wait. They were kind of playing the noble warrior.
We would wait to absorb a nuclear attack
until we launched, okay?
So many Americans, you know, experts will tell you
that that's just posturing and propaganda.
But that was their official position.
And that changed just two years ago
when Putin gave a speech and he said that their position
had changed, that they will no longer wait to absorb an attack, that they, once
they learn of, how did he phrase it, he called it like the the trajectory of the
missiles, right, which is a way of talking about parody, the same way we see the
missile coming over in mid course. Putin made that
same statement and said we would launch.
What do you know of the way Putin thinks about nuclear weapons and nuclear war? Is it just
something to allude to in a speech? Or do you think he contemplates the possibilities
of nuclear war?
I don't know, but if I had to guess, it would go like this.
I would look at his background
and he comes from the intelligence world, right?
So my experience in interviewing old timers
who have spent decades working for the CIA
or even NRO or NSA,
I know the way they think
from having spent hundreds of hours interviewing them,
right?
And then I know the way that, you know, military men think and it's very different, right? So
Putin's not a military person per se. He's an intelligence officer. So what
would concern me there if I had to guess about his mindset has to do with
paranoia, right? Most intelligence officers must have a degree
of healthy paranoia or they're gonna wind up dead, right?
And so that's not a great quality to have.
You would be more trigger happy perhaps.
So you would be more prone to respond to erroneous signals.
And you'd be suspicious and you can see that now.
There's such an incredible distrust and sort of real
conflict between Russia, between its leader and NATO,
between its leader and all of the West.
And then that is fueled by his closest advisors.
Kind of, you know, they seem to be, from the statements they have made that I've read in
translation, they seem to be fostering that same idea that, you know, NATO really has it in for Russia.
The America really has it in.
And that is so dangerous and disheartening.
And perhaps makes it less likely that the president will pick up the phone and talk
to the other president.
And or that the close advisors near the president would make that happen.
You were talking about the procedure with the football.
Is there any concern for cyber attacks, for sort of security concerns of, at every level
here, false signals, errors, shutting down the channels of communication through cyber
attacks, all that kind of stuff.
So to answer those questions, I interviewed a number of people, but most specifically
General Toohill, who was Obama's cyber chief, and he was actually America's first cyber
chief. And the nuclear command and control system and really the triad functions on analog systems.
It functions on old school systems.
If there's not digital interface, you can't hack into it, right?
So most of the issues that I raise in the book have to do with what happens to cyber after a nuclear attack, right?
What happens to cyber in the minutes after a bomb, a nuclear weapon strikes America and
how that impacts the ability for people to communicate with one another.
And that's when chaos takes control.
Well, let's talk about it.
So, God forbid,
if a nuclear weapon reaches its target,
what happens?
Perhaps you could say what you think would be
the first target hit, would it be the Pentagon?
I was told by many people I interviewed that the biggest fear in Washington, DC is what's called a
bolt out of the blue attack. That's an unwarned nuclear attack against Washington, DC. The target
would be the Pentagon. And that's what I begin the scenario with, you know?
And I reported in graphic, horrifying detail what happens.
Because I don't know what's worse,
me writing that all out or the fact
that it's all documented by the Defense Department.
I mean, they have been documenting the effect
of nuclear weapons on people and animals and
things since the earliest days of the Cold War.
And all of the details I pull are from these documents like the effects of nuclear weapons.
And again, this document was the original information, the original data in this document
come from Hiroshima
and Nagasaki, right? It was all classified. And then it was built upon by those 200 some
odd atmospheric nuclear weapons tests. We did. And, you know, we're talking about like
millimeters and inches. We're talking about the Defense Department knowing that, oh, seven and a half
miles out, the upholstery on cars will spontaneously combust. The pine needles will catch on fire. They
will start more fires. You have all kinds of mayhem and chaos happening based on reported facts from observations.
And this is really shocking and grotesque at the same time.
So one warhead reaches the Pentagon,
everybody in the Pentagon perishes.
180 million degrees. The fireball on a one megaton nuclear weapon is nineteen football fields of fire.
Think about that.
Nothing remains.
Nothing remains.
And there's then a radius where people die immediately,
and then there's people that are dead when found,
and then there's people that will die slowly.
Yes.
And eccentric rings.
And again, rings defined by defense scientists.
But before that, you know, the bomb goes off,
then there's this blast wave
that's like several hundred miles an hour,
pushing out like a bulldozer, knocking everything down, bridges, buildings. I mean, you can read
FEMA manuals about what the rubble will be like. You're talking about 30 feet deep rubble as the buildings go over six, seven, eight, ten miles out.
That speaks nothing of the megafires that will then ensue.
So once all these people die and third degree radiation burns, did you even know there was
such a thing as fourth degree radiation burns?
Right?
We're talking about the wind ripping the skin off
people's faces many miles out. And then you have a sucking action, right?
Everyone is, or many people are familiar with what the nuclear mushroom cloud
looks like and its stem is actually creates, and again this is from you know
physicists who advise the Defense Department
on this, the sucking up into the nuclear stem, 300 mile an hour winds.
You're talking about people miles out getting sucked up into that stem.
When you see the mushroom cloud, Lex, that is in a nuclear war, that would be people.
Those are like the remnants of people and of things
in the cloud, 30, 40 mile wide mushroom cloud
blocking out the sun.
And that speaks nothing of the radiation poisoning
that follows.
And then the power grid goes out.
Basically everything we rely on in terms of systems in our way of life goes out. Basically everything we rely on in terms of systems in our way of life goes out. You write,
quote, those who somehow managed to escape death by the initial blast, shockwave and firestorm
suddenly realize an insidious truth about nuclear war, that they're entirely on their own. Here begins a quote, fight for food and water.
I mean, that is
a wake up call on top of a wake up call
that we go back to a kind of primitive fight for survival,
each on their own.
And by the way, those details were given to me by Obama's FEMA director, Craig Fugate,
who was in charge of...
So FEMA is the agency in America that plans for nuclear war, okay?
And what Fugate said to me was, you know, Annie, we plan for asteroid strikes.
These are called low probability but high consequence
events. And FEMA is the organization that you know when there's a hurricane
or an earthquake or a flood, FEMA steps in and they do what's called population
protection planning, right? They take care of people. And what Fugate told me
is after a nuclear strike, after a bolt out of the blue attack, he used those terms,
there is no population protection.
Everyone's dead, right?
And he means that metaphorically,
but also kind of more literally,
because he just said, at that point,
you just hope that you stalked Pedialyte.
What do you think happens to humans? Like how does human nature manifest itself in such conditions?
Do you think like brutality will come out? Like people will, just for survival, will steal,
will murder, will... I can't imagine that not happening. I think that's why people love post
apocalyptic television shows and films because they see that. And then of course there's always one great
charismatic person who's trying to restore morality and these are great
narratives that people like to tell themselves in the world of science
fiction. But what we're dealing with is science fact in this scenario and it is
meant to terrify people into realizing wait a
minute this is a conversation that absolutely should be have had while it
can still be had because the realities when you have the director of FEMA
telling you this it's a real wake-up call and And by the way, Craig Fugate was so transparently human with me, and I quote him directly in
the book, but he spoke about, you asked me earlier about like, what would be going through
the president's mind?
And we don't know, I don't know.
But Craig Fugate told me what would be going through his mind.
And he said, along the lines, I'm paraphrasing, like, it's almost something you couldn't even
comprehend. It would just, like, ruin you. You know, his words are really powerful. And of course,
the FEMA director in the scenario is notified in that first window while the launch, you know,
while the ballistic missile is on its way and no one in America yet knows.
And I have the FEMA director pull over to the side of the road and jump in a helicopter that's sent for him
to take him to the bunker that FEMA goes to, which is called Mount Weather.
And so he's aware that, Fugate was aware that as FEMA director, you would likely be taken to a safe place
however many hours you're going to be safe or days or maybe
weeks or maybe months but as I also learned from the cyber people I
interviewed that you know there's a complete fallacy that these military
bases can continue functioning they run on diesel fuel and when the fuel stops
pumping there's no more generators.
Electricity is gone.
Communication lines are all gone.
The food supply, all of it, all the supply chain is gone.
It's terrifying.
And that's just in the first few days, first few hours.
In part five, you described the 24 months and beyond
after this first hour we've been talking about.
So what happens to Earth?
What happens to humans?
