Shawn Ryan Show - #120 Annie Jacobsen - Nuclear Armageddon in 2024
Episode Date: July 8, 2024Annie Jacobsen is a New York Times bestselling author, Pulitzer Prize finalist and Princeton graduate. Jacobsen’s works have received rave reviews by outlets like The Washington Post, USA Today, The... Boston Globe and Vanity Fair. Her career spans numerous media formats, including writing and producing TV series like Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan and serving as a contributing editor for the Los Angeles Times Magazine. Her newest book, Nuclear War: A Scenario, has risen to critical acclaim and brought Jacobsen to the Shawn Ryan Show to discuss war, weapons, government secrecy, and national security. Shawn Ryan Show Sponsors: https://lairdsuperfood.com - USE CODE "SRS" https://helixsleep.com/srs https://shopify.com/shawn https://hillsdale.edu/srs https://meetfabric.com/shawn https://drinkhoist.com - USE CODE "SHAWN" https://ShawnLikesGold.com | 855-936-GOLD #goldcopartner Annie Jacobsen Links: Website - https://anniejacobsen.com Book - https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/748264/nuclear-war-by-annie-jacobsen LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/annie-jacobsen-20147b7 X - https://x.com/AnnieJacobsen FB - https://www.facebook.com/AnnieJacobsenAuthor IG - https://www.instagram.com/anniejacobsenbooks Contact - https://anniejacobsen.com/contact Please leave us a review on Apple & Spotify Podcasts. Vigilance Elite/Shawn Ryan Links: Website | Patreon | TikTok | Instagram | Download Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Annie Jacobson, welcome to the show. It's delightful to be here.
Thank you for having me.
I have been looking forward to this for so long.
We had to postpone it because you went and spoke at the EU Parliament.
I spoke in Brussels to members of the EU parliament in the audience, yes.
Well, I think it was well worth the wait and I'm actually, I think it worked out better,
you know, that we rescheduled for later because now we have more to talk about.
We do. We have no shortage of things to talk about.
Yeah, we could probably go on for days here. But everybody starts off with an introduction. So let me know if I'm missing anything.
But Annie Jacobson, American investigative journalist, Pulitzer Prize finalist, and New
York Times bestselling author.
You're an author of seven books and best known for your book, So Far Area 51, An Uncensored
History of America's Top Secret Military Base.
You just released your seventh book called Nuclear War, A Scenario.
Write and produce television programs including Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan.
Your books have been named best of the year and most anticipated by outlets including
the Washington Post, USA Today, Boston Globe,
Vanity Fair, Apple, and Amazon.
You're a Princeton graduate and captain of the Women's Varsity Ice Hockey Team, as we
spoke about earlier.
And you're a wife and the mother of two sons.
Am I missing anything?
That's about it.
Wow.
Yeah. We got a lot to dive into.
I want to focus mostly on your new book, Nuclear War.
But we have, we got to knock a couple things out before we get in the weeds.
So I have a Patreon account.
There are top supporters that have been with us since the beginning.
I wouldn't be here if it wasn't for them and neither would you.
And so one of the perks that I offer them
is they get to ask a question to each guest.
And so today's question is,
with today's attitude towards fake news,
do you think we will ever gain public knowledge
of the topics covered by your books?
What a great opener question I
Think of the idea of fake news as air quotes
Entwined with the idea of strategic deception and that is something I have written about in many of my books
No doubt we will cover this. But an interesting question there, because what I, the takeaway that I see is like,
how much should we trust what we are being told?
And that is certainly why I write books, is to sort of uncover these long-held secrets
and bring them into the light of day.
And so to answer the question specifically,
I think you want to go to as many sources as possible.
It's why I read all sides of the aisle.
I will read international papers.
I will watch different programs that people might
otherwise think are in opposition of one another.
Read things on the internet, listen to the podcast, and then come to your own
opinion about things. Because... That's interesting. Well, one, how much
should we trust? I would love to talk to you about that. But, you know, I try to do
that and I try to read both sides of the aisle. Do you get a lot of flack for that?
I used to but I don't anymore because I think that's very much part of my reporting style. I
No one knows how I vote. No one needs to know how I vote
Um, I write about podis in all of my books, President of the United States.
And so that keeps me in the middle, and it also allows me to have incredible conversations
with all kinds of people.
And that, I think, keeps me comfortable with what I'm learning because I'm learning how
to make my own judgments about things.
And I think America is getting savvy to that as well.
Man, that's great to hear because I do that.
I think people probably know which way I vote, but I don't like to make it a point of any
of my discussions.
I don't.
I like to hear both sides.
And sometimes when I'm, especially when I'm critical to my own side,
man, I really get a lot of flack,
but I think that's part of the problem
that we're facing in the country right now
is people have become,
and I've talked about this several times,
I think people have become,
they're not tied to their own ideas,
values and beliefs anymore. They're tied to their own ideas, values, and beliefs anymore.
They're tied to their political candidate and party.
And when you do that,
you're only getting what that side wants you to hear,
whether you like it or not.
And so it's refreshing to hear somebody
that listens or pays attention to both sides
and gives a bipartisan take on whatever you're reporting on.
So thank you for doing that.
Well, also what comes to mind is there's,
people talk a lot about tribalism, right?
Like, and there's tribe and then there's people talk a lot about tribalism, right?
And there's tribe, and then there's tribal.
You want to have a tribe.
You want to have people that you know have your back.
And usually those people, the tribe, the true tribe, right?
They actually are perfectly fine with you having opinions.
At least this is my take.
My tribe is, oh, Annie with her opinion about that,
or Annie with her interest in that, they're fine with it.
You know, they might not like that or do that or think that,
but that's the tribe.
Tribalism is like, that's where I think it becomes
a little bit dangerous and fraught,
because then you're supposed to adopt really a party line.
You have to have an opinion about this because and that that just puts you in a really awkward
position because I think naturally we're all such creatures of multiple, you know, multiple
ideas and multiple ways in directions in which we want to head.
And it doesn't have they don't have to be mutually exclusive.
Yeah, yeah. You know, it's, it's, it's weird times we're in, right?
Well, there are weird times, but you know, I am a historian also.
And so all of my books cover, you know, going back national security issues to World War II.
And we've always, we, if we're talking about Americans,
have always been tribal, have always had weird times.
So I'm not as pessimistic about how terrible
the times are right now, because I've read so much history
about how terrible the times have always been.
Yeah. It's kind of how you want to see it.
Do you find times today different than some of the stuff
that you've studied in the past?
Well, one thing about me is I'm always looking
for the similarities
and then understanding the differences.
But I find things, I'm an optimist at heart, even though I write about these incredibly
dark, grim topics.
I think that I'm a pragmatist, right?
Know the facts.
Don't be afraid of them.
But the optimism of it all comes from being able to see, certainly as I get older,
and I write more books and I learn more things
and I interview more interesting people,
oh, we are more similar than different,
both as people and also culturally through his,
like through the different decades
and generations of modern America.
Interesting. How much you brought up, how much should we trust?
How do we even know what to trust anymore?
Well, I look at things specifically head on. So I would be better to your listeners
I would be better to your listeners and my readers
to deal with specifics than big generalizations. I can certainly make big generalizations
about what I think about war and weapons
and US national security and secrets
because that is what I write about.
But in terms of operations,
the specificity is important.
It's like, wait, is Area 51 really that?
Were the Nazi scientists really that?
Is the DARPA program about biohybrids really that?
You know, I can speak to them specifically
because I think that, again,
I'm going to give you the information that I know
and then people can decide what they think.
Because the takeaway is incredibly...
Want me to give you an example?
Yes, please.
Okay.
So this is the best example I can think of a point of view.
When I wrote a book called Operation Paperclip, which is about the Nazi scientists who came
to America to build our weapons programs after World War II.
So they were former Nazis. And this book published in 2013, 2014,
back in a time when a journalist like me
could actually appear on Fox News and CNN
on the same night.
You almost can't do that anymore.
Right?
They just don't, the royal they don't let you.
But you could then. And I would go go on to the let's just call them
The conservative in the liberal, right? So I'd go on to a conservative organizations media program and they would say oh
My god, Annie Jacobson. Thank you so much for writing Operation paperclip
I mean you showed us that these guys were these terrible Nazis.
They were odious, et cetera, et cetera.
But man, did we need them to come to the United States or otherwise we'd all be speaking Russian
now.
So thank you for writing this book.
Okay?
Then I would go over to the really liberal stations, maybe even the Holocaust museum type
scenarios.
And they would say to me, oh my God, Annie Jacobson,
thank you so much for writing this book,
Operation Paperclip.
You showed us in no uncertain terms,
these horrible, evil, criminal minds
should have been hung at Nuremberg.
They never should have come here.
You make that so clear.
Thank you so much for writing this book.
Interesting.
You take away, they read the same book.
They took away a point of view
based on the same set of facts.
And so when I can understand that about people,
and there's no, I suppose one group isn't right
and one group isn't wrong.
And when you can look at it like that,
and maybe this also comes into play of you being,
we talked about this earlier,
like when you're a new parent
versus my kids are college aged, right?
The wisdom that comes with parenting, I believe,
if you want to be an optimist,
is that you learn how to help your children understand
that different points of view are fine.
Same sets of facts.
That's great advice.
That's great advice.
Parent to parent.
Yeah, thank you, thank you.
But we want to talk about, actually, I forgot something. I will sometimes I forget not very often, but everybody's everybody starts off with a gift.
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The TSA will not pull me over.
They might try to steal them, but.
They'd be like, wow, that's Sean Ryan.
That's right, that's right.
Great, fantastic.
You're welcome. Amazing.
Keep going? Oh no, that's good.
Oh no, this is very important.
Some stickers, yeah.
Put it on my car.
There you go.
With my Mammoth Mountain sticker.
Nice.
And the Shawn Ryan show.
There you go.
There you go.
I had a Mack V Sog sticker on my car for a while.
Did you really?
I did, and I got some hogs. Yeah
That's I've never even seen a Mac V's a Mac. I'm gonna send you one. Yeah
And here's what here's something for you. Oh
That's a that's a Billy Wau coin and
We'll get I'm sure we'll get into surprise kill vanish after nuclear war
But they kind of entwine all my books entwine, but Billy was perhaps the most legendary
CIA operator singleton in the agency's history.
Began his operations when Eisenhower was president.
That's incredible, thank you.
Just died, yeah.
He just died, when did he die?
He died April a year ago.
Oh man. Yeah.
So, yeah, so a year exact almost, wow.
Well, thank you very much.
I can't wait to speak about him in a little bit.
But nuclear war.
So your new book is about a nuclear war scenario. And you
know, you talk to all these, I mean, you get access to people
that nobody really gets access to. I've read that Leon Panetta,
how are you getting access to former secta, former director of
CIA, and all the rest of his resume, which I'm not,
I could go on here, but people don't get access
to figures like that.
How are you gaining access to former directors?
What's the saying, the harder I work, the luckier I get?
There's that part of it.
This is not my first rodeo, so seven books.
I do find that when I reach out to people to ask them if I can interview them and I
say my creds, sometimes they say, oh, I'm familiar with your work.
I've read and they name a book.
So that helps
But I think in principle the greatest
Contribution
That I can put on the table and it's perhaps why some of these really, you know
significant people and when I say that, they have a lot of information
to share that is powerful
and that the public benefits from knowing, like Panetta.
Um, it's that objectivity card that I have,
which I believe is so important.
I'm trained as an old-school journalist.
You are here to report the news down the middle of the aisle.
You should not have an opinion,
okay, when you write long-form books, maybe at the end, you kind of give your opinion a little bit or you might
suggest it so that there's something to think about for the reader. But for the most part,
tell the you know, relay the facts. I mean, the origins of journalism come from this idea
that anyone, a high school student should be able to understand what you're writing about.
And that's how I write, you know?
I write for the regular old people.
I know I'm read by the generals and admirals
of the Pentagon, because they tell me so.