If a full on nuclear war happens?
if a full on nuclear war happens. So for that, I was super privileged to talk to Professor Brian Toon, who is one of the
original five authors of the nuclear winter theory. And that theory was developed and
was published in the early 1980s. One of Professor Toon's professors was Carl Sagan,
who was sort of the most famous author of the nuclear winter theory. And, you know,
there were all kinds of controversies about it when it came out, including the Defense Department
saying it was Soviet propaganda, which it wasn't. And what the nuclear winter authors conceded back in the 80s was that their modeling
was just the best it could be based on what they had at the time. And so now flash forward
to where we are in 2024 and talking to Professor Toon, who's been working on this issue for all these decades since, he shared
with me how the climate models today with the systems we have, the computer systems,
reveal that actually nuclear winter is worse, right? So to answer your questions, the bombs
stop falling. In my scenario, 72 minutes after they first launch the bomb stopped
falling and then the mega fires begin each nuclear weapon will have according
to the Defense Department a mega fire that will burn between a hundred and
three hundred square miles so a thousand weapons 1500 weapons think about those
mega fires everything is burning forests cities, think about those mega fires. Everything is burning, forests, cities.
Think about the pyrotoxins in all the cities,
high-rise is burning.
And all of this soot gets lofted into the air,
according to Tune, some 300 billion pounds of soot.
And what happens?
It blocks out the Sun and without Sun we
have nuclear winter we have a situation whereby ice sheets form you're talking
about bodies of water in places like Iowa being frozen for ten years so
temperature drops.
Temperature plummets, right?
And there are all kinds of papers
that have been written about this
using modern calcula, you know, systems.
And the numbers vary,
but the bottom line is agriculture fails.
Foods obviously dies.
So the agriculture system completely shuts down.
So the food sources shut down.
So there's no food, there's no sun,
temperature drops completely, no electricity.
And we haven't even spoken of radiation poisoning
because the radiation poisoning kills many people
in the aftermath of the nuclear exchange.
But after the nuclear freeze ends, after nuclear winter, after the sun starts to come back,
let's say eight, nine, 10 years, now you have no ozone layer or you have a severely
depleted ozone layer.
And so the sun's rays are now poisonous.
So you have people living underground and you have this great thawing.
And with that great thawing comes pathogens and plague.
And you have this system where the small-bodied animals, the insects and whatnot, begin reproducing
really fast and the larger body animals like you and me begin to go extinct.
Professor Toon said it to me this way, you know, he said
66 million years ago an asteroid hit Earth,
killed all the dinosaurs and wiped out 70% of the species and
nuclear war would likely do the same. And so here we are talking about this because there is a difference.
There's nothing you can do about an asteroid, but there is something you can do about a nuclear war.
Do you think it's possible that some humans will survive all of this?
So if we look, I mean, how long would it be?
Would it be decades?
Would it be centuries before the, you start to have,
the earth starts to have the capacity to grow food again.
Carl Sagan talked about that in this amazing book
that he wrote with two scientists, colleagues,
called The Cold and the Dark.
And there's a bunch of essays about exactly this, right?
Like what would happen and how long would it take?
It's really interesting.
It's dated, it's from the 80s, but man, is it shocking.
And you think about that where, okay, so men return
to sort of the worst, most base versions of themselves.
Civilization is gone, right?
Meaning, civil society.
There's no rule of law, it's just fend for yourself.
There's people fighting over what little resources there are.
Man returns to a hunter-gatherer state. And to really think about this idea, I looked at the oldest known archaeological site in the world in Turkey, which is called Gobekli Tepe.
And it's really fascinating to me because I interviewed one of the two archaeologists who first found
this site in the early 90s.
The lead archaeologist was a guy named Klaus Schmidt, and Michael Morche was the young
graduate student who was with him.
Morche's description of coming upon this rumored-to-be site, there was something called
a wishing tree on the site,
which I just found so human and perfect
that it was this magical place and it was locatable
because there was a wishing tree on a hill
and it's where people went to wish
and to hope that their wishes came true.
I mean, how human is that, right?
And that is where beneath the wishing tree,
kind of like in the shadow of
the wishing tree, there was a tep, which is a hill. And beneath that, there is the oldest
known civilization in the world. 12,000 years ago, a group of hunter-gatherers built this
site. Why? We don't know. But I imagined when through more descriptions of coming upon like,
you know, he tripped on a rock,
he told me, right? He tripped over a stone that turned out to be the top part of a 12,000 year old
sculpted man, giant pillar, right? And he talked about coming upon that and then no one knows really what Gobekli Tepe was for.
And that makes my mind try and answer the question you asked me internally, right?
Just as like a human who's here on earth for the amount of time I'm here.
Like if there were a nuclear war, what would it be like?
What would it be like when someone in the future, would we become archeologists one day?
Would civilization rebuild?
Would we develop computers?
Who knows?
It's interesting to think about.
I hope we never have to.
What would we remember about this time?
Right.
It is terrifying to think that most of it
will be forgotten.
Everything we kind of assume will not be forgotten.
We think maybe some of the technological developments
will be forgotten, but we assume like some of history
won't be forgotten.
But realistically, especially us descending
into primitive survival, probably everything
since the industrial age will be forgotten, like everything.
Maybe some religious ideas will persist,
some stories and myths will persist,
but like all the wisdom we've gathered,
higher level sort of technological wisdom would be gone.
That's terrifying to think about.
And like maybe even as you touch on,
the very fact of nuclear war might be forgotten.
Like the lessons of nuclear war might be forgotten.
That there are these weapons,
sort of the obvious elephant in the room
would be one of the things that's completely forgotten.
Or become so vague in the recollection of humans
that our understanding will change.
It's almost as if a God descended on Earth
and destroyed everything.
Maybe that's how it will persist.
Sort of like mythological interpretation
of what nuclear weapons are.
That's terrifying, because then it could repeat again.
are. That's terrifying because then it could repeat again. But I think for me, the idea of what is buried becomes very interesting and very human and
in a strange way, optimistic and positive. Because if you can visualize that wishing
tree and I have a picture of it in the book from one of the archaeologists who work on that, right?
You think what were they wishing? What were they wishing for? Right? And then you think of your own self
what do I wish for in this world, right? Because you know, I do think all things
come from what happens, you know, metaphorically around the dinner table, right?
Like what people put their eyes on becomes interesting
and expands what people talk about.
And ultimately, when you think about the long arc of time
in human civilization, it does kind of make you
want to communicate more with your enemies, with your adversaries.
And, you know, I think about the quote, what Einstein is said to have said, which is that
he was asked what weapons World War III would be fought with. And he said,
I don't know, but I know that World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones.
Let me ask you about the great filter.
When you look up into our galaxy, into our universe, look up at the sky, do you think
there's other alien civilizations that are contending with some similar questions?
And perhaps the reason we have not definitively seen alien civilizations is because the others
have failed to find a solution to this great filter, something like nuclear weapons? I'm not sure, I'm gonna have to think about that question.
But what does come to mind is an answer
that was given to me similarly, right?
By a man, by Ed Mitchell who went to the moon, right?
And he was the sixth man to walk on the moon. And so his opinion,
I think, might count a little more than mine on that subject because his lens is so much
greater, right? And Mitchell was vilified when he got back from the moon because it became known that he believed in things
like extrasensory perception and this kind of mystical, metaphysical way of looking at
the world.
And he really suffered from that.
I mean, he was ridiculed and he lost a lot of his career and his friends. But what he said to
me in our interview about his trip home from the moon answers that great filter question, I think,
in a way I might want to adopt, right? Which is this, that he said that as they were returning from the moon to earth, he looked down at the earth
and, and I'm paraphrasing him, I write all this in Phenomena, an earlier book, but he's, the
paraphrasing is that he looked down from the earth and it was 1971 and he thought about all
the conflict going on down below,
particularly the Vietnam War where many of his friends were.
And then he looked behind him into the great vast galaxy.
And he had a moment, he says, that was like an epiphany,
like not a near-death experience but a sort of near-life experience, right?
Where he believed that the human consciousness, which is where so much of this thoughtfulness
about metaphysics and ESP perhaps come from.
Mitchell's theory was that human consciousness, the way to understand it had something to do with
realizing that man's inner life and man's outer life are deeply connected in the same
way that man is connected to the galaxy.
And he said it much more eloquently, but you kind of get the idea that,
and I think it's why humans have always loved to look up, right, that there's more there.
And it's a bit like the wish,
it's like the big version of the wishing tree, you know?
What do I wish for for myself?
And what is maybe perhaps the realignment of thinking
for those of us in search of happiness, right,
and rather instead of war, is, you know, what does it mean to have a conscience, to have
consciousness? What does it mean to be a thinking person? What does it mean to be on this earth, to be born, to live, to die, and then there is legacy.
And so all of those ideas are, I think,
foster the kind of conversation that deescalates conflict.
Yeah, so in some deep way, so the mysteries of what's out there when we
look out to the stars are the same mysteries that we find in when trying to
understand the human mind and they're coupled in some way. For me, thinking
about alien civilizations out there is really the same kind of question
Which is what what are we what is this? What what are we doing here? How do we come here?
Why does it seem to be so magical and beautiful and powerful?
Where's it going?
Because it feels like we're really
going because it feels like we're really,
perhaps for the first time in history, are in a moment where we can destroy ourselves.
And so naturally you ask, well, where's others like us?
Is it perhaps, are we inevitably going to a place
where we'll destroy ourselves? Is it basically
inevitable that we destroy ourselves? We become too powerful and not
insufficiently wise to know what to do with that power.
But like you said, probably the answers to that are in here. We don't need to look out there. I'd love to ask you about the extra sensory
perception. You've written, like you said, the book Phenomena on the secret history of the
US government's investigations into extra sensory perception and psychokinesis. What are some of the
more interesting extra sensory abilities that were explored by the government?
And maybe just in general, ESP, what is it?
What do you know of it?
The book was so interesting to report
because I spend so much time dealing with like
mechanized systems, machines, war machines.
And yet the military and intelligence were
and continue to be incredibly interested in
the human mind, in consciousness. And so, if one is called hard science, what we're talking about
now is called squishy science, right? And it was really interesting to delve into that world. It
just couldn't be farther from weapons and war or could it, right?
And then I really began thinking,
well, before science and technology,
sort of the supernatural ruled the world.
The Oracle of Delphi in Greece exists for the pre,
before the common era rulers to go and beg to learn from the powers
that be what was going to happen, right?
So all ESP programs, I think, pull from that origin story, right?
The leaders desire to know.
And so I really found it amazing that many people think these systems or rather these
programs started in the 70s. I learned they actually began right after World War II. And
that was because, and here, you know, in my reporting, I find all things sort of always
circle back to the Third Reich, to the Nazis. The Nazis had a
massive occult program, an ESP program, a psychokinesis program, astrology. Both Hitler and
Himmler were deeply interested in these occult concepts. And after I learned from records at the National Archives that after the war, you know, half
of everything went to the Soviet Union and I'm talking about the trove of Nazi documents
from which the superpowers were then going to learn to fight future wars.
And half of them went to the United States.
And so we got this trove of documents about all of this, and the Soviets got the other.
And so it set off a kind of psychic arms race,
which in a weird way paralleled the nuclear arms race,
which we've been talking about,
in as much that it led one side to constantly wonder
what the other side had.
Have they been able to find anything interesting in this squishy science analysis of trying to see
how the human mind could be used as a weapon? The CIA most definitely believed from from my reading
of the documents that there was something very legit, shall we say, about ESP.
It couldn't, it was uncontrollable, it was unreliable,
but nonetheless it existed.
And being the intelligence agency that they are,
they cared less about why it worked,
they just wanted to know how they could use it.
And then it got into all kinds of elements
of placebo effect and this, you know,
and you know, when the military stepped in
and got involved in the programs,
that was a complete disaster in my opinion,
because the military needs to control everything
in a mechanized systematic way.
And so they started, for example,
teaching people to be psychic,
which is a really, really, really bad idea.
I mean, and you know, flash forward to where
we are today, these programs still exist. There's a Navy program which is working on, based on a lot
of data that came back from the war on terror with certain soldiers knowing, you know, wait,
don't walk down that path. There is an IED there.
And they call this the Spidey Sense.
And they actually have a program that works from this.
So these things never go away.
They kind of circle around in terms of, you know,
being made fun of and then taken seriously
and a little of this and of that.
My biggest takeaway from writing that book was a quote
that I referenced in the beginning,
which is the Thomas theorem.
And it says, if men define situations as real,
they are real in their consequences.
Yeah, I mean placebo, as you've mentioned,
is a fascinating concept.
By the way, a short plug, I started listening to it.
Andrew Huberman just released a podcast
on Placebo, the Placebo effect.
Does he know the origin story of Placebo?
We'll have to ask him.
We'll have to ask him, yeah.
But, are you ready for this?
Yes.
CIA.
Okay?
And not only that, I can tell you that Dr. Henry Beecher,
Harvard, I think he was also at MIT for a bit,
he came up with that term,
and you might even say for the CIA.
Is that trouble you that so much of this
is coming from the CIA first?
You mean the placebo concept or the-
The placebo concept, but a lot of the sort of scientific investigations? Listen I have such mixed feelings about the CIA as
one should. I think you should have mixed feelings about anything that you cover
as a reporter or as a human because and maybe change that from mixed to you know
conflicting right because there are there are really positive elements
of every organization within the federal government.
I mean, my first learning about the CIA
came from the work I did on the Area 51 book
about their aerial reconnaissance programs,
which were set up, again, to prevent World War III, right?
Nuclear World War III.
It was this idea that information was king.
The U-2 spy pain was developed out at area 51.
And I interviewed Herve Stockmann,
the first man to fly over the Soviet Union in a U-2,
gathered all this intelligence, prevented wars.
Later I wrote a book about the CIA's paramilitary,
surprise kill vanish.
So like just when I was thinking, wow,
the CIA is doing all this amazing, you know,
non-kinetic activity with aerial reconnaissance,
then you learn about their kill programs
and that's a whole different set of issues.
It turns out as you write in that book
that the CIA
assassinates people sometimes, and we'll talk about it.
But anyway, like you said, conflicting feelings.
I mean, I work with sources to report my books.
And so put yourself in my shoes, right?
I interview for dozens or hundreds of hours, my primary sources.
In the case of the Surprise Kill Vanish book, I traveled with Billy Woh, the longest serving
CIA operator, back to the scene of the crime.
Back to the battle.
We went to Hanoi.
We went to Havana.
And you really get to know someone and that's when I say
conflicting. You know, I work with sources on a real trust basis, right? And sometimes people will
tell me things, they'll say, Annie, this is off the record. This is for you to know about me
on deep background because I want you to know who I am. And that's powerful.
And a lot of times it's personal, right?
It's personal.
It's about their personal life.
And they don't want that.
And it isn't apropos to what I'm writing about.
But I need to know that.
And that's where it gets conflicted because you, in a good way, because you realize where
we're all such creatures of our personal lives,
right?
So you have a professional life where your national security are in your hands.
I don't know what that is like.
I wonder if you could just speak to that.
You've interviewed so many powerful people, so many fascinating people. And as you've spoken about, trust is fundamental to that.
So they open up and really show you into their world.
What does it take to do that?
I think willingness, we were talking about trust earlier.
Like you have to trust that there's, I have to trust that
there's a reason I find myself in a certain situation, right? Otherwise it would just be
a constant doubt paradox, right? Why am I here? What am I doing? And so I trust that I'm going
to learn something of value. And so I'm willing to listen.
I really am willing to listen, right?
Because, and so far, it's always proven,
the expectations I might have going into something
are dwarfed by the outcome
because people are so interesting
and because the people that I interview,
because I write about war and weapons
and national security and government secrets
and the people I interview are at the heart of all of this.
I mean, they are really capable people,
intellectually brilliant, physically capable.
They go so far out on the limb to do their jobs. And by the way,
the reason they're talking to me is because they're still alive and so many of their
colleagues are dead. So it gives them also a wisdom about life, about sacrifice, not in cliched sort of nationalistic, jingoistic terms whatsoever. I'm talking like real,
real, what is their real truth. When I went to Vietnam with Billy Wah, I mean, so much of it was,
the details are just every detail, right? I mean, starting with the fact that he showed up at my house with a giant suitcase and a bunch of clothes,
dry cleaning pressed clothes in plastic hangers, carrying them.
I'm like, Billy, we're going to Vietnam and we're going back into the jungle to find the Oscar VIII battle site.