But I just write for regular people.
Nice, nice.
You had an interesting fact here.
I want to just kick it off with this.
A full scale nuclear exchange between the US and Russia
will likely kill some 5 billion people.
Can you, how did you come up with 5 billion
and what does that scenario look like?
And keep in mind,
Nuclear War Scenario is a nonfiction book.
It presents a hypothetical situation in the future
that is based on fact.
So the five billion figure, for example, is not my fact.
That is a fact from Professor Brian Toon
and a group of scientists that he led
reporting on this subject for decades in their
newest paper for Nature magazine, Nature Food actually, based on climate modeling systems
of what would happen after nuclear winter.
And so the book takes you from nuclear launch to nuclear winter.
Five billion people are dead after nuclear winter. Five billion people are dead after nuclear winter. But a key haunting line that
was said to me that really allowed me to see the book clearly, because when you're writing
books as a process, you're reporting, you're interviewing people, you're figuring out how
your chapters are going to lay out. When I did an interview with the former strat com commander, General Keeler.
And we were discussing what a nuclear exchange between Russia and America would look like.
And he said to me, the world could end in the next couple of hours.
What is strat con?
Okay.
Great question.
And how great that we don't need to know everything.
That's how right
strategic command is
The most important combatant command, you know combatant commands. There were 11 now, right?
It's the most important combatant command that almost nobody has ever heard of
outside of strategic command, outside of the military structure.
It is the commander of strategic command is in charge of the nukes.
He's in charge of them.
He's the steward of them.
There's 150,000 employees beneath him in his chain of command.
The president, when the president needs to launch nuclear weapons, he communicates with
the STRATCOM commander.
That's how important the STRATCOM commander is.
Okay.
And you got access to him.
I did.
And you guys had a discussion about this.
We did.
How did that start?
You know, dear General Keeler.
I mean the actual discussion.
Yeah.
Oh, the actual discussion with his origins, like very much, it's what I relate to about
your podcast, like his origins, like how did you wind up the commander of STRATCOM, right?
And like he wanted to be a musician, you know?
So it's like there's this idea that you wind up Stratcom commander and then you begin with
people's origin stories and how they are as a person.
And you know, I recall him telling me about how he was tending his garden before our interview.
Now this is not all in the book,
because unlike a podcast,
I interview people for a certain amount of time,
and then I kind of condense down what is,
I'm going to say about them
because I'm driving the narrative for the reader.
But the discussions, I think,
begin with human questions.
And then you can get to what's important and what you're after.
And also like you, I'm very transparent about what I'm after.
So I do not like the idea of gotcha journalism.
I think it is incredibly unhelpful.
I think it's at the verge of dangerous.
Whenever I read a piece in any of the legacy media
that like sort of is a hit piece against someone,
I cringe.
I think of that person, you know,
opening up themselves to a reporter
and then being, you know,
presented in a way that perhaps they certainly didn't intend.
Yeah.
I think that is... I cringe.
And I actually feel for the journalist who's stuck doing that,
you know, because I think that it just takes you down
a real path of mistrust and suspicion.
Anyways, I'm digressing.
I tell my sources right up front what I'm doing.
I told every single one of them.
I am writing this book called Nuclear War, a Scenario.
I also ask them, is this fear mongering?
Because that was the question in my own mind that led a lot of the reporting.
Sean, what happens in this book is like everybody dies
and they die in the most horrific ways.
I described to you in appalling detail
what happens to humans in a nuclear flash.
I wanted people to know how horrific this concept is.
And I told my sources that.
And they were forthcoming with me,
which says so much about nuclear weapons.
Interesting.
Where did the interest in this come from?
Are you worried about a nuclear war?
I am now.
All of my books touch upon nuclear weapons because they all cover American history since
World War II.
And in every one of my books, so imagine 100 plus sources for each book, how many of those people told me with deep pride,
Annie, I did what I did to prevent nuclear World War III, right?
So a lot of our really dark, dirty operat- even the CIA's most dastardly sort of dark-hearted operations,
you could say, in the 50s and 60s, people I interviewed who worked on those, or the very non-kinetic operations like in Area 51, which deals with reconnaissance
missions, spying on the Soviet Union to try and find out what's really going on there
instead of speculating.
All of these people, a majority of them said to me, I did what I did to prevent nuclear
World War III.
And so in the previous administration, former President Trump with the rhetoric about fire
and fury against the North Korean leader, I found that shocking and rather unpresidential,
because there had been a precedent not to threaten people with nuclear weapons.
It's dangerous.
It really is.
That's not an opinion.
That's a fact.
I, like many people, began to wonder, what if deterrence failed?
Deterrence is just another synonym for prevention.
What if it fails?
Because all of nuclear war fighting, deterrence is predicated on this psychological phenomena.
You who are so interested in the mind, right?
It is a psychological phenomena.
Deterrence will hold.
Deterrence will hold.
Deterrence will hold.
And then you have a quote from a deputy director at STRATCOM saying, if deterrence fails, it all unravels.
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That unraveling is this book.
Well, it must be a very realistic scenario if you're speaking, how do I say this, to
you're speaking in Brussels and there happen to be members of the EU Parliament listening. So, let's go over the scenario.
What do you think would trigger this?
A nuclear war could be triggered by any nuclear launch at the United States, period, right?
So there are now nine nuclear armed nations.
In my scenario, I chose a rogue launch from a ballistic missile, an
intercontinental ballistic missile, just like it sounds. It can travel from one
continent to the other. That's an ICBM. In 30 minutes, launch to target. 30
minutes. That's the farthest target.
30 minutes.
33 minutes is actually from Pyongyang.
26 minutes and 40 seconds from Moscow to the East Coast.
This is specificity.
It doesn't change.
All the new weapon systems, that doesn't change.
That is what it was when they were invented.
This is just basic physics.
It goes up and over the earth and down.
Okay?
And so then once you know that, wait, that's all it takes?
This is not a 9-11 scenario where someone whispers in the president's ears, sir, the
planes have hit the buildings.
It's not that.
If you're me reporting this, suddenly you learn that the United States has not only spent
trillions of dollars creating this vast arsenal of nuclear weapons, but defense systems to
survey other nations.
So we have a system of satellites in space, in geosync, one-tenth of the weight of the moon, a satellite the size of a school bus,
parked over North Korea,
watching, watching, watching, watching.
So when launch happens, we see it in under one second.
That's why my scenario goes by seconds and minutes.
It's 72 minutes, this book.
Wow.
Three acts, 72 minutes.
24 minutes, 24 minutes, 24 minutes.
Then you got the setup at the beginning
and nuclear winter at the end.
Interesting.
Real quick before, so here's what I'd like to do
is dive into the scenario and then talk about
some of the defenses that we have.
Talk about what maybe you weren't,
maybe your sources weren't able to tell you.
I'd like to go maybe a little more into the scenario.
But real quick, who are the nine nations?
US, Russia, China,
UK, Russia, China, UK, France, Pakistan, India, Israel, North Korea. Iran's not on there yet.
Iran is not on there yet.
Iran on.
Good for us.
But who would you, out of those nations, who would you be the most concerned about?
Give me your top three.
North Korea.
North Korea.
North Korea.
And that's how I begin this scenario.
It's a launch from North Korea.
One of the most interesting people I interviewed for this book, okay, this on the cover here
is a thermonuclear bomb called Ivy Mike.
This is the first thermonuclear bomb ever exploded
in 1952 in the Marshall Islands.
It was a test, okay?
Hiroshima was 15 kilotons.
This is 10.4 megatons.
Wow.
Okay?
Think about that scale.
This weapon takes a nuclear, an atomic bomb,
acts as its triggering mechanism inside the bomb.
Okay. I interviewed the man
who drew the plans for this bomb.
No kidding.
93 now, Richard Garwin.
Talk about classified.
His information was so classified,
it was all...
No one knew he even drew the plans to the bomb.
He was 24 years old when he drew them.
Are you serious?
Does he regret drawing them?
I asked him that question.
I said,
do you wish that you hadn't
drawn the plans for the thermonuclear bomb?
And he said to me, after a long pause, Do you wish that you hadn't drawn the plans for the thermonuclear bomb?
And he said to me, after a long pause, I wish they couldn't have been drawn.
Wow.
I mean, we could do a whole podcast on what that might mean.
Yeah.
Right?
Does it mean Russia would have drawn them anyways?
Does it mean Russia would have drawn them anyways? Does it means right but interviewing Garwin?
Who advised every president since then on nuclear weapons?
You asked about why North Korea is like the most dangerous
Garwin
So sharp, you know in his we did all these zooms during kovat
and he presented, when I asked him, what's the, what's the biggest threat?
He said a mad man, sort of mad king logic is what he called it.
A mad man with a nuclear arsenal.
And he said this French term, which is called, apres moi le deluge, after me the flood.
Okay?
Which is like, if you have a mad king leader,
who doesn't care what happens, you know, let it all flood.
That's what Garwin told know, let it all flood.
That's what Garwin told me he was most afraid of.
And so that made me interpret
that he was speaking about North Korea.
Wow.
Because North Korea does not play by the rules.
I mean, it's very tricky, you know,
rules of nuclear warfare, rules of nuclear testing.
We all armed, nuclear armed nations
of nuclear testing. We all armed, nuclear armed nations, inform their adversaries of their nuclear tests,
like informally, formally through different ways, but not North Korea.
They just launch.
And when you learn what I have learned and you can learn from reading this book what
happens inside nuclear command and control, inside those nuclear bunkers at the Pentagon,
beneath STRATCOM, in Cheyenne Mountain, the first 150 seconds after a ballistic missile
launches, when the satellite in space sees the launch, it sees the hot rocket exhaust
from its incredible sensor, one-tenth of the
way to the moon, sees it.
For the next 150 seconds, US nuclear command and control, all those assigned to the job
are trying to figure out where that ballistic missile is going.
It's like...
I'm glad you brought that up because that's what I was going to ask.
Are the satellites advanced enough to pick up on the trajectory and where it's headed
and how fast?
So in seconds, the data goes to the satellite and then it's relayed to command centers in
the United States.
There's a facility called the Aerospace Data Facility in Colorado that was only declassified,
its existence was only declassified in 2008.
And that facility, and others, NSA, there's numerous intelligence agencies, military intelligence agencies that
are then processing that data, this is happening in seconds, and interpreting the trajectory
of the missile launch.
So I show a map in the book that Garwin and Professor Emeritus at MIT, Ted Postel drew,
and then let me render and put in the book the book that shows so you can see a missile launching
It's a map and then it shows the missile and it shows their concentric rings. It's like at 10 seconds
This is where it might be going at 20. So Guam is in one direction
Moscow is in that direction and then you realize if it's going in that direction
San Francisco East Coast, Hawaii, okay?
So as the seconds tick away,
the data is determining where that is headed.
So this is almost like a,
it's like when a hurricane's inbound,
except a lot faster.
It narrows in, narrows in, narrows in, narrows in.
And by 150 seconds, Stratcom or the Peterson Air Force Base, the Space Force, the aerospace
data center, they know this ballistic missile is headed toward the United States.
150 seconds.
Normally, what North Korea does is send the satellite.
They're sending it up to space to drop a satellite, so that's one different trajectory.
Or they launch into the Sea of Japan.
So within seconds, the facilities know it's going into the Sea of Japan.
Everybody can relax now.
But in my scenario at 150 seconds and fifty second boom. Oh my god
it's coming to the East Coast of the United States and
That is when everything kicks off because the next step is to inform the president now
There must be a secondary confirmation of that nuclear missile on its way to the United States before the president
launches a counterattack.
That secondary confirmation takes eight and nine minutes.
These are like nerd things that I figured out in the book
and present them to you,
hopefully in this incredibly dramatic manner
that you realize, oh my God,
once a ballistic missile launch happens, nuclear war begins.
Because a ballistic missile launch happens, nuclear war begins, because a ballistic missile cannot be redirected or recalled.
None of them. Not even our own.
None. None.
And once President Reagan, okay, I mean,
the lack of information the president has about nuclear war is astonishing.
Really?
President Rae...
And by the way, they have presidential sole authority, so only the president can launch
nuclear war.
Only the president.
He doesn't ask permission of anyone.
Not his sec def, not his chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, not the Congress, certainly
not the Congress.
This is all happening in six minutes.
Presidents in charge and presidents,
most presidents, Leon Panetta confirmed this with me.
He was the White House Chief of Staff under Clinton, right?
And he said that many presidents just don't want to know
because that, again, the paradox of nuclear war,
deterrence will hold.
Don't want to know what?
They don't want to know about nuclear war.
That's frightening.
So Reagan mistakenly said during a press conference,
and I think it was 1983,
that our submarine-launched ballistic missiles
can be recalled.
They can't. He's the commander-in-chief. Mm can be recalled. They can't.
He's the commander in chief. He didn't know.
Do you think it's possible that technology,
we have technology to recall them,
but they're not declassifying it?
It's basic physics.
It's impossible.
But I love the astonishment with which people express themselves when they learn these details
because it is astonishing.
And I had that same experience, even knowing what I know.
I know so many other things about nuclear weapons from different points of view, having
written a number of books that deal with people who dealt with nuclear weapons from different points of view, having written a number of books that deal
with people who dealt with nuclear weapons.
But I never knew the command and control ticking clock scenario, hypothetically, in the future
until reporting this book.
And I was shocked at everything I learned.
Shocked at everything I learned.
And it's such a big from, wait a minute,
they really can't be redirected or recalled?
Nope.
Wow.
I did not know that.
I did not know that.
So you're saying within six minutes
of something being launched towards us,
we're going to, we make a decision whether we're
responding and sending one at them or not.
Yes.
So think about it this way.
When the nuclear, if it just takes approximately 30 minutes, the concept that has been put
into play over decades of strategy of how to fight a nuclear war is that the president must make a counter
attack decision before those nukes land.
So this is all going to happen without the public ever having any idea.
The reason is because no one ever thought of having a nuclear war where there's like
one nuclear missile.
The rogue launch off of Garwin's worry is how my scenario starts.
And then you see all these things go wrong.
The war fighting concepts of nuclear war were built with like, Russia's going to send a
thousand missiles.
The mother load, it's often called.
And so a strategy kicks in called use them or lose them.
Very simple to understand, right?
If we don't use them, we're going to lose them to the Russian incoming missiles. And so that's why the president is positioned to make a counterstrike within a window of
time before the missiles hit.
So basically, so they have six minutes, why is the number six minutes? So OK, 30 minutes is the nuclear launch gets detected in, let's say, 150 seconds.
So we got two and a half minutes gone all of a radical.
Right, gone.
Everybody's now getting ready to prepare the president.
At the same time, the long range ground radar systems that are going to give that secondary
confirmation, which exist in multiple places around the world.
I write about them quickly in the book.
In this scenario, if the missile's coming from North Korea, it's going to be the ground
station in Alaska.
They have this massive radar of a picture of it in the book.
It's like five stories tall.
It's just sitting there waiting to see over the horizon.
That will happen at eight or nine minutes.
In the meantime, they have to get ready to brief the president.
People I have interviewed had to brief the president when we had false alarms.
Okay?
So it's like really this intense, you know, suddenly everything is moved.
The decision tree unfolds in this radical way.
And while the individual leaders, the STRATCOM commander, the SECDEF, the chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff are getting ready to brief the president, they're waiting on the
secondary confirmation.
But once the president is told, so there is a, it's called the red, the red clock is running
and that clock in the strategic command headquarters has, you know, is ticking down until the
missile is going to strike, in this case, Washington,
D.C.
Now they have to get the blue clock running.
The blue clock is the counterattack.
Okay?
So you send General Hyten, another former STRATCOM commander, during the fire and fury
rhetoric of Trump, did an interview with Barbara Starr from CNN.
And she asked him directly about this.
Like, what do we do if they launch at us?
And Heitin said, if they launch one missile, we launch one.
If they launch two, we launch two.
But if you dig a little bit deeper, as I did, and it's all sourced in the book, when you're
reading, if you ever wonder how does how does she know this?
You can go to the back and you can see the notes of the documents where it comes from
So the deep digger the deeper digging
Revealed that if North Korea launches one missile at us. We're gonna launch 82
in response 82 82 I mean
Seems a little excessive, you know. It's called escalate to deescalate.
When you look at the size of Korea.
But I mean, would it take how many how many missiles would it take to just completely
obliterate Korea?
82.
It would take 80.
It would actually take 82 missiles.
No, no, you're absolutely right.
But there is a sense of overkill, literally and figuratively.
And you know this from your operating days that like, you know, it's called it's like
go big or go home.
I mean, the idea, there's a concept with the president that was explained to me by one of the President
Obama's national security advisors named John Wolffsthal, who sat in the room with the president
when this was being negotiated.
There's a policy in the United States called launch on warning, and this exists.
This is the president has the authority that if the missiles are coming, he launches.
We launch on warning.
We do not wait until we are hit.
And Wolfstahl explained to me that what that has to do
with what's called a damage limitation responsibility.
Everything has like a term that is difficult
to come out of the mouth.
It's why they have acronyms for them.
But this is pointing to your eight,
why do we have to launch 82 questions?
So the president now has a responsibility
to limit further damage.
That's what his military is telling him.
So a strike with a one megaton thermonuclear weapon
against Washington DC that I describe,
it kills two million people, Sean.
Nevermind that the things are about to really take off.
It destroys the beating heart of American governance.
That is like, the response is 82 nuclear weapons, the damage limitation responsibility, because
all the military strat comms thinking at that point is you're going to let another nuke
come in.
And so the 82 we learn from those, the scientists and the analysts who have spent a lot of time
looking at this, is how to limit the damage.
82 nuclear weapons could possibly take out, not just like turn the entire country into
a furnace, but obliterate their nuclear command and control, their ability to launch more
nuclear weapons.
That's why that is set up that way. Man, I would think 82 nuclear missiles would...
I would think the flash alone would be enough to wipe out the entire country.
It would kill tens of millions of people, not a question.
And the book was read after it was written, before it went into production and publication,
by many of my sources and by people who actually were not my sources, but who ran these scenarios
for NORAD, generals I'm talking about.
People who were not in the book, so they didn't have a horse in the race that they could say
to me, you're wrong about this, this is too.
And there were some tweaks that I did, but that was not one of them.
No one said that's too many.
We wouldn't do that.
Do you have any idea how many nuclear weapons we have?
How many? So on ready for launch status, meaning they're forward deployed,
meaning they can be launched in
seconds or minutes from the president's order, seconds or minutes.
We have
1,770.
The numbers change a little bit every year.
Russia has 1,674.
That says nothing about the thousands more in storage that we have ready to, you know, that could be pulled out.
So we have approximately 5,000 each. Why do we need that many nuclear weapons? You must be pulled out. So we have approximately 5,000 each.
Why do we need that many nuclear weapons? You must be asking yourself.
We need that many because they have that many,
and they need that many because we have that many.
And guess how, guess what the number was
at the all time high, which was in 1986.
10,000. 70,000. 70,000? which was in 1986. Ten thousand. Seventy thousand.
Seventy thousand?
Seventy thousand.
Wow.
So the setup of the book,
it's like 50 pages or something,
it's like how we got here.
I explain how America had
this insane buildup of nuclear weapons during the 1950s.
There was one point in 1957, this bomb went off in 1952, and the military industrial complex
just went ba-ba-ba-boom.
At one point, we were building on average five nuclear weapons a day, a day.
And then you're building the weapon.
That's just the bombs, the warheads.
You're building weapons systems because we have a triad.
We don't just have the ICBMs in the silos and the ground.
We have nuclear armed, nuclear powered submarines outfitted with submarine-launched ballistic
missiles.
And then we also have the bombers, so we have a triad.
But during the Cold War, we were shooting tactical nuclear weapons out of cannons. Billy Wall was halo jumping a hand-carried portable nuclear weapon out of an airplane
in case we needed to use it on the battlefield.
How do you, I mean I know you don't like to give your opinion and if you don't want to that's okay.
How do you feel about having like a one thousand, what did you say, one thousand one hundred and six?
One thousand seven hundred and seventy us.
One thousand seven hundred and seventy. How do you, do you think we need that? Did you say 1,170? 1,770, us. 1,770.
Do you think we need that?
I mean, that's an opinion I think that I own,
which is absolutely not.
I mean, look, my lane is, as an investigative journalist,
reporting the facts, doing the interviews,
and setting them down on the record.
But of course, you get to have an opinion at some point.
Certainly when time, like times have changed.
We are back in the original buildup.
It was us and Russia and then China in the early 60s.
Now there are nine nuclear armed nations, many of which are in direct conflict with
one another.
All of the new technology, artificial intelligence,
you know, this is crazy.
It's like the United Nations Secretary General
recently said, we are one misunderstanding,
one miscalculation away from nuclear Armageddon.
And he said, we must reverse course and we must.
So I was in Brussels talking about my book
because people were interested in it.
What I learned is because they said to me,
and these are disarmament groups, right?
And they said to me, your book condenses
in a really dramatic, terrifying way,
what we have been trying to convey to world leaders
for decades with a lot of information, you just...
And what we're trying to convey is this is madness.
So the progress is that we've gone from 70,000 nuclear warheads to there are a total of approximately
12,500 today amongst the nine nuclear armed nations.
The disarmament people will tell you that's 12,500 too many.
The United Nations recently created a treaty called, I'm going to mess this up, the IPTNW,
the International Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.
And their idea is that gradually nations should begin to reduce their arsenals down to zero.
Gradually.
And so the opinion I would have, which seems like a responsible journalist opinion, that sounds
like a really good idea.
And the word gradual is important because, okay, so we've been talking about the horrors
of nuclear war, but you can also talk to proponents of deterrence, as I do, who will tell you
we must have a nuclear arsenal because the bad guys do.
That's where I would fall.
Right?
And by the way, that's the easier, it really is the easier, quicker conclusion.
I mean, I feel like it would be great if there were no nuclear weapons.
However, we don't play nicely with one another, right?
And so I think the, I mean, how, I'm just going to go off on a tangent here and say
that the only way, look, if I were president or in charge of this country, the only way
I would even consider eliminating our nuclear
weapons is if we had a defense capability that was able to eliminate a nuclear, any
nuclear weapon on the way here.
Well, yes, the idea is absolutely that the disarmament idea isn't, oh, we should give
up all of our nuclear weapons and then just believe that North Korea and Russia and China
and Iran, or Iran doesn't have the weapon yet, all of these other countries will just give
up their capability.
That would be madness.
But the disarmament that when we went from 70,000 down to 12,000, Russia reduced their
arsenal alongside of us.
So reduction is possible.
Did we really reduce the arsenal though, or have we developed better, maybe not, maybe
better is the wrong word, have we developed more powerful and more devastating nuclear
missiles to where we don't need 70,000?
Maybe I'm pulling numbers out of nowhere right now, but just for example,
maybe, maybe one of today's nuclear warheads is equivalent to a hundred back in 1950s.
Except for that's not the way it is. Okay. Which is so interesting because you and I both know the weapon systems that are, you
know, the kinetic weapon systems that are used by the military in ground wars or air
wars have been advancing like nobody's business as technology has been advancing.
The nuclear weapons are essentially the same.
Not much has changed.
We haven't built any new nuclear weapons since Clinton was president because he signed a
treaty prohibiting that.
And Russia complied.
So allegedly, we do not build any new nuclear weapons.
It would be a massive violation of a treaty. Russia complied, so allegedly we do not build any new nuclear weapons.
It would be a massive violation of a treaty.