Like, what are you carrying? And he got really mad at
me, not like anyone correcting him. And I got my husband on the job, like Kevin, you got to sort
this out. And what transpired was that Billy Woh had never taken a trip for personal reasons.
He operated, I think, in 62 countries every single time for the CIA.
And it would go like this, Billy, go to there and get to there, right?
And that's what he would do.
When he arrived, whatever he needed, he would just get.
You know, it's not a fashion trip, right?
So he had no idea how to pack for an overseas trip.
This was like, oh my God, how can you not have the hugest smile on your face going into
this?
I'm with a guy who's 89 years old.
He's got eight bullet, you know, he's got, he's had eight purple hearts from Vietnam,
right?
I mean, he operated against Osama bin Laden 10 years before 9-11.
He went after bin Laden in Afghanistan when he was 72.
And he went after Gaddafi during the Arab Spring when he was 82.
And now here he is with me going to Hanoi.
The details, those human details. But my husband repacked his bag and got him a proper suitcase
that was carryable and small and didn't have the hangers. He wasn't trailing the hangers.
But it was the trip home in the taxi that I got at this really big reveal.
Billy reached into that small suitcase my husband had given him and pulled out a rolled up American
flag. And he had taken this flag because I had tried to help him pack and he wouldn't let me.
And I just thought it was like an old guy being stubborn, but he didn't want me to see that he was bringing an American flag to
Vietnam, which is not legal. And he wanted to bring that flag and take it around everywhere with him,
as he explained to me later, to honor all of his friends who died there 50 years ago. And then when
the trip was finished, he gave me that flag and it's in my office.
And that's the kind of relationship that you can develop with people as a reporter, if you're willing
to go the extra mile with them, to trust them, that they'll tell you things of value. And to me,
something like that is as of value as any secret mission I'm able to get declassified
because we are a nation of people.
And probably there's a bunch of human details
that you can't possibly express in words,
things left unspoken, but you saw in the silence
exchange between the two of you, the sadness,
the maybe you could see on his face
looking back at memories of the people he's lost, all that kind of stuff.
All that kind of stuff.
You mentioned you wrote a book on Area 51.
For people who don't know, you've written a lot
about security, the military, secrets,
all this kind of stuff.
So Area 51 is one of the legendary centers
of all of these kinds of topics.
So high level first is what is Area 51?
As you understand it, as you've written about,
the lore and the reality.
I think everybody wants to know about Area 51
because it kind of, it's like this American enigma,
it's like to some people, it's the Shangri-La of
test bed aerospace programs, right?
And to others, it's the place of captured aliens, right?
And everything in between.
I had the great fortune of interviewing 75 people
who lived and worked at that base
for extended periods of time,
mostly leading up to the 90s,
because everything since then is classified, right?
So things get declassified after decades,
not everything, but some,
and that allows you to piece together stories.
So you talked to a lot of people that work there.
What can you describe as the history
of technological development that went on there?
I mean, Area 51 is huge, by the way,
and it's a top-secret military facility
inside a top-secret military facility,
inside the Nevada test and training range,
which is this massive, not secret facility,
right? So you're just talking about layers. Talk about peeling the onion in reverse. And it began
as a place to test the U-2 spy plane. And literally the CIA set up shop there to build this plane away from the public eye.
And then that led to another espionage platform called the A-12 Oxcart, which is, you know,
anyone who's seen the X-Men movies knows about the SR-71.
And that's a two-seater, right?
And before that, there was the A-12 Oxcart, and that was the CIA's stealth Mach 3 spy plane.
Think about that in the early 1960s, it's astonishing.
And I interviewed the pilots who flew it.
What did they say about it?
What was it like? Oh my God.
I mean, look, I describe in detail in Area 51,
but also the amazing thing, Lex, about that was that, and
you know, I just look back on that with such fondness. This is like in 2009 when I was
reporting that. And all, many of the guys who were in their 80s and 90s were World War
II heroes, like serious World War II heroes like Colonel Slater, who was the commander
of Area 51. He flew the U-2 on the missions called the Black Cat missions
over China in the early 1960s to see about their Lop Nor nuclear facility,
right? So all of these things tie in when you're reporting on military and
intelligence programs. But these guys had been World War II heroes and then
were given this cushy job out at Area 51.
It just came with all these perks.
Colonel Slater told me this one perk I just love so much.
They all had a hankering for lobster one day.
Here they are in the middle of the desert in Nevada,
and they have these really fast planes.
They literally called, they arranged.
They didn't take the ox Guard out for that one,
but they got some lobsters from Massachusetts,
like delivered to them in like record time.
They didn't even need to put them on ice, you know?
And again, those are these details where you're like,
thank God, at least for me, thank God I got these details.
These guys are all passed now.
Yeah.
So there's a lot of incredible technological work
going on there.
So the legend, the lore, like you said, aliens.
Were there ever aliens in Area 51, as you understand it?
So I've interviewed hundreds of people.
That worked there.
Well, not just at Area 51, but in all the different
national security
and military intelligence and intelligence programs.
And I personally have no reason to believe
that aliens have ever visited Earth.
That's just me personally.
Just at an Earth period.
I have no information that causes me
to conclude that's the case. Now with that said, many of the
primary players in this present day, you know, there are aliens among us narrative are in my
phenomena book. I continue to communicate with a lot of these people. I'm talking about astrophysicists, who fundamentally believe that there are aliens among us.
So we beg to differ on that issue.
But for you, in terms of doing research
on government agencies that do top secret military work,
I mean, they would know. So you have interviewed a lot of people government agencies that do top secret military work,
they would know.
So you have interviewed a lot of people that have, at every layer of the onion,
you don't see evidence or a reason to believe
that there was ever aliens or UFOs captured
from out of this world.
That is correct and even perhaps more important
and perhaps this colors my thinking.
But I am uniquely familiar with disinformation programs
put forth by the CIA or the agency as it's called
by insiders, right?
And I've learned firsthand about these programs or
rather learned from firsthand participants in strategic deception campaigns that the
CIA has engaged in beginning with Area 51. You know, the idea that all these reports
of this U-2 spy plane, this giant long wind, long winged aircraft flying 70,000 feet up. People didn't think
airplanes could fly that high. And the sun shining off of it, it looked like a UFO and
all the reports coming in. And the CIA opened up a UFO disinformation campaign office headed
by a guy named Toto Otorenko, you know, specifically
for this reason.
Now, does that mean that every UFO sighting in the world has been a U2?
No.
But I come from it, from that lane of thinking.
And there are so many strategic deception campaigns.
And as I look over the decades of how these same UFO stories and again
This is just my opinion based on my reporting this narrative that keeps
Reoccurring it seems to me like a very large catch-all to keep the public's attention on that not on that
so so to you
Like sexy stories like UFOs
are going to be leveraged by the CIA
for strategic deception?
100%.
I mean, Google Paul Benowitz.
I'm always amazed that Paul Benowitz's story
is not more widely spoken of.
And I think that's because people,
there's like the sort of ufologists
or the people who are like
absolutely convinced that aliens are among us. And I use that term loosely, but you know what I mean.
And then there's the quote unquote skeptics and the skeptics tend to be sort of like self-righteous.
And I would never want to be self-righteous. So I'm not a skeptic. I'm just, you know, agnostic, I suppose. But Google Paul Benowitz, and you can learn the
story of that man who thought he saw a UFO in the 70s, early 80s, and the Air Force, because the
Air Force intelligence community works hand in glove with CIA a lot, and some of the other
intelligence agencies, of course, they're 17, not just the CIA.
And they destroyed Paul Benowitz. They sent him to a mental institution by pulling a massive strategic deception campaign against him
because they didn't want him to know about the technology that he was seeing at Kirkland Air Force Base.
So look that up and then you go, oh my God, and you know And to my eye, you can apply any of these other names,
substitute in Paul Benowitz,
or any of the current individuals,
who really become convinced of X, Y, or Z,
when in fact there's a strategic
deception campaign going on.
Yeah, there's a lot of incentive for the CIA
and other intelligence agencies to get you to look
the other way on whatever is happening. Plus, from an enemy perspective, whenever two nations are at
war, to try to create hysteria in the other. But then you have the Thomas theorem that becomes
applicable there too. If men define situations as real,
they are real in their consequences, right?
So this idea of like UFOs and we're being lied to,
it becomes real to many people.
And then that creates a whole subset of problems
to the point where things are spiraling out
of control and there is no center anymore, right?