All of our nuclear weapons are decades old, which is a whole other debate because now
the Defense Department has just asked for, I think it's $900 billion to upgrade the arsenal
because it is old and the ICBMs are old. So this is a, it's like a,
you're suddenly down the rabbit hole and going,
wait a minute, how did I wind up here?
But the number of nuclear warheads
is simply the number of nuclear warheads.
What's another grim consideration is that
dismantling a nuclear warhead is also a dirty process. And there's a plant in Texas that does this, which itself is like a major target because
it has all the dismantled plutonium and uranium course. So the eyes can glaze over with like, isn't it just easier to have an arsenal of nuclear
weapons that's the same size as ours?
Which is why I point to the people like ICANN, like the Arms Control Association, who actively
work on these disarmament issues with the United Nations.
And the point of a book like mine is to make it digestible
for the average person to understand that like this many
nuclear weapons is madness.
An accident or a miscalculation could lead to a nuclear war.
And it's only going to end one way.
Almost no one disagrees with that.
Once nuclear war starts, it ends in Armageddon.
And the scenario takes you through what happens
and then the mistakes that happen
because of technology holes.
What has been upgraded?
It must be the transportation of the warhead
that has to have been upgraded by this point.
No.
Really?
I mean, a ballistic missile is okay.
So here's how a ballistic missile works.
Ready?
Because this helped me to understand it.
Shall I give you the like 30 second version?
Please, let's do it.
Okay.
So it happens in, you can just imagine it going from like there over that continent to that continent.
And there's a little diagram in the book.
By the way, the way I know this is because the first director of DARPA, are you familiar
with DARPA?
I am.
Okay.
DARPA was created in 1957, 58.
I can't remember what it stands for, but basically DARPA is our advanced weapons.
Yes. It's our advanced weapons.
Yes.
It's our advanced technology weapons, correct?
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
Another mouthful, DARPA.
It began in 1957 after the Russians launched Sputnik.
We got caught by scientific military surprise.
That was like a bad thing.
Herb York becomes its first science director.
And he wanted to know, because the reason Sputnik was so threatening, it was a satellite,
the Russian satellite, the first one orbiting Earth.
The reason it was threatening was because it takes a rocket to get a satellite into
space. And if you can get a satellite into space.
If you can put a satellite in space, pretty soon you can put a nuclear warhead on that
rocket and hit the United States.
That was 1957.
That's where everything changed.
Herb York wanted to know in seconds and minutes how long it took for that ICBM to get to the
United States.
So he hired this really the smartest guys in the room, the Jason scientists about which
there are extraordinary many conspiracy theories.
I interviewed a number of them, including its founder for the DARPA book.
So York, and I learned this because I went and looked in the archives at a library in San Diego,
because I couldn't get the Defense Department to tell me the answer.
Go to York's papers where a lot of, you know, if you go to the scientists' papers, you find a lot of secrets.
And sure enough, there's this,
you know, process, York asking the Jason scientists, there's all these incredibly cool documents about it,
figure out, tell me how many seconds and minutes it takes.
Because you forget that people don't know until they know.
You can be the smartest guy in the room
and you don't know how a ballistic missile works
until someone tells you.
Okay, so they tell York, here's how it works.
Three phases, boost phase, the rocket ignites,
you can imagine that, fire, missile goes up, five minutes.
Five minutes of fire launching the missile.
That's when the satellite can see it.
The satellite sees the fire, okay?
Then it burns out.
the fire, okay? Then it burns out.
Then it has a 20 minute mid-course phase
where it's just moving with the rotation of the earth,
500 miles above the earth.
And then it has a hundred seconds of terminal phase,
a good term for it.
Terminal phase is the last hundred seconds. the warhead, which has been traveling because
everything else burns away, the nuclear warhead or plural warheads, because there might be
multiple of them, is now going to reenter the atmosphere in a hundred seconds and detonate
on target.
That's it.
That's it.
It's so simple. And once you understand that,
certainly for me as a reporter, then you can kind of understand, oh that's how an
ICBM works. So there's no upgrading to do. Right? You can maybe make the rocket
motor more powerful, but... That's, I guess that's kind of what I'm getting at. I
mean we just, I can't remember who developed it, but we just saw the new, maybe it was
in, within the past year, the hypersonic missile.
Who developed, do you remember who developed that?
It's probably Lockheed's Falcon program.
I thought it was, yeah.
I thought it was another country, but that's kind of what I was leaning towards is, you
know, maybe a little more stealthy,
faster, less than 30 minutes.
I don't know.
This isn't, you know.
Yeah, I mean, but again, that,
my job as a reporter is exactly to take those questions,
demystify them, right?
And definitely not take the approach of like,
you know, you don't know, which so many, so
much of society kind of, I think functions that way and prohibits people from asking
really basic questions.
There's no such thing as a dumb question.
Yeah.
Okay.
Because then once you know it, you know it.
But like hypersonic, people talk about hyper, we have hypersonics.
Well, a hypersonic goes approximately Mach 5
Okay, ballistic missiles go Mach 20. Okay, okay
So the ballistic missile is such a game. It's just just like ending. It's such a doomsday machine
You can have hypersonics that this is
You know, this is like warfare that is non-nuclear.
Nuclear war is in a case by itself, which is why we're at this incredibly threatening
moment right now, because nuclear war is coming out of the—or nuclear weapons, the use of
nuclear weapons is coming out of the mouth of world leaders.
And the nuclear war used to be the red line in the sand.
And yes, if someone decides to marry a nuclear warhead
onto a hypersonic missile, you know,
a hypersonic missile will take an hour
where a ICBM will take 30 minutes.
But it's mixing, as soon as you're talking about
tactical nuclear weapons, it's just the worst possible scenario because I know I
can tell you from looking at one of the only declassified nuclear war games
called Proud Profit, and I write about it in the book and I show you what a
declassified paper looks like.
That war game showed us two weeks in 1983, ordered by President Reagan,
it showed us that no matter how nuclear war begins,
it ends in nuclear Armageddon.
Everybody in nuclear command and control knows that.
Everyone knows that there is no such thing as a limited nuclear war.
That's terrifying.
It can sometimes feel like TMI, right?
That it's almost easier to just not know. And also like a lot of the
warfighting concepts you have on these walls, right? Which involve humans, are so
much easier in a way to think about, to talk about, to discuss, to wonder about. Nuclear weapons are so abstract.
There's no battle for Chicago, battle for New York.
It's just, it's just literally push button warfare.
Why do we, why is that okay?
I mean, I don't think it's,
I don't think it's okay. I personally feel like it's a necessity that we have to have it because our adversaries
have it.
Unless we have some type of defense system that can disarm, destroy whatever nuclear
warhead is headed our way before it reaches destination.
Do we have that capability?
So now it gets really depressing
when I tell you about the interceptor missile capability.
Cause you will hear people say,
oh, we have like a iron dome.
You know, we both read the news
and we saw what happened
when Iran lobbed missiles,
including ballistic missiles at Israel,
and they were intercepted, right?
Those are short range and medium range missiles.
Totally different story than trying to shoot down
a long range ballistic missile, also called a strategic missile.
What I told you about that 30 minute arc, 500 miles up in space, you're trying to shoot
that down.
That's where interceptor phase happens.
Don't we have some sort of space weapon that could initiate that instead of shooting up
at it?
We do not.
We have 44 land-based interceptor missiles.
Forty-four.
People have asked me like, maybe we have a secret arsenal.
We do not.
We have forty-four.
How can you be so sure?
You know, maybe Secretary Panetta is lying to me.
He, hey.
I don't think so.
We have 44 interceptor missiles.
Russia has 1,670 already.
That's why I'm saying it doesn't even make sense.
It doesn't even make sense why we would only have 44 when the adversary's arsenals are
so much bigger
than 44.
Well, it might have to do with this, okay, when you can look at the numbers and the cost
of the program which I tell you about, the interceptor missiles.
Now the success rate on those interceptor missiles, of which we have 44, is between
40 and 55 percent.
The success rate. And right now that program is on strategic pause,
which is a euphemism for oh shit.
So we could take 22.
If, because inside the warhead,
best case scenario,
inside the warhead is almost certainly decoys
that are meant to confuse.
So here's how the interceptor system works.
It's basically a mini version of that giant rocket that is the ICBM.
And inside of its nose cone, it has the aptly named exo-atmospheric kill vehicle.
That's what it's called. It's 140 pound, it's not a warhead because it doesn't have any explosives in it.
It's just an object.
140 pound object that is going, so the interceptor missile fires up.
It's communicating with its ground, with its sensor systems that's guiding it and it's going to now try and hit the missile, the
warhead, moving through midcourse phase at 14,000 miles an hour, 500 miles up in
space. It's going to try to hit it. That, the exo-atmospheric kill vehicle is going at 20,000 miles an hour.
The Missile Defense Agency spokesperson says, yes, it's like hitting a bullet with a bullet.
Wow.
Damn near impossible.
And there's no spatial technology.
Wow. It's illegal to put nuclear weapons in space, as per the treaties, as it should be.
And I'm not, there's one spoiler alert I'm not going to give away, but in the third act
of the book, North Korea unleashes a nuclear warhead it has flying in space,
already in space disguised as a satellite, a technology that is actually
capable and that North Korea has expressed intention of having. Whether it
really has it, we don't know. And that unleashes a new kind of mayhem.
I'm going to make you read the book to learn about.
But just when you thought it was bad, it gets really bad.
So you definitely don't want nuclear weapons in space.
Perfect. I didn't necessarily mean nuclear weapons.
I meant something to disable a nuclear weapon that is in mid-flight in space,
like maybe a laser or something some sort of
Some sort of new technology that we don't know yet
But in this, you know back to that you had mentioned a war game
I think that the Reagan administration had put together it so just for the I want to dive into that and so just for the
audience a war game is basically a
made-up scenario So just for the audience, a war game is basically a made up scenario, but a realistic scenario
that they put, and it kind of shows the probability of what the outcome would look like.
And so they do this with all kinds, a lot of countries do this.
And this is, we do this with a multitude of scenarios, cyber attacks, nuclear warfare,
and I mean, regular warfare.
So what did the Reagan administration uncover with that war game?
The proud prophet.
So also, they do hundreds of these a year.
Like if you read STRATCOM discussions with Congress as I do, you can interpret how many of these nuclear war games are going on.
Nuclear war games because STRATCOM wouldn't be doing
other operations.
So they're happening all the time and they're incredibly
classified, meaning they don't get declassified.
But this one, Proud Profit 83, nuclear war game got declassified. But this one proud prophet, 83, war game got declassified, nuclear
war game got declassified. And I show you in the book, it's literally all blacked out. It's
redacted. You've seen documents like that. It's just all black. There's maybe like one word,
you know, aftermath or, you know, build up, right? Everything else. And so you might say, well,
what's the point of releasing this?
How can we get any information? It's all redacted. We get the information from a
civilian scientist, professor, who was on that war game named Paul Bracken. He's a
professor at Yale now. And once it was declassified like 10 years ago, it allowed Bracken to speak about it
generally.
Before that, he couldn't say anything, you know, about, you know, the classification
requirements.
But then suddenly, because it was declassified, he could speak about it in a general manner.
And he wrote in his own book what I just conveyed to you, that no matter how nuclear war...
So there was a two week long program, the SecDef, like the highest ranking people in
military nuclear command and control got together and gamed out these different scenarios, according
to Professor Bracken.
NATO was involved, NATO wasn't involved.
Tactical weapons are involved, tactical weapons not involved.
China gets involved.
What Bracken said was no matter how nuclear war begins, it only ends in nuclear Armageddon.
His exact words was that everyone left the war game very depressed.
And so I think I pulled the veil back on some of this that, and it's almost like a little
bit of our experience communicate, the nuclear war conundrum is so complex and tightly wound.
It began with the generals and the admirals
of the Pentagon in the 1950s,
working from an idea that nuclear war could be fought and won,
which itself is insane.