So a lot of people that are briefed on programs maybe aren't even aware of their position
within a greater campaign.
Or I'm wrong and there are aliens among us.
Right, so I appreciate the possibility of acknowledging
that you might be wrong.
From everything you know about the US government,
if there was an alien spacecraft,
like what do you think would happen?
Would they be able to hold on to those secrets
for decades?
Like would they want to hold on to those secrets for decades? Would they want to hold on to those secrets?
What would they do?
What's your sense?
I can't imagine that kind of exciting situation
not becoming public information.
And the counter to that is this, right?
This is a very strong argument for why
this is a big strategic deception campaign, right?
Think about the defense department and the air.
Think about how jealously they guard its airspace, right?
I mean, you had a Chinese balloon flying over
and the whole world went crazy, right? It mean, you had a Chinese balloon flying over and the whole world went crazy,
right? It was front page news. So the fact that the one element or a couple people in
the Defense Department have made this statement, we've lost control of our airspace over this
UFO, alleged UFO craft that they can't explain. I don't buy that, at all, zero.
Of course it's possible that, you know,
it is alien spacecraft, if it is that,
and they operate under a very different set
of technological capabilities, in theory.
In my interviews with Jacques Vallee,
who is the kind of grandfather of all ufology,
and he's such an interesting person and has such a really unique origin story about how
he came into all of this, and he's such a scientist, right? And he is profoundly dedicated
to this issue and stands completely on the opposite end of the spectrum from me and knows
a lot more and has studied this for decades more. But what he said to me is the most interesting thing, which is that it's not a military problem, it's an intelligence
problem. Because Jacques believes that this is some kind of intelligence, right? Which really,
the closest I can do to wrapping my head around that takes me to consciousness, right? The idea
of what is consciousness. And I think that's where it becomes very interesting
I think the government is hiding bodies and crafts is is very Paul Benowitz. Read it
Yeah, I think this kind of flying saucer thing is a
Is a trivialization of what kind of if there's alien civilizations out there
Trivialization, that's a great word. Trivialization, I agree with you.
I tend to believe that there's a very large number
of alien civilizations out there.
And I believe we would have trouble comprehending
what that even looks like, were they to visit.
I tend to believe they are already here, have visited, and were too dumb to understand what that even looks like, were they to visit. I tend to believe they are already here, have visited,
and were too dumb to understand what that even means.
And they certainly would not appear as,
as flying objects that defy gravity
for brief moments of time on a low resolution video.
I tend to have humility about all this kind of stuff.
But I think radical humility is required to even like open your eyes to what an alien intelligence would actually look like.
And to me, it's beyond military applications.
It's like the basic human question of like, what is even this thing?
Like you mentioned, consciousness that's going on.
Like, where does this come from? Why is it so powerful?
Is it unique in the universe?
I tend to believe not.
Of course, I hang out a bunch with other folks,
like Elon, who believe we are alone.
But I think that belief, just like you said,
has power because it actually manifests itself in reality.
So if you believe that we're alone in this universe,
that's a great motivator to build rockets
and become multi-planetary and save ourselves,
especially in the case of nuclear war.
Because otherwise, whatever this special sauce,
this flame of consciousness will go out
if we destroy ourselves on this earth.
For people like Elon, it's too high of a probability that we destroy ourselves on earth, not to
try to become multi-planetary.
In your book on Area 51, you propose an explanation that I think some people have criticized at the very end that this might have been a disinformation campaign from,
I guess, Stalin, that the Roswell incident was a remotely piloted plane with a quote
courtesque child size aviator. Just looking back at all that now, years later, what's
the probability that it's true? What's the probability it's not?
So you know I've never revealed who that source is.
Yes. Did you know that?
I know. Want me to tell you?
What the source?
Yeah.
Okay, who is the source?
So before I say anything on that,
let me speak to the question that you asked, right?
So you asked me, what's
the probability that that is still standing as an idea 12, 13, 14 years later, right?
So I continued to work with that source for years afterwards. We talked about this. Look,
I mean, his whole family knew it was him. And I knew his family because I was an integral part of,
you know, I was at his house, met all his kids, grandkids. And...
And we should say the source is the main expert advisor behind the story that it was, maybe
you can explain what the story is that you report in the book, that it was disinformation campaign created by Stalin
to cause mass hysteria in the United States.
The very kind that we've been speaking about
with the CIA and so on.
Yes, predicated on the narrative
of the war of the worlds, right?
And the war of the worlds,
when it was a radio program in the United States,
made people go crazy,
oh my God, we're being invaded by aliens.
Well, the government was always interested in this story and Joseph Stalin was too. We know that
from declassified documents, right? And so the source told me that the reason for this program
and that the real Roswell crash remains where in fact, it was a black propaganda hoax infiltrated,
you know, or rather predicated at this idea that you were
going to overwhelm America's early warning air defense system, cause mayhem, and maybe be able
to attack the United States. That was the plan. And Stalin was also messing with the United States,
messing with Truman, who sort of, you know, turned his back on him, right, at Potsdam. And so
this idea was, and the reason that the source is important and
unlike, you know, a lot of people, I saw, I saw this, I saw that, I learned that, was
according to the source, once it was determined that this was a hoax and that Stalin was able
to get a craft over the United States and it crashed.
And it had, you know, people inside of it.
They were people that were sort of deformed and meant surgically altered to look like aliens.
The United States government decided that it needed to know what on earth that was all about
and if it was possible for us to have the same program.
This according to the source, right?
And so it sounds preposterous.
And if it was just someone saying,
you might say, well, it's ridiculous,
tell me and get them onto another subject.
But the difference was is this source
who was very well-placed and friends
with all of the other 75 people,
told me this as a confession, right?
A real tearful confession because what he said is he was involved in the American program
to do the same thing and people died because there were human experiments that went on.
And I write about this in the last 12 pages of Area 51.
It was an explosive, you know, revelation and I felt very confident in writing this
because the source wanted it written. Why? Because he said, I'm dedicated to my country.
I know about being committed to national security and this kind of thing must never happen.
And if you give people too much power, they will take advantage of it. And he wanted it
on the record. And his wife of 60 years did not know until
after the book published nor did his children okay so after the book
published I was called to his house and sat there with his family and they said
tell us this isn't true and he said it is true right now that source is Al O'Donnell, who is the nuclear weapons engineer
who armed, wired, and fired 186 nuclear weapons.
Okay, so if you wanna talk about some of that,
you're the first person I've told that on the record,
but it's kind of about time.
Wow.
Well, you received a lot of criticism over this story and it
confused me why because it's given the context of everything you described
with this AA and other intelligence agencies, it is reasonable that such an
action would be taken.
And the source is extraordinarily credible, right? If you wanted to take the position,
well, that person isn't very reliable,
then you have to ask yourself,
why did they have top secret clearances
that are higher than any in the United States whatsoever?
Because he was responsible for arming nuclear
bombs. He was called the trigger man. And by the way, he told me that I could tell
the world who he was. There's a lot of details that are really dark involving
that program. And when is it appropriate, right? Well, it feels appropriate now,
first of all, because you and I have been talking for several hours.
So this is what is truly a long-form conversation, and it's the outcome of, you know, a very long time of my reporting
and also being judicious about what, you know, closing the loop on that, right? because I do think it's important for people to know that sources have revelations.
And like you said, the programs both on the Soviet side and the American side,
conflicting, I think is the term we used previously, ethically, morally, on all fronts.
Um, people have done some horrible things in the name of security.
In your book, Surprise Kill Vanish, you write about the CIA and the, uh, so
called president's third option.
It turns out, so first of all, first option being diplomacy and, uh,
second option being war.
So when diplomacy is inadequate and war is a terrible idea,
we'll go to the third option.
And, uh, this third option is about covert action and it's about assassination.
So how much of that does the CIA do? is about covert action and it's about assassination.
So how much of that does the CIA do?
That is open to debate. We know from the historical record
that the CIA was heavily involved in assassination
during the Cold War.
That's non-negotiable.
Even the names of the programs that were assigned
to perform assassinations are fascinating
and now declassified, like Eisenhower's, for example, was the Health Alteration Committee.
Well, at least they have a sense of humor to this dark topic.
You know, then the more modern names are targeted killing, right?
Executive action, targeted killing, right?
I mean drone striking is essentially assassination.
And you know, people jump up and down and say that's not true.
Well, I spent quite a long time interviewing the CIA's lead counsel, John Rizzo.
He died recently.
But Rizzo was very forthcoming with me.
Of course, never sharing classified information,
but going up to the edge of what can legally be known. Rizzo was thrown under the bus by
sort of the general public for, he was the fall guy for the torture campaign. The CIA
calls it enhanced interrogation. And so Rizzo had this long career.
He began working under the Carter administration, right?
And was responsible for the torture memos,
was responsible for legally making sure the president's ass
was covered, and then got thrown under the bus.
And so he was very forthcoming, not in a bitter way,
but in a very earnest way about
a lot of how these programs are made to be legal because if the president of the United States says they're legal they're legal. Executive order one two three three three you know it says we
don't assassinate but it can be overwritten by another order that's straight out of Rizzo's mouth
right. Also really important to keep in mind
is that the military operates under what's called Title 50.
It's part of the national security code
that gives like sort of rules and et cetera,
how you must behave in a war theater.
Well, the CIA is under no such rules.
It operates under what's called Title 50.
And it was interesting to me as a reporter
because before I wrote the book
and reported openly about Title 50,
it was not really discussed.
And now you even see operators themselves on podcasts
talking about Title 50, which is kind of great,
because it's like the cat's out of the bag, guys.
That's what it's called, and that's how it works.
It means what we say goes.
Can you elaborate on what Title 50 says?
Basically says assassination is allowed?
It says what the president wants the president gets, right?
And so, I mean, the best example is the killing of Bin Laden, right?
We were not at war with Pakistan.
So Title 50 doesn't apply.
You can't have a military operation in a country you're not at war with.
I mean, the Lions, my God, now they've really blurred.
But even then, they were a little more honored, right?
And so what do you do?
Well, Leon Panetta was the CIA director.
And you work out a scenario whereby the SEALs, and by the way, it wasn't the SEAL, there
was a rotational on that killer capture mission,
which was really just a kill mission.
SEALs were practicing, Delta was practicing,
and Special Activities Division was practicing.
They were all practicing at a secret facility
in North Carolina, right?
And it was just like, you know,
they're ready till they get the go order,
and it just happened to be the SEALs, okay?
So the SEALs operate under title 10.
So they had to get what I call sheep to dip because that's what the insiders call it. Right.
And that is the term that comes from interestingly area 51. The U-2 pilots were Air Force pilots. They
needed to be sheep dipped over to the CIA so they could do things that defied the law. Okay. So you
can see how these all entwine
and you become more and more informed
and you go, aha, right?
So that's how Title 50 worked.
So the night of that mission, it was a CIA mission
because the CIA is allowed to go into Pakistan
and kill someone and the military can't.
That's fascinating.
So people talk about the Navy SEALs doing it
but it's really legally speaking to get the permission
to do it within the whole legal framework
of the United States, it was the CIA.
And if you look at their uniforms that they were wearing,
and now that you know this,
you'll see there's no nomenclature on them.
There's no, right?
So those are, they're just meant
to be completely untraceable.
Were they to be shot down and captured?
It's like, wait, who are these guys?
Oh, a bunch of rogue guys, okay?
And this goes back, the origin story of all that
is in Vietnam with MACV SOG,
and these cross-border operations that I chronicle
in Surprise Kill Vanish, which still amaze me to this day.
Right?
I mean, SOG missions, they called it suicide on the ground
because that's what it was.
And these guys had no identifiable, nothing.
I mean, they were essentially in pajamas, right?
Even their weapons were specially designed
by the CIA to have no serial numbers, no nothing.
So if they were captured and they became POWs,
I don't know who these guys are.
What do you think, and how much do they think
at the highest levels of power
about the ethics of assassination
and about the role of that in geopolitics
and military operations?
Like, to you maybe also, does assassination make sense role of that in geopolitics and military operations.
To you maybe also, does assassination make sense as a good methodology of war?
I mean, again, I try to remain agnostic
on the policy part of it
and just report the operator's perspective, right?
Because this is what people do
and this is what people are asked to do.
And it depends on the individual.
I mean, Billy Wah went on a lot of those missions. I mean, the saying is like, oh, Billy Wah,
he killed more people than cancer, right? Did Billy Wah ever tell me about direct assassinations?
No, because they're all classified, right? Did he tell me about some failed ones? Yes.
I'll give you an example, it's really interesting.
He would show me these PowerPoints that were just fantastic. Late in his life,
he was constantly being asked to go up to Fort Bragg and lecture to the young soldiers. Everybody
loved him, you know? And he would drive all night to get there and he would create these
PowerPoints and then he would show me the PowerPoints and he would, all night to get there and he would create these PowerPoints and then he would show me the PowerPoints
and he would, all unclassified.
But at one point when Hugo Chavez was in power,
Billy Woh was kind of asked, that's how it works,
of like, if you had to think about doing something,
what would it look like, let's just say hypothetically.
So he took me through this PowerPoint that never happened
whereby he and a group of operators, agency operators, were gonna halo jump in to the palace and grab
Chavez and probably kill him because he wouldn't allow himself to be captured.
And you know what Billy, and by the way halo jumping for those of listeners who
don't know, high altitude low opening, right? So you jump out of an aircraft and
you go down like a pencil until you're really
low to the deck, like a thousand feet. You pull your parachute cord and that way you're not picked
up on radar and you're also not traceable when you get to the ground because it's so fast.
Billy Watt took the second halo jump in history into a war theater in Laos during the Vietnam War,
right? So he's like this famous halo jumper, right?
So he and the team were going to go in, grab Chavez,
and he said to me a very interesting thing that was kind of a one-moment time
where I saw a different side of Billy Wah, where he said,
I'm so glad we didn't do that, even though I really wanted to at the time.
Because can you imagine that country's problems where it is now?
Can you imagine how we would have been blamed?
And it was an interesting, rare moment for Billy Watt to comment on the bigger picture
that you're asking me about, right?
I think pretty much the operators I know, they just stick to the mission. So on the technical difficulty of those
missions, just your big sense, how hard is it to do to assassinate, to assassinate
a target on the soil of that nation? I suppose that just depends, right?
All right, here's another insightful thing Billy Woh said to me,
and I'm answering the question around because I don't know.
Because again, I never had anyone say to me,
here's how it went down, right?
Because you can't, that would be,
first of all, those are classified.
So I'm never going to receive classified information.
I did hear a lot about reconnaissance missions when people would be in charge of,
you have to be able to what's called make book on the target before, right?
And making book on the target means photographing them to really then that gets run up the chain of command to make sure this is really Emad Mugneah we're about to kill, right? But I once asked Billy when I was trying to get the
question, you know, and he wouldn't answer it and I said, so there's another person
in my book named Rick Prado who's also like a legendary agency guy and and so
you know he's like 20 years younger than Billy and I said, Billy if you and Rick
had to kill each other like who would win, right? I was trying to imagine this like hypothetical like each other, like who would win, right?
I was trying to imagine this like hypothetical,
like how would that work, who would win, right?
And I posed the question to each of them, right?
And of course, each of them said me, right?
But Billy, then I went back to them
and Billy said, let me tell you how I would win.
Okay, right?
And he said, I'd cheat.
I'd show up before the duel and I'd kill him.
Yeah.
That's such a, like, you know,
I have a lot of friends who are Navy SEALs,
it's such a guy conversation.
Well, you would be amazed at what the women do.
Let me just tell you that.
Women are part of the Special Activities Division.
A big part of it. Can you comment on that?
I can. Women can get a hell of a lot closer to a target. And I mean that literally.
The Special Operations, do you mean, is this part of the CIA?
The Special Activities Division, now it's called the Special Activities Center. But originally that's the umbrella agency
that has the different paramilitary organizations
under it, right?
So the most lethal one is ground branch.
And that's what I reported on in Surprise Kill Vanish.
And its origins go way back to the guerrilla warfare core
that was started in 1947 for the president.
So women are also a part of the alleged assassination?
Absolutely.
And you're saying they can at times be more effective?
I'm just gonna leave that pause there.
The reason I ask of how difficult the assassinations are, you know, with Bin Laden, it took a long
time.
So I guess the reconnaissance, the intelligence for finding the target.
I imagine with Mossad, maybe they say now the leadership of Hamas, or the military branch of Hamas,
is much wanted from an assassination perspective.
So to me, as an outside observer,
it seems like it's more difficult than you would imagine.