The original nuclear war plan against the Soviet Union
that I write about in the book
was going to kill 600 million people.
Wow. 600 million people.
600 million people.
How can you have a plan like that and not call it mass extermination?
That's how it began, that was a long time ago.
The Soviets were the big bad threat, no one's doubting that.
It's different, it's a different world that we live in now.
Why do we have, why have we not acknowledged
that what began as madness will likely end in madness
unless all of these issues are addressed?
Money.
Money.
You mean there's more money to build more weapons?
I think we're...
I think we're at a new crossroads
that's completely different but maybe has some similarities with AI.
Okay.
Do you?
Keep going.
I'm interested what you have to say.
Well, I mean, there's a lot of fear
of what AI could develop into,
and basically, you know, it gets to the point
where it makes humanity completely irrelevant.
And so, it's a dangerous game we're playing.
I don't think anybody really knows the extent of what we might experience if this keeps
on with the brain chips, with everything.
And so it's another, once it's out of the bag, it's not going back in.
And I feel like that's where we're at with AI is where we were with nuclear war It's the Pandora's box idea. Yes
Which kind of begs the question?
Okay, so how about doing something about it and I know we all have busy lives and
That is part of the you know, no one can stop what they're doing and suddenly
Become an expert on existential threats per se.
So we talk about it and we pontificate what can be done.
But we should remember that there are powers that are paid to deal with these issues in
our own government. And also the days are over where you could just trust
the government to be doing the, how do I say that right?
Yeah, I know where you're going.
We should be able to trust the government
to be doing things in our best interest.
Yeah, right, like if you watch the propaganda films
of the 50s having to do with nuclear war, right?
I mean, and you see like a housewife with a tiny waist
and, you know, curlers maybe even making pancakes
and then like a siren goes off and then Jimmy come quick
and they duck and cover and that's gonna protect you
against a nuclear bomb and everybody went,
okay.
I mean, those days are over.
But then you kind of, I think the point you're raising is what kind of like version of that
are we dealing with today?
I think it's AI.
I mean, it's happening right now. You know,
Xi Jinping in China says the first country that masters
AI will achieve global domination. And so
now you have all these people over here that are worried about, I mean, I'm conflicted.
What do you do?
China's not going to stop.
They're not going to stop.
And so if we stop, then we put ourselves at a disadvantage.
But if none of us stop, we put the entire human species at the risk of becoming irrelevant.
You know, and does that make sense?
Of course it makes sense.
And it's absolutely on point.
And you know, you can also throw into that mix biology
because, okay, so here's how I would tie that together,
right, because you have biological warfare threats
that become more threatening, more
existentially threatening with the introduction of AI. I believe perhaps more so than with
the nuclear weapons, right? One of the areas, I'm going to try to hold this thought together,
but it ties. So you might say nuclear weapons could, you know, AI could get hold of nuclear weapons.
Well, maybe.
And this is where I'm either informed or inaccurate.
I don't know.
Okay.
What I do know is that from interviewing people in cyber command is that our nuclear weapons
are surprisingly analog, meaning they are not digital.
Okay.
So for example, I learned in reporting the book that our sub launched ballistic missiles
guide to the targets by star sighting, Sean.
A little panel opens and they use the stars
to guide to the target.
There are other systems in place
and this stuff is very classified,
but what is leading is like this ancient technology
that like our hunter gatherer ancestors used, okay?
So nuclear weapons because they happened before the advent of the digital age, ancestors used.
Nuclear weapons, because they happened before the advent of the digital age, there has been
a concerted effort to make sure they remain analog so that they can't be hacked.
These are assurances that I have gotten from Cyber Command.
You're just taking somebody at their word at that point
because the documentation is not declassified.
Mm-hmm.
So hold that thought.
Then you have this idea that...
..biological weapons used to exist.
We used to have... We had a program about biological weapons.
I wrote about it. We hired the Nazi scientists.
They built up our biological warfare program.
And we used to have an arsenal.
And then Nixon made them illegal.
So all of the biological weapons were destroyed.
We found out Russia was cheating.
I mean, rat hole upon rat hole.
So biological weapons are no more, which exists sort of, that's the reason
that nuclear disarmament people say
we don't need a nuclear arsenal to keep us safe
because we were able to say,
we don't need biological weapons to keep us safe.
Biological weapons have become taboo.
We need, so the disarmament people will say nuclear weapons should become taboo. We need, so the disarmament people will say
nuclear weapons should be taboo.
Now you take AI, okay?
What you're saying, which is really significant
to think about is how does AI fit into the mix?
If there is indeed a giant gap on purpose
between AI being able to access nuclear weapons,
because it has grown up with
that.
That is one lane of security, shall we say.
But with the biological issues, that is far more dangerous to my eye, because they didn't
grow up together. And AI has the capacity to make biological weapons
and chemical weapons on paper.
Does that make sense?
Because a lot of AI is pulling from information
in the public domain.
And so far, no student in a basement that we know of
has made a nuclear weapon.
Think about that.
It remains this jealously guarded recipe.
Pakistan got the bomb because they stole the info.
Most people get the bomb because they steal it.
But biology, we have synthetic biological situations being made by students in high
school because of AI, because what you can program AI make me a chemical weapon.
That to me is a major existential threat.
But again, we don't have the language yet just as laymen or with a little bit of knowledge
to understand what AI is really capable of.
And so you're bringing up the question, should we trust the same same people that said like duck and cover and you'll be safe should
that's what you're saying and that's a
very important question I
Would say probably not we should probably not trust them
I mean, I don't you know, I don't know
Once again, this is like the disarming of the nukes. I mean, what do we do?
Do we...
I mean, what is your opinion?
What do we do?
About the nukes or about AI?
With AI.
I mean, I always start by looking at the opinions of people I respect.
And then I start to kind of gather more information,
like why did they wind up with their opinion?
And so one person that comes to mind
when I was looking at early AI,
because a lot of the early AI comes from DARPA,
and DARPA has always had this idea. So also I think it's important to
make a distinction, at least to my eye, between, or I do when I think about it,
AI, artificial intelligence, and machine learning. If your machine learning is
making computers a lot smarter, artificial intelligence is
actually trying to figure out how to make a machine think.
For that, I visited, I went to Los Alamos when I was reporting the Pentagon's brain
and visited a DARPA scientist who had a grant to try and create, you know, a brain in essence.
And he was using the computer that used to have
all the nuclear codes on it.
It was really interesting.
But he explained to me, his name was Dr. Garrett Kenyon.
And he gave me this analogy where he said,
we're so far out from computers being able to think.
And I said, try and just give me an average Jane or Joe
way to understand this.
And he said, okay, think about the facial recognition software on your iPhone, right?
Very basic thing.
That is machine learning.
So he said, have your iPhone look at you and then try to have it look at you further away
and with a baseball cap or sunglasses, right?
So you're kind of making it harder
for the machine to know it's you.
Now, this interview we did, by the way,
was like eight years ago, and things have changed a lot
in a frightening manner.
Then he said to me,
the iPhone could definitely not recognize me across a football field,
walking with a baseball cap on.
He said, my daughter, on the other hand, who was, I think, something like eight years old
at the time, he said, my daughter knows who I am across a football field, walking with
a baseball cap.
Good point.
And begins running toward me.
That is human intelligence.
I mean, do you think, I think we've,
I mean, look, now China supposedly has camera systems.
I don't know what you'd call them.
I guess they wouldn't be facial recognition.
They would just be.
They are facial recognition, yes.
I guess what I'm saying is it can pick up how you walk.
Gate recognition.
And so people are putting rocks in their shoes
so that they walk different.
Did you know this?
I did not know the way to spoof that.
They're putting rocks in their shoes so that they walk different, so that the technology
doesn't pick up how they actually walk.
Yep.
And they can now have systems that can read your heartbeat.
I didn't know that. So this gets into tricky, my opinion on this,
or rather my lots of facts, you know, opinion,
gets into a tricky area here,
because I speak often about the military industrial complex,
not in, and I want to preface this,
what I'm about to say about China and all of that, right?
Which is not in what might be called a conspiratorial way per se, like the military
industrial complex, literally as a fact-based military industrial complex.
And it is real.
And it is also, provides a lot of jobs for a lot of people.
I often think about this.
So the military industrial complex as a term
comes from Eisenhower's farewell speech.
And that's very well known.
But less known is what Eisenhower
said as a follow up to that in that same speech, which
is interestingly something I tell my sources as a follow-up to that in that same speech, which is interestingly something
I tell my sources as a principal I work from, would they let me interview them?
And most of them say yes on those grounds, which is this, that the way in which America
can function as a peaceful nation and a democratic nation and a nation that
has a strong defense is through an alert and knowledgeable citizenry, which is exactly
what we've been talking about this whole time, which is in a way the question for the original
listener asked, right? So what Eisenhower was saying to us is be alert and be knowledgeable.
And so I think it's always good to temper that.
Like if you say, I'm being alert and I'm being knowledgeable in sort of like a nerdy way,
then you can, I can differentiate my pontificating about what does that mean?
And I can see my sort ofating about what does that mean?
I can see my more paranoid brain thinking thing.
It balances things out.
On the concept of the military industrial complex, specifically, and China's surveillance,
I want to say this, which is that one way of looking at that, which I would look at,
because I've done quite a bit of reporting on it, is that it's that problem of the chicken or egg scenario,
that when the United States creates a radical new technology
that it's using for its own defense,
China follows suit, Russia follows suits,
and nowhere is that more specific and more obvious,
if you really think about it, than what the
United States did during the war on terror, what the government did during the war on
terror.
That is create these biometric surveillance systems, which you know to go after bad guys
in Iraq, in Afghanistan, fingerprint technology, find the bomber, not the bomb. A great idea.
If you're just going to take out, if you're going to go after the bomb, you're just going to be,
think about that's what your teams were doing. But as soon as you can go after the bomber,
you're cutting off the head of the snake. But the biometric surveillance system got out of
control before you knew it, perhaps
because of the military industrial complex.
The Pentagon had decided, well, let's just get biometrics on everybody.
So it went from, do you know about this?
A little bit.
It went, I'll keep it short because it can be like too much of a rabbit hole, but it
went from finding the fingerprints on the bomber to let's get fingerprints on every
single person in Iraq.
85% of the population was the goal.
And then they did that in Afghanistan.
These are facts.
This is like David Petraeus fact.
And so the idea was we're going to have this colossal database of everybody, which used
to be considered an FBI criminal concept.
We're just going to have this on everybody, and then that way we're going to know if you're
a bad guy or a good guy.
And it got totally out of control, and it happened too fast, and there was so much money
being made that it just became a deluge of systems.
And China copied that.
China did not have that system of systems until we introduced it to them.
Because China is great at stealing our intellectual property, that is precisely what happened.
Then China, because it's a communist country and it does not have any of the same rules
to abide by, just went berserk with it and said, we're going to now do...
They have a system called physicals for all.
Physicals for all. What a great euphemism.
What it means is we're going to get your DNA.
And that's what they are in the process of doing.
Having DNA fingerprints, iris scans, gate monitor of everybody.
So it's, it's becoming a massive police state,
if it wasn't already.
It is now as a technology-based police state.
But remember, my point in that would be
the Defense Department set that up.
You could say to happen.
Or is that military industrial complex?
That's a good point I've not thought of.
That's a great point.
What do you think?
I think it's the Eisenhower quote,
like an alert and knowledgeable citizenry, right?
And also a little bit if you pick your battles.
Because you can become subsumed with,
this is just a horrible, you know?
You can really, and you wanna enjoy your life
and be a good parent and write your books
or do your podcast.
So, and then I look to history to say,
okay, oh, that's right, this has always been going on.
I do believe money needs to be spent to keep the economy going.
But there could be a restructuring of the military industrial complex in a manner that
suits the livelihood and the future.
Yeah, I agree with you on that.
Let's take a quick break.
When we come back, I'd like to see what it looks like
here in the US if we do endure a nuclear attack.