But perhaps that's the intelligence aspect of it,
not the actual assassination, of locating the person.
Well, I think most, it's because mostly,
from what I understand, it's a really dirty game.
And people are covering for people, right?
And I'll give you the example of Billy Wah
and Imad Mughniya, if I may, right?
So Imad Mughniya was the most wanted terrorist
in the world before Bin Laden.
You know, Hezbollah's chief of operations.
And he was wanted by every, you know, the Mossad, John down, but no one could find him. He was missing for 20 years.
There wasn't even a photograph of him.
And then he resurfaced and of all places he resurfaced in Saudi Arabia.
Okay.
So what, that's when I say it's a dirty game, right?
Hezbollah, Iran, Hezbollah, Iran, enemies with Saudi Arabia. Why on earth was Imad Mughniya in Saudi Arabia?
Well, that's where he was. There was a Navy SEAL who was doing reconnaissance on him.
This is according to Billy Wah. And this is around 2005. So Billy is in his 80s at this point, right?
Late 70s, 80s.
And he gets word that the SEAL, who has been tracking Mugnia to get photographs of him,
to give the photographs to Mossad and CIA so they can do a joint operation to kill him,
which they did with a car bomb in Damascus.
That's the end of the story, right?
But how we got there was we needed, you know, the CIA needed confirmation. You
can't kill the wrong person. So the seal panicked according to Billy Wah and was just like, I'm
out of here. This is too dangerous and I do not want to wind up in a Saudi prison. So who do you
send in? Billy Wah, right? He shows up. He's there for 24 hours. He finds, he knows where Mughniah
lives from the seal. He positions himself in a cafe across the street, which is run
by Sudanese men. And of course Wa speaks some Sudanese because he operated in Sudan, right?
And he's shooting the shit with him by his own words. He had the most foul mouth. It
was just absolutely delightful to listen to.
And then in between him and Mugnia's house is a dumpster. And Billy Wah, being Billy Wah, who will go to any lengths to do the job, decides to conduct reconnaissance from inside the dumpster.
And that is where he is when he takes the picture of Emaud Mugneah living so comfortably in Saudi
that Mugneah, according to Billy,
came out of his apartment building
with dry cleaner plastic bag hangers over his shoulder.
That's how comfortable he lived there.
It was his neighborhood.
Click, click, click.
Billy Wah takes the photographs, runs
them to the CIA headquarters in Saudi at the embassy. Oh my God, it's Mughniah. Get the hell
out of here. He gets to the airport. He leaves. Those photographs get sent to the agency and then
they do the operation with Mossad and Mughniah is dead. Now the truth about that being a co-CIA mission
was not reported for many years after the fact.
It was originally, Mossad took credit
as the CIA often likes to just give other people credit.
They just want the job done.
Well, speaking of Mossad,
in your understanding of all the intelligence agencies,
what are the strengths and weaknesses
of the different intelligence agencies out there?
CIA, Mossad, MI6,
SVR and FSB and Chinese intelligence,
all this kind of stuff.
Is there some interesting differences, insights
that you have from all of your studying of CIA?
That's a really interesting question.
I don't know, and here's why.
It's because I've never interviewed any intelligence officer
with those other agencies, right?
I've interviewed a couple people with Shin Bet in Israel.
But until I speak to an actual source whose job it was, I don't know. And so the
information that I'm getting is based on perception of others, which one would think would be deeply
clouded by the idea that America is the greatest. Right. Right. Right. Right.
We're better than them, you know?
Yes.
Well, actually the fascinating thing is,
because you've spoken to a lot of people about,
they say, hey, how do you know they're telling the truth?
Like, how do you, and this actually probably applies
generally to your interviews with very secretive people.
How do you get past the bullshit?
Well, that's just like multiple sourcing, right?
So you find the story out and then you have to,
you go to the National Archives and you find the operation
and then you learn all about this
and then you interview other people who were there
and you put the story together to the best of your ability
and you make very specific choices with,
quote, so and so said, end quote, said so and so, right?
And very rarely do I report on a single source,
as I did in the end of Area 51.
And then it says, essentially, look, dear reader,
this is what the source told me, I have no way of corroborating it. This is legit,
and here it is." So that's an area to make your reader comfortable with the information that
they're being given. And then in all of my books, whether they're three or 400 pages,
there's always a hundred pages of notes at the end. So you can see all the sourcing and you can begin to get an understanding of how journalism
in the national security world works. And also great opportunity for me to say, I'm
often standing on the shoulders of journalists before me who did an incredible job digging
into something and being able to report what they knew.
Often the books are 10, 20, 30 years old
and so much more has come to light since.
And I also would just like to say that I appreciate
that you said, great question, I don't know.
Not enough people say I don't know
and that's a sign of a great journalist.
But speaking about things you might not know about, let me ask you about something going on currently.
So recently, Alexei Navalny died in prison, perhaps was killed in prison.
What's your sense from looking at it?
Do you think he died of natural causes in prison?
Do you think it's possible he was assassinated?
Russia, Ukraine, Mossad, CIA,
whoever has interest in this particular war.
For that, I look directly to the historical record, right?
Having written about Russian assassination campaigns
and programs since the earliest days of the Cold War, right?
And Russia has a long history of assassinating, murdering,
dissidents.
And in Surprise Kill Vananish, I tell the story of an actual KGB assassin named Kolkoff who knocked
on the door of the man he was assigned to kill. And by the way, this all comes from a book that
Kolkoff wrote later, right? Because he defected to the United States. He knocks on the door and the guy answers the door and instead of killing
him he has like this moment of conscious of crisis or crisis of conscience and says like,
I can't kill you even though that's what I'm supposed to do. And then sits down with the
guy and together decides, okay, we're going to defect, you know, we're going to let the
decides, okay, we're gonna defect, you know, we're gonna let the Western intelligence agencies know what we're doing here. And the CIA got
involved. But Russian assassins were able to poison Kolkhov with polonium. What
happens to him is insane and it's a miracle he didn't die. But he doesn't and
then he defects to the West and he writes these books and he tells lots of incredible secrets
about the Russian assassination programs
and their poison labs.
And they're really, really, really interesting.
And so to answer that question, I mean, to my eye,
of course I don't know, but it certainly looks like
Russia is acting in the same vein that it has always acted,
taking care of dissidents that go against
Mother Russia.
So in the style of KGB assassinations.
Is there something you can comment on about the ways that KGB operates versus the CIA
when we look at the history of the two organizations, the Cold War, after World War II,
and leading up to today.
I mean, my feeling on that is always that
there's a thread somewhere
in declassified documentation about these programs
of America working
to maintain a semblance of democratic ideals, however surprising that may be, right? In other words, always trying to, I don't
want to say fight fair because killing people isn't fair, but versus a certain ruthlessness,
a real sinister totalitarian type ruthlessness, certainly from Soviet Russia.
I'm far less familiar with modern day Russian assassination activities,
although we certainly know on the record that they exist. Some people have done great reporting
on that. But there seems to be a kind of almost sadism about the Russian programs that I personally
have not seen in the American programs
What about on the surveillance side?
It seems like America is pretty good at surveil mass surveillance or at least has been revealed through NSA and all this kind of
reporting and leaks and whistleblowers
Can you comment to the degree to how much surveillance is done by the US government? reporting and leaks and whistleblowers,
can you comment to the degree to how much surveillance is done by the US government internally and externally?
If you'd asked me five years ago,
I would have a very different answer, right?
Because, all right, first of all,
you can't, they're looking for a needle in the haystack,
they're looking for the bin Laden,
and they can't find the needle in the haystack,
but they continue to create the haystack and survey the haystack, they're looking for the bin Laden and they can't find the needle in the haystack, but they continue to create the haystack and survey the haystack. But the real problem,
what has happened, and I write about this in my book, First Platoon, which is about a group of
young soldiers who goes to Afghanistan and unwittingly becomes part of the Defense
Department's efforts to capture biometrics on 85% of the population of Afghanistan, okay? Which, by the
way, China then emulated in their own biometric surveillance program, right? And I think this is
a terrible idea. But what has happened, these biometric systems that have been created and biometrics are of course fingerprints, facial images,
DNA and iris scans that allow you to tag, track and locate people.
And what has happened in the five years since this question was first on everybody's minds
about NSA surveillance is that the civilian sector companies have
essentially done all the defense department's biometric surveillance job for them.