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What with your tax attorney or financial professional before making an investment decision? All right, Annie, we're back from the break.
We're getting ready to dive into what it would look like if we do get hit.
I just looked back at my notes though, and I just want to cover one more thing, back
to the six minutes for the president to make a decision.
Don't you, have you talked, how do I put this? I would think that a lot of these decisions
have already been predetermined.
If there's only nine nations, us included,
so eight other ones,
and then I can't remember how many are our allies.
I know Russia, China, Korea, is there another one that's?
Pakistan.
Pakistan.
Questionable, yeah.
Okay, definitely questionable.
But, but.
You've been there, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So, so I would think we would definitely have
a lot of predetermined decisions made if one
of those four countries launched towards us.
So the reason I'm bringing this up is for the audience more to, at least I would think
that there would be contingency plan after contingency plan after contingency plan, what were to happen if one of those countries
launched a nuclear weapon towards us.
And so that I think it's important to know that
the president isn't just making a,
going through a raw decision process
from beginning to end in six minutes on what he's gonna do.
Would you agree with that? Absolutely, okay, great. So let's talk about the football. from beginning to end in six minutes on what he's gonna do.
Would you agree with that? Absolutely, okay, great.
So let's talk about the football.
Okay.
Because there is not time, you're absolutely right,
for the sect to have to say,
okay, sir, we think there's no time for that.
You're talking about a six minute window.
I mean, that's like making a pot of coffee, okay?
That is a tiny amount of time.
And so the football, do you know what the football is?
I do.
Okay.
Do you want to describe it?
The football is the emergent,
also known as the emergency satchel.
It's this leather bag that is always with the president.
Any photograph you look at the president,
if you can see around him,
you will see the mill aide, the military aide,
who is the person assigned to carry the football,
24-7-365 with the president.
It is always with the president.
Lou Merletti, the former director of the Secret Service,
told me a great story about the football when I said,
is it really always with the president?
He said, it is always with the president.
He was, before he always with the president.
Before he was director of Secret Service,
he was the head of President Clinton's detail.
And he told me about going to Syria with Clinton
to see President Assad, the current president's father,
and that they got into the elevator.
And one of Assad's guys was like,
no, like about the mill aid.
And Lou said it was like a standoff.
There was no way they were gonna let the president ride
in the elevator without the football.
That's how significant it is.
It is with him on all time.
Inside the football are two key items.
One is an ability for the president's identity
to be confirmed with and by those in the nuclear bunker beneath the Pentagon, which is called the
National Military Command Center. So the president has like a card, a laminated card inside his wallet known as the biscuit.
It has information on it, which matches up to the information in the football that is
a literally a call and response.
It is a verbal call and response.
This is not digital.
This is not biometric.
It's old school.
And the other important item in the football is the black book.
That's not its official name, but that's what it's called.
The classified historian at Los Alamos told me that the reason it's called the black book
is because it involves so much death.
The black book is another jealously guarded secret.
What is in the Black Book?
Almost no one that has seen the contents of it has spoken of it.
Once a mill aide referred to the content in an interview with Smithsonian magazine, described
the contents of the black book,
and he described it like a Denny's menu,
which gets us to how does the president choose his targets.
So the countries that are perceived as enemies,
nuclear armed enemies, who might launch at us,
are broken down into this Denny's Menu type document with options for the president
to choose from in that six minute window really fast.
I interviewed for the book one person who has actually seen the contents of the black
book.
His name is Ted Postle, and he's the one with Richard Garwin who drew the map for
me about the launch and the missile. And Postle in the 80s was the chief advisor to the Navy
about nuclear missiles. That was his job in the 80s. And so he worked on some of the statistics, the information about potential targets.
But what he told me was this very frightening story about the Black Book, which gets to
your question about the president making a decision.
He said they would work on all these different scenarios, kind of let's consider the 82
missile scenario we're talking about.
Why you would get to that, how you would get to that, how you would determine where the CIA
thinks North Korea's nuclear command and control centers may be.
Operative word thinks, we have no real intelligence on them.
And then Postal told me, and of course, North Korea wasn't involved in the 80s because they
didn't have nuclear weapons yet, but Postel told me that he had another experience, which was
another day he was at the Pentagon and he became privy to the black book, kind of like
by accident.
It was out and he looked at it.
What freaked him out, his words, was that he said the difference between what they had been working on
with these very precise calculations about why different targets should be chosen and what resulted
were almost not recognizable. And he couldn't-
Can you say that again? I'm sorry.
Yeah. Okay, so like they nerded out, like you can imagine guys with pencils and recognizable. And he couldn't- Can you say that again? I'm sorry.
Yeah.
Okay.
So like they nerded out, like you can imagine guys with pencils and rulers and going, what
are the targets in said enemy nation?
What are the, where are their nuclear command and control facilities that we would want
to take out in a nuclear strike?
That's what the, you know, they're big industries.
They're bunkers, they're version of the STRATCOM bunker, they're version of the Pentagon.
They kind of nerd out around all the details to get down, pare down what the targets are
and how many bombs you're going to put on a target because you never put just one.
You know this from ground warfare, right?
But what Postel said is when he went over to the Pentagon and was looking at the black
book, the Denny's Menu, if you will, that he was shocked.
He actually said he was freaked out at the disconnect between them.
In other words, they had just been reduced to
option a and a you know, there was not
Information the president wouldn't realize you're striking a city that's going to kill
15 million people
It's a playbook
and I got the sense it's numerical or alphanumerical.
Again, that's classified information, but that's the sense I got.
It's like A324B.
I'm using that kind of as an analogy, but maybe even literally.
So in other words, that is what they're not, the president doesn't go, okay, I'm going
to hit and they're not cities with humans.
It's a look. I don't know anything about nuclear warfare. That's I'm a ground guy. That's it. I don't do nuclear strategy or anything like that. But I will say that
combat planning strategy contingencies is very much like a football game. You
call a play and nobody that has not been briefed understands what that play is.
So if it's a, if it's a, a, a, did you say a numeric or? Alpha numeric. Yeah, so if it's alpha five two,
then they go to the, everybody who is read in
knows what alpha five two is in that scenario,
that scenario plays out.
And does that make sense?
Absolutely, I agree with,
I think that's the best analogy I've heard
from what I understand.
Now, I could be wrong, because I haven't
had anyone who's seen the contents of the Black Book
tell me precisely they've only spoken in metaphor,
because they can't.
And very, very few people have seen it.
Yeah.
So it would be, I mean, I would imagine
it would be very similar to a quarterback.
When he calls a play, everybody on that team
knows exactly what's going to happen,
where they're going to go, what they're going to do,
what route they're going to run,
where the ball's going to land.
You know, and that's. And so in the black book on the Denny's menu of he calls, Alpha 2-6, all the key players
know what's going to be struck, where they're going to be, how long it's going to take to
get there, what countries are going to...
All of that is already...
It's already been predetermined.
It's a predetermined playbook of possible scenarios.
And you're exactly, probably right, right?
And so then imagine this.
The president says, well, what is Alpha 52?
And now the six minute window, the clock is ticking. Inside STRATCOM, the bunker beneath Offett Air Force Base,
which is one of the three nuclear bunkers that are central to this,
in this moment in time as this is happening.
There's one in Cheyenne Mountain, there's one beneath Offett Air Force Base,
and there's one at the Pentagon.
And the president, wherever he may be, is trying to discern this black book.
And he's being advised.
So at STRATCOM, there is an identical black book.
It's in a safe.
The safe gets opened.
The black book gets taken out.
They're identical so that they know exactly they're talking about the same thing.
There is a target officer who's prepared to brief if the president has any questions.
And there's also a weather officer that's going to tell them how many people are going
to die, maybe if there's time, and if he asks that question from the radioactive fallout
in concentric circles going out from ground zero, each ground zero.
But again, how much time do you have in a six-minute window and imagine?
What's going through the president's mind in the scenario that I write I have the president ask a number of key questions
which were
Which I learned questions. I learned from interviewing people
That they are worried the president or that they think the president might ask.
Like, I'll give you an example of a key question
the president in my scenario asked.
How do we know there's a nuclear warhead
in the nose coming in that ballistic missile?
And you know what the answer is?
They don't.
And then the next answer is, they don't.
And then the next answer is, you know, where the president might then wonder, perhaps someone
is, you know, tricking me into starting a nuclear war.
And the answer is no one sends a ballistic missile unless they know we are going to send
the mother load in response.
Which brings us back to the paradox, or the catch-22 of deterrence.
So you could use this as an argument,
which is why no one would be insane enough
to ever launch a nuclear missile at the United States,
because they would be obliterated.
Or you can use the argument that that's ridiculous.
How can more nuclear weapons make us more safe?
I mean, we shouldn't be so,
we shouldn't put so much weight on that.
I mean, we're just going down to a lower level.
I mean, look at suicide bombers.
They had no problem recruiting suicide bombers,
you know, in the global war on terrorism.
And so all you would need is somebody with that mindset to get into government and become
a world leader.
I mean, not an easy task, but not impossible.
Not impossible.
And in 2024, certainly more likely than in 1952. Mm-hmm.
On top of that, going back to the decision-making of the president, I'm sure he would have,
if it happened, I'm sure he would have advisors that would say something along the lines of,
this is what's happening right now.
These are our top three actions that we have recommended that you take.
Here they are.
And that is the job of the advisors.
Which one would you like us to do?
So he's not reading the whole Denny's menu.
You're absolutely right.
So you also have to imagine what would be going through the president's mind, who, from
what I understand, has not thought this through, has not been part of these war gaming scenarios,
has been concerned with other issues, both domestic and abroad, suddenly new to this,
asking questions like, is this a test? And his advisors knowing it is not a test, and his advisors being much more aware of
how this is going to end, meaning having wargamed these situations out.
But then you can learn about a concept as I did, which is something called jamming the
president, which is what is understood
would happen at a moment like this, whereby the military advisors almost universally would be
advising him to escalate, to deescalate, to hit them with an extraordinary amount of force.
And that is a natural military mindset, particularly if you are attacked.
You know this, right?
And so in the scenario that I report, that's where things go awry because of some technological
holes in the system.
And that is why Russia gets involved.
Interesting.
Well, let's get into this scenario.
What does it look like if we're hit?
A nuclear bomb explodes with a flash of light, of x-ray light, that is so powerful and hot,
it is impossible to comprehend.
It is 180 million degrees.
That's the temperature at the center of the sun times five.
Really?
Times five.
And so the thermonuclear flash sets everything on fire, depending on the size of the bomb.
In the scenario that I write, it's three miles out.
Is that a fact?
Is that the biggest?
Yes.
That's not the biggest bomb, but that is a fact.
And so by the way, when I write about these horrific details about what happens to people in third degree burns and wind ripping skin off people's faces, you know, nine miles
out, limbs being ripped off, you know, the sucking motion that happens, the blast wave
that's like a bulldozer, the buildings that come down, when I write all those details,
those are not out of any Jacobson's imagination.
Those are sourced from a primary document called The Effects of Nuclear Weapons, which
is a 600 and some odd page book.
It's also called Army Pamphlet Number 50-9, if I'm remembering correctly.
And that began with the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings,
the effects of nuclear weapons on buildings and people.
And as the tests were done, we conducted atmospheric tests in the Pacific
and also in Nevada at the test site.
As the tests were done, defense scientists were constantly measuring
the effects that nuclear weapons have on things
and people.
And the people substitutes were animals.
And they measured these with a specificity that's just stunning.
And that's a polite word for gruesome. And I use those details in the book and I source them again in notes.
So, you know, then you get to learn as a reader, oh, wait a minute, how does the Pentagon know that a pine needle will catch on fire six miles out from ground zero?
You know, spontaneously combust and start more fires. Oh, because these have been studied.
Six miles out.
So does that mean the blast radius of the flash can be up to six miles?
People can go blind up to 50 miles out if they're looking in the direction of the bomb.