By all of us sharing our facially recognizable images on Instagram and Facebook and everywhere
else X, by sharing information, by writing up narratives about ourselves.
This information has become part of the database.
Five years ago when I was reporting First Platoon, I was interviewing the police chief
of El Segundo, which is kind of like on the outskirts of LA, it's right near the airport.
And why it's important is because it's like defense contractor haven, okay?
So they have like, you know, massive surveillance.
And Chief Whalen, when I posed this question to him,
he said to me, Annie, let me show you something.
And he had Clearwater AI, the recognition software
on his phone.
And this was still when it was like quasi not supposed
to have to have that for law enforcement.
And he said, I want you to go down the block and I want you to just turn the corner still when it was like quasi not supposed to have to have that for law enforcement.
And he said, I want you to go down the block and I want you to just turn the corner and
come back toward me, right?
Which I did.
And he just didn't even hold up his phone.
He just kind of looked like his hand was and his phone was on me.
And he went back down.
It was like tiniest movement.
And when I came back to him, he went like this and he showed me there I was, everything
about me, everything about me, facts and figures and all images. And he knew who I was before I
even got to him. So is that a good thing or a bad thing? I mean, we could have another three-hour
conversation about that alone. So you're saying more and more you don't need an NSA
where we're giving over the data ourselves
publicly or semi-publicly.
Yeah.
During the war on terror, people were just like incensed
to learn that there is a drone that's flying at something
like 20,000 feet.
It's called Argus Is, right? And it can capture the, it's not a license plate,
it's like it can basically capture
like what's written on a golf ball
from 17,000 feet, 20,000 feet up, okay?
And people went crazy over this,
like, oh my God, it's Big Brother.
Well, one of the lead engineers on that,
Pat Bilkin,
is someone I talk to regularly,
because we talk about surveillance a lot,
because he thinks about it a lot, because he has kids now.
And he has given so much thoughtful,
really thinks about this issue,
because he believes, just like you stated,
that what we are turning over about ourselves
actually exceeds anything that Argus is could do from above because we're doing it willfully. And so what it's doing is
it's creating an ability for if someone wants to know about you, if someone,
let's say in government, wants to know about Lex Friedman, they can find out
everything about you and then that gets used for tagging, tracking, and ultimately, you know, in the war theater,
it was called find, fix, finish. Well, what do you think the finish is in that statement?
It's not pleasant. It's called a drone strike. Yeah. Find,
find him with the biometric, fix him, meaning fix his position. We know he's moving in a car.
That's him. That's him. finish him. Call it in, drone
strike, boom. If we could return to nuclear war, you've briefly mentioned that
a lot of things go back to the Third Reich and Hitler. If we go back to World
War II, we look at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the dropping of the
two bombs.
I would love to get your opinion on whether we should or shouldn't have done that, and
also to get your opinion on what would have happened if Hitler and Germany built the bomb
first.
Do you think it was possible he could have built the bomb first? In my researching Third Reich weapons for Operation Paperclip, because of course,
we got a lot of those scientists after.
Which is another great book in a terrifyingly complicated operation.
Yes. When, you know, at what point do the ends justify the means, right? But in looking at those programs,
and we acquired Hitler's favorite weapons designers, and I'm talking about weapons of
mass destruction like chemical weapons and biological weapons. But of course,
America was ahead in the nuclear program and an interesting detail reading Albert Speer's memoirs was
Speer
Referring to a conversation he had with Hitler where Hitler said
No, I don't want to do that
That's Jewish science and so because of Hitler's own
Racial ethnic pressure prejudices. They didn't develop the bomb, right?
As far as should we have dropped the bombs on Hiroshima, you know, I've interviewed all
kinds of people with different opinions, most of them that had ended the war.
The best interview and most meaningful perhaps that I ever did was with Al O'Donnell, who
was a participant in the Battle of Okinawawa which was like this insane, just to read stories about Okinawa it makes your hair stand on end.
And O'Donnell like so many others was slated to invade mainland Japan to his
almost certain death, right?
So somebody like that, it makes sense right from the get-go
why he would be pro-nuclear weapons.
It saved his own personal life, and it saved everyone
that he knew that he was fighting with, and it ended the war.
Do you think it sent a signal? Without without that, we wouldn't have known perhaps
about the power of the weapons.
So in the long arc of that history, 70 years plus,
it is the reason why deterrence has worked so far.
Yes, that's an interesting thought.
My thought goes to this idea that, like, of more, right?
That everybody always wants more.
It's a very dangerous, it's like more power, literally.
Not just figure, more power, right?
And what is more confounding to me
beyond the fact that we dropped two atomic bombs on Hiroshima,
Nagasaki, and the war ended is that this decision was then made to develop the thermonuclear bomb,
a force that is such, the degree of magnitude of that power is mind boggling.
I mean, even projects within the Manhattan Project
defined thermonuclear weapon,
the thermonuclear weapon as the evil thing.
Like it was evil.
It's a weapon of genocide.
Atomic weapons destroy cities.
atomic weapons destroy cities.
Thermonuclear weapons destroy civilizations.
You open the book with a Churchill quote, the story of the human race is war,
except for brief and precarious interludes,
there has never been peace in the world.
And before history began,
murderous strife was universal and unending. Do you think there will always
be war? Do you think that there is some deep human way in which we're tending to
this kind of global war eternally?
Well, the optimistic answer of that would be that we could evolve beyond that, right?
Because certainly if we look at our ancestors, they had not developed their consciousness
as far as we have to be able to build the tools that we have.
And so the hopeful answer is we will evolve beyond this kind of brute force, kill the
other guy attitude.
Certainly, you know, these are questions that will become more obvious over time.
I just want to play my little part in this world that I live in as the storyteller who
brings information to people so that they can have these kind of questions with themselves,
with their friends, with their families.
And I think in asking that very question,
what you're really saying is,
why don't we evolve beyond war fighting?
It is very possible,
and your book is such a stark and powerful reminder that human
civilization as we know it ends in this century. Let's say it's a good motivator
to get our shit together.
But aren't you really saying human civilization could end, not it ends?
Could end.
Could end.
But the power of our weapons is growing rapidly.
So.
As they say, it's time to come back from the brink, right?
And it's time to have that discussion
while we're still talking.
And, you know, there's another complexity
sneaking up into the picture
in the form of artificial intelligence.
And in cyber war, but also in hot war,
the use of autonomous weapons,
all of it starts becoming super complicated
as we delegate some of these decisions about war,
including nuclear war, to more and more autonomy
and artificial intelligence systems.
It's gonna be a very interesting century.
Do you, just to zoom out a little bit,
hope that we become a multi-planetary species?
I'm all for adventure.
And I too, while I'm for adventure, I'm all for backups in all forms.
So I hope that humans start a civilization on Mars and beyond out in space.
If you zoom out across all of it, what gives you hope about human civilization, about this
whole thing we have going on here?
I mean, I am a fundamentally optimistic person.
I must have come out of the chute that way,
because I just am, right?
Even though I write about really grim things,
I get inspired by them,
because I do always believe in evolution, right?
I also have like the greatest family ever,
two kids, Jett and Fin have like the greatest family ever,
two kids, Jett and Finley.
Shout out to them, they're Lex Friedman fans.
You know?
And my husband.
And you know, so what inspires me
is like this idea of legacy.
I think that you always wanna have your eye
on being a good example to the best that you can.
And so, and passing
on what you know and believing kind of in the next generation.
And again, that's a sentiment echoed by all these cold warriors I've been talking to because
they also share that, that idea that, wow, look at what we have done as a civilization and look where we're going,
whether it's exoplanetary travel or AI.
It's just that the human factor of like the desire to fight, the desire to have conflict
needs to be reconfigured because with all these new technologies that we have, the peril
is growing at an accelerating pace, perhaps faster than the average human can keep up
with.
Well, Annie, thank you for being a wonderful example of a great journalist, a great writer,
a great human being.
And I'm a big fan of yours. It's a huge honor to
meet you, to talk with you today. So thank you so much for talking today. Thank you for having me.
Thank you for listening to this conversation with Annie Jacobson. To support this podcast,
please check out our sponsors in the description. And now let me leave you with some words from
John F. Kennedy. The very word secrecy is repugnant in a free and open society, and we are, as a people,
inherently and historically opposed to secret societies, to secret oaths, and to secret
proceedings.
Thank you for listening, and hope to see you next time.