Fifty miles?
Five-oh. if they're looking in the direction of the bomb. 50 miles? 50. And the way we know, you know,
the Defense Department would put rabbits in cages
and fly them, you know, 50 miles out from this bomb
and put their, you know, it's very clockwork orange
to determine the effects on the retina.
A one megaton bomb that I have hit the Pentagon,
and I use the Pentagon as a target, by the way, again,
that's not just because it's my imagination, but because many people that I interviewed
told me that a bolt out of the blue attack against Washington is what Washington fears
most.
And so a one megaton bomb that detonates over the Pentagon creates a ball of fire, pure fire,
that is 5,700 feet in diameter.
That's a little over a mile.
Again, like the specificity of these numbers are
from defense scientists.
A ball of fire.
So nothing remains.
Not a cricket.
No cellular life in that.
And then you have this blast wave,
it's called a steeply fronted blast wave,
and it pushes out and it bulldozes down, metaphorically.
All physical bridges go down, you know.
Stone splits apart.
Steel, lead melts.
Ten miles out, streets become like molten lava.
So if you survive, you're suddenly sucked into a lava street.
Third degree burns on everyone.
Anyone in a subway is going to die,
if they're 10 miles out, they're gonna die of asphyxiation.
So 10 mile, would 10 miles be the,
let's talk immediate death.
Mm-hmm.
10 miles?
Well, there's like three rings that I write about specifically,
you know, in their diameters and they go out up to the Washington DC Zoo is kind of the
edge where all the animals, you know, have their skin hanging off of them. Sorry. It's
dark. It's true. And so then you have to think about, you know, you have all these people dead, all these people
now with that are far out as far as 10 miles out with third degree burns, fourth degree burns.
Did you even know there was such a thing as a fourth degree burns? Third degree burns require
a specialized bed. There are like 10 in Washington, They've now all been obliterated in this scenario.
People die of blood loss. Imagine the projectiles from this. There are several hundred mile
an hour winds accompanying that steeply fronted blast wave. The buildings topple over and
become rubble.
We haven't even spoken in the back that no first responder can go in there for 72 hours.
By then the world's over.
The situation I write in appalling detail because I want you to see how horrific it
is.
You would hope you were inside the fireball because the further out you are, the worse it is.
When you think about this,
the mushroom cloud that we've all seen, right?
That mushroom stem and the cloud is made up
of the remnants of people
who have turned into combusting carbon.
That is the ditrious of civilization. That's just one nuclear bomb. So people get
to see that every nuclear weapon is really a mass extinction weapon. Because when you consider the
black, you know, we're talking about the ring out ten, shall we say ten, ten miles
out. What will then, because all these fires have started now from the flash,
the situation becomes a mesocyclone of fire, is how it's described.
There, in a matter of minutes or hours,
there will be a hundred mile radius of fire burning,
because there's no first responders in a nuclear attack.
I learned this from Obama's FEMA director,
a guy called Craig Fugate,
who did all these on the record interviews with me,
and described to me how horrific a nuclear war was.
He was so candid.
I went back, are you sure you said this, this, this,
and this, it's quoted in the book, you know, that he said,
FEMA does something called population protection planning.
So earthquakes, floods, hurricanes, when these happen,
FEMA's at the ready to help the people.
Population protection planning.
And Fugate said to me, after a nuclear strike,
there is no population protection planning because And Fugate said to me, after a nuclear strike, there is no population protection planning
because everyone will be dead.
You're on your own.
I said, what do you suggest people do?
And he said, hope that you stocked Pedialyte
and don't forget your morals.
That kind of candor from that level of an individual made me realize people leave office
and become civilians again, become parents again, and grandparents, and they suddenly
realize nuclear war is insane.
We cannot have a nuclear war.
What do you, have you talked to any of your sources about likely targets other than DC?
Every city in America is a target.
Every airport in America is a target. Every airport in America is a target.
Every industrial base in America is a target.
Maybe not for the rogue launch that happens in my scenario in the beginning, but as I
describe in the book, a series of events happen.
Shall I jump forward to what really goes wrong?
Sure.
Okay. So we have a really great satellite system. Russia does
not. They pretend they do. There's this called tundra. I told you, ours can measure inches
from 22,000 miles up. Theirs pretends to.
Their system is so flawed that it sees clouds and sunlight
as exhaust, as fire sometimes.
Now I sourced this not just from American experts,
but from people who are experts on Russian nuclear command and control,
including a guy called Pavel Podvig, who studied in Moscow,
who's the liaison to the UN for Russian nuclear forces.
So he would be prone to giving you a different opinion maybe than,
and he even conceded that the tundra system is deeply flawed.
And so Russia can't see, Russia could easily misinterpret what it's, what it is seeing happening.
We're talking about once the missiles start flying, once America, the American president
learns that he has to make a counterattack. And our missiles are now flying.
And as Leon Panetta said to me, you're right.
No one thinks about mad chemistry, mutual assured destruction chemistry, once the missiles
are flying.
And that's where the mistakes happen.
So in the scenario, a very serious flaw arises, which is that US ICBMs do not have enough range.
If we are sending ICBMs at North Korea, they have to fly over Russia.
An actual fact confirmed by Panetta, by the way.
They have to fly over Russia.
Think about the state of affairs between Russia and the United States right now.
I don't believe the two presidents have spoken in years.
During the war, General Milley couldn't get his, in the early days of the war,
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Milley couldn't get his Russian counterpart on
the phone when there was an errant, erroneously
reported missile attack against Poland.
Couldn't get him on the phone.
Imagine a scenario where nuclear missiles are flying and Russia sees missiles coming,
it would interpret at themselves.
Even if you could get the president on the phone and say, trust
us, they're going to go over you, not at you.
And so Russia makes a decision to launch.
And when Russia launches, it sends a thousand nuclear weapons.
Does that mean North Korea's nuclear weapons would also have to fly over Russia?
North Korea's nuclear weapons fly over Russia and China, but they do not have the same technology
that we have, according to my understanding of the technology, to see in real time the way that we see in real time
any ballistic missile launch anywhere on the globe.
Only reason I'm bringing that up is context.
Yeah.
Because if they do have somewhat of a capability
and North Korea launches a nuke at the US and it does have to fly over
China and Russia. At least in our response, they would have some context and they could go,
okay, we did just see one, we just saw one fly this way. Now we're going to see one head west,
you know, and so it wouldn't be a hundred percent in the blind.
Which is a could, that is a possibility.
Now with that being said, you're also, you know, there would have to be some type of
communications and if we don't have communications and we can't even get our counterpart on the
phone, then...
And here's the fundamental problem with that in terms of long thinking, which is that America's
first nuclear war plan against Russia was a preemptive nuclear strike.
Okay?
A preemptive nuclear strike.
Russia has been paranoid ever since, maybe with good reason, because this is an origin
story, that we would do a preemptive nuclear strike.
I have heard some leading experts on Putin, including Fiona Hill, who advised multiple
presidents, so she's completely nonpartisan,
talk about how the invasion of Iraq profoundly impacted Putin's thinking about the United
States, about regime change, about a preemptive attack, and how dangerous that is.
So it's not just long history that someone might be thinking of,
it's short history, more immediate history.
And so another example of how paranoid Russia has been for decades
is its system that it created called the Dead Hand.
Okay?
The literal name of it is Perimeter.
This perimeter system, Dead Hand, was originally reported by a Washington Post reporter named
David Hoffman in 1999, when he first learned about it, right after the wall had gone down,
before we were back to this nuclear threat posturing.
But the way the dead hand works is like this.
Russia was so paranoid that the United States was going to launch a preemptive nuclear attack
against it during the Cold War, that it created a dead hand system.
What is that?
It's kind of like it sounds. They created a system whereby ground sensors would be able to determine nuclear weapons,
nuclear bombs hitting the Russian soil.
And if they weren't hearing from the nuclear command and control, so the idea being that
the nuclear command and control had been taken out in this preemptive nuclear strike, the idea being that the nuclear command and control had been taken out in this preemptive
nuclear strike.
The dead hand system would launch all of Russia's remaining nuclear weapons, which were like
30,000 at the time, okay?
Would launch all of them without even needing a hand to push the button, hence the name
the dead Hand. So it set up a system to launch no matter what,
even if we're all dead.
And the idea behind it is kind of part of deterrence,
like don't you dare launch at us,
or even our own dead hand will get you.
And so when you think about that, you realize there's a long history of suspicion in Russia.
And even more terrifying is I have heard in defense circles, and I haven't been able to
confirm it, but I've heard that even now, the US Defense Department is thinking of creating some kind of a dead
hand equivalent, because allegedly, Russia never got rid of that system.
That's where AI would become a real problem.
Yeah, that's a great point.
That is a great point.
The dead AI hand.
Wow, that's a great point.
Let's keep with the, let's go back into
what life looks like.
Okay.
So we, it sounds like, excuse me if I'm mistaken,
it sounds like immediate devastation
is about 10 mile radius.
100 miles, you're gonna feel effects.
What happens after that?
So in the scenario, I have the president making this decision.
The six-minute window is upon him.
They're waiting for minute eight, nine to have the secondary ground confirmation from
the ground radar systems.
That happens.
Sir, it's confirmed the ICBM is coming to Washington.
Then I have a situation unfold between the Secret Service and Nuclear Command and Control
based on interviews I did with Secret Service.
Once I realized, wait a minute, the Secret Service's job is to protect the president.
As soon as the Secret Service learns that the special agent in charge, the SAC in charge
of the president learns that there's a missile coming at Washington, he's moving the president.
Period.
Non-negotiable.
The Secret Service has an element, a cat team, counter-assault team.
They're kind of like the president's version of ground branch, in essence. A lot of guys go
back and forth. So the counter-assault team gets called in by the SAC. Within the counter-assault
team, there's an even tinier group called the Element. An Element is a three-man team.
A three-man team is now going to move the president on Air Force One out of the White
Hall, out of the White House, back off.
So it's a standoff.
Who do you think is going to win?
Who has better equipment?
We do.
The CAT team wins.
They move the president, much to the chagrin of the strat com commander and everybody else
who wants that order.
While they are moving the president, and there's a problem, because I learned that getting
a little into the weeds here, but I'm good.
There's an EMP which will happen with any nuclear.
You're familiar with that? Marine One is EMP which will happen with any nuclear. You're familiar with that?
Marine One is EMP-proof.
For listeners, it's an electromagnetic pulse that could very easily fry the electronic
system on Marine One, causing it to crash.
So the SAC needs to make sure there are parachutes that they can tandem jump the president.
They're not in Marine One.
A detail I learned.
They probably are now, but they weren't then.
So the element has to swing by the White House office,
grab the parachutes.
They need one for the mill aid,
one for the guy who's going to jump the president,
and one for the sack.
They get them. They get into Marine One.
While that is happening, I have in the scenario
a second ballistic missile strikes a nuclear power plant in California.
A sub-launched ballistic missile.
Now, I had Ted Postol, I'm pointing to this, and Richard Garwin
discuss with me whether or not it
was plausible, whether or not North Korea can actually get a submarine up to the west
coast of the United States, because we know China and Russia can.
That's a fact.
You learn that later in the book.
Can North Korea?
Ted Postel believes that they can.
Garwin says he doesn't think they can yet.
I wanted to have that kind of a debate available for readers to think about.
You just don't know until you know.
I take you through the technology of why Postal thinks it's possible.
The North Korean sub-launched ballistic missile fires from a couple hundred miles off the
West Coast.
That takes less than 10 minutes.
It's like six minutes or something.
While the president is deciding whether or not he's going to give this counter-launch
and the Secret Service is moving him, the power plant is hit.
And when the nuclear, the reason I chose the nuclear power plant to be hit is because it's
what's called the devil's scenario.
It's the worst of the worst, worst case scenario.
And I won't get too into the weeds about what happens.
Why not?
I want you to read the book.
Okay.
But no, I shouldn't say it like that.
What I mean is the details, if you're me, you almost can't tell the details in a 30
second version because it's so profound what happens.
And it's so terrifying.
And people would say that they would never do that.
Well, there's actually a rule.
It's called Rule 42 in the International Committee
for the Red Cross that says you must never strike
a nuclear power plant.
That's even with kinetic weapons.
We're not talking about nuclear weapons.
When I was doing this scenario, people that were mentors, are you sure you want to do
that?
That's against the rules.
It was like, well, that's the point.
There are no rules if you're going to play nuclear war.
Then this is before the Ukraine war unfolded. And so when Russia, Russia has now exploded weapons around the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power
plant in Ukraine eight or nine times, they have been on backup generator.
That's one step away from losing power.
That's one step away from a nuclear core materials meltdown.
If you strike a nuclear power plant directly with a nuclear weapon, you will have a nuclear core materials meltdown. If you strike a nuclear power plant directly with a nuclear weapon,
you will have a nuclear core materials meltdown.
The land will be uninhabited all the way to Colorado.
Are you serious?
Fact checked with Los Alamos.
Wow.
That's why I don't want to give it away.
I want you to have that experience, Sean, where you read it,
and you're just like, how is this possible?
And hopefully the only reason you're stopping to read
is to go back into the notes to check, is this really true?
So that's like a third of the country.
Rendered uninhabitable.
And so that's why the president agrees
in the logic of this scenario to the 82 nuclear
warhead counterattack, because he learns from his sect if we just got hit in a nuclear power
plant in California, he's going to send the mother load.
And that's why things go awry, is that decision to send 82.
So perhaps the only way this scenario might have unfolded differently, and I did this
discussion with former Secretary of Defense Bill Perry, because we talked about this a lot,
because he thinks about this a lot. He's now in his 90s, and he stopped doing interviews.
But during COVID, he and I did a number of Zooms, going through these scenarios.
And he, he shared with me that, you know, perhaps a certain kind of president
might wait to see the outcome after, might not instill the launch on morning policy, might we?
But once you see a catastrophic attack,
you just, the emotions take over and it's revenge.
What does the middle of the country look like?
So 50 some odd minutes later when Russia launches, because the president makes the decision to
launch the 82 as the weapons fly, he launches 50 ICBMs and 32 SLBMs. The 50 can be launched in 60 seconds.
That's how long it takes to launch an ICBM
once the president gives the command.
The joke is, those missiles are called Minutemen
because of the Revolutionary War.
But the joke in Washington is,
they don't call them Minutemen for nothing
because they take 60 seconds to launch.
Sub-launched ballistic missiles take 14 minutes from the time the commander in chief gives
that order.
The sub has to get into position.
It's a little bit more complicated, 14 minutes.
And so as the clock is ticking, Russian early warning systems now move into place, and the Russian early warning
systems see the ballistic missiles coming over the pole and interpret them as coming
for them.
And then there are other, you know, and I went through experts that know all about the Russian early warning systems to take the reader through how this happens.
And then you go into the command bunker where the Russian president is with his advisors,
who are all almost certainly hawks, who are all almost certainly extremely suspicious
of the United States.
And they advise him.
And so a thousand nuclear warheads get launched at the United States.
So when you ask what happens to the middle of the country, think of a thousand targets.
I have a map drawn based on Defense Department targets, DOE, you know, different documents that have been released over the years, leaked,
guesstimated. The whole country is obliterated. And then you have a 100 to 300 square mile
ring of fire, a mega fire that's now producing its own weather.
You have a thousand of them.
People die from blast, they die from objects flying through the air,
they die from immediate radiation poisoning, and they die from fire a thousand times.
And then we talk about the survivors.
Have you looked at what immediate
radiation poisoning looks like?
For that, I tell the story of,
and again, this stuff is like,
okay, how do you get, how do you,
where is that information?
Well, I found that information.
There was a guy called Louis Slotin,
who was an original Manhattan Project member,
and his death was declassified by Los Alamos.
The doctors report on his death
after he died of radiation poisoning.
And I sourced that precisely.
Throughout the book, as the, you know, it's a ticking time clock scenario, but I stop and give you little history
lessons at moments where you might ask, like you just asked me that question, I give the
reader what does radiation poisoning look like?
And I tell the story of Louis Slotin.
He was a member of the Manhattan Project and after the war was over, he was like, I don't
want to keep making nuclear bombs.
I'm out.
They were like, okay, that's fine, but you have to train the next guy.
At Los Alamos, they went out into this little site outside of the lab in the forest.
The building's still there.
It's a historical building now.
Slotin was training the next guy how to like work with the plutonium core,
uranium core, like this is the center of the bomb.
And they were doing this experiment that was so dangerous it was called
tickling the dragon's tail.
And Slotin is working on this and it drops.
And so everybody takes off.
And Slotin, what happens to him, And so everybody takes off.
And Slotin, what happens to him is like documented in seconds.
He dies eight or nine days later.
This had been classified for a very long time, but it's been declassified.
And you can, you just learn what happens to his body.
I mean, you know, where the hands blow up,
the skin, you know, essentially peels off.
I mean, it just is so grotesque.
You really want me to describe it?
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, they tried everything,
like blood transfusions and, you know,
your body swells up.
They're de-briding his hands,
they're putting Vaseline on them.
His insides begin to...
The radiation ruins the lining on your organs.
And so you essentially just become like...
It almost reminded me of...
I read a description once of what happens
to an Ebola patient.
It's like that, like the lining sloughs away
and so your organs start to merge
and you just have sepsis and then you get gangrene
and then you die and when they cut you open,
you're just like soup inside.
It's like a blender.
And when they cut you open, you're just like soup inside. It's like a blender.
It's a horrific way to die.
That's acute radiation poisoning.
The really sinister thing about radiation poisoning is,
first of all, it's invisible, you know.
It's not like a burn.
And the degrees of radiation poisoning are not necessarily dependent on proximity to
the bomb.
And of course, if you're really close, sayonara.
But you can have acute radiation poisoning far away from...
One of the things about the nuclear power plant exploding
that's just so crazy is that
it's not just the nuclear core materials meltdown
of the actual nuclear reactor,
it's that every nuclear facility has spent fuel rods.
Those are the rods that used to power the nuclear generator.
They're in cooling pools right nearby.
And they're incredibly radioactive.
And when those blast apart, the pieces of the spent fuel rods become entrained in the
cloud.
So in that mushroom stem, you have all this radioactive material that's like the size
of a marble or a pencil.
That's how it was described to me.
And it goes up in the cloud and then it moves and then it's dropped.
One of those drops near you.
You have Louis Slotin type poisoning.
Man, man.
Where would the survivors be?
So are you familiar at all with the nuclear winter theory?
No.
Okay.
So nuclear winter theory was originally written in 1983.
Have you heard of Carl Sagan?
No.
Okay.
Carl Sagan was an astrophysicist who became very famous in the 70s and 80s and then he died tragically of
cancer.
But he became a real proponent, an anti-nuclear weapons proponent.
And he and a number of people wrote this theory called nuclear winter where they client they modeled out what would happen after the
fires stopped burning.
So you have all these fires.
And again, we're just talking about the thousand in the United States, the US launched in my
scenario, 1000 at Russia, because we don't just go, you know, okay, we're gonna, we're
all gonna die. don't just go, OK, we're all going to die, so we're just
going to let all of you guys live.
We launch.
And for reasons why, I take you through that.
So you have 2,000, 3,000 nuclear weapons that have gone off.
And the modeling on that suggests that after all,
the fires stop burning.
This is state of the art climate modeling updated since
the 1983 nuclear winter theory.
So this is still the nuclear winter theory, but now with the technology, instead of scientists
like doing calculations on paper with old computers, these are like really advanced
computer systems confirming all of this. The fires will loft into the air 330 billion pounds of soot.
Goes up into the troposphere and blocks out the sun.
70% of the sun's rays disappear.
And so hence nuclear winter.
Suddenly in places like across the mid latitudes of the globe, you have all bodies, all bodies
of water, freshwater bodies become ice.
The ice at the Arctic Circle doubles. You have a temperature drop around the Earth
between 27 and 40 degrees.
Whoa. Wow.
Places like Iowa and Ukraine, bread baskets of the world,
they become frozen for eight, nine, 10 years.
Agriculture fails.
So now you have people, any survivors,
who are malnourished,
suffering from radiation poisoning,
everyone who they know is dead,
fighting over a tiny amount of resources.
When the sun returns, you think the sun's back out, but the ozone layer has been destroyed.
So the sun will give you radiation poisoning.
So people have to live underground.
And this interesting detail I found was that was shared with me was that the small-bodied animals, the sort of
insects, they can bounce back faster and they will reproduce faster than large-bodied animals
like you and me.
And so you have pathogens, you have plague, you have all these horrific plagues that come
with insects and abundance of index,
nevermind all the five billion people who died.
I mean, at some point their bodies thaw out.
Think about that.
That's like dark beyond dark.
One of the original authors of the nuclear winter theory
is a guy called Professor Brian Toon.
And I interviewed him for the book.
He's been on this issue since he was Carl Sagan's student in 1983 when he was one of
the original five authors.
And he took me through all of this.
And he said to me, Annie, 66 million years ago, an asteroid struck the planet, killed the dinosaurs, and 70% of the species that
we know of.
He said nuclear war would not be unlike that.
So you have to ask yourself, you know, there's nothing we can do about an asteroid strike,
but there is something we can do about nuclear war.
This isn't a nation-ending event. This is a...
It's a civilization-ending event. Civilization meaning civilized man.
It's over.
man, civilized man. Einstein was asked if he had like about what weapons he thought World War III would be
fought with.
And his response is said to have been, I know not with what weapons World War III will be
fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones. So after a nuclear war
man returns to his hunter-gatherer state. And the philosophical question I find so
interesting to think about is like here we humans, who have moved in the past 12,000 years
from hunter gatherers to like,
look at us, podcasts, microphones.
I flew here.
There's a probe on Mars.
Do you think,
I'm gonna go down a rabbit hole hole and you can entertain it or not, but
have you looked at any of the, have you looked at anybody like, I don't want to mention any
names, have you looked at anybody or looked into kind of the cataclysm type stuff and how civilization just restarts over and over and
over again.
You have, what do you think of that?
Yeah.
I mean, we started out this conference, I read all things.
Do you think that this has happened before?
I mean, I don't know, but sometimes I try to counter what could be perceived as conspiracy,
conspiratorial thinking, shall we say, with maybe a more bookish,
you know, concept, which is actually the same thing, right?
So let me go back at you with this,
that there was a paper written by like two nerds,
and I say that love, like two guys with with probably they probably have like five PhDs and
You can google it. It's called the salurian
Concept and I think they took the name off of a doctor who character if I'm not mistaken
and an interesting thing to think about is in my experience digressing for a second before a
lot of times like
super intelligent PhD people,
Nobel laureates, science geniuses, they read science fiction. They like to think
about the very concepts that you just suggested. And when you think about it,
that's where a lot of DARPA concepts come from. You know, you could say Jules Verne thought about the submarine before,
right?
So the Solarian concept where these two PhD people imagining if what you propose is true,
that there had been advanced civilizations before, How would we, present-day man, see it in the geological record,
which is actually a really brilliant thought.
Not talking about ancient archaeology.
That you're talking about 12,000 years ago.
They're talking about a million years ago, two million years ago or beyond.
And the only way to know about that would be to
look in the geological record.
And I think that is really interesting to think about
two things, one, that's where it would be,
and two, that all kinds of people wonder that.
And why wouldn't you wonder that?
It's a little bit like wondering, are we alone?
I sometimes think of geology and ask, you know,
people look up to the cosmos and get really inspired.
I often look, I look at the ground.
I can drive through the Sierra Nevadas
and look at the mountains and have that same thought.
Like, whoa, what was here before?
Like a long time before.
Reason I'm asking is, if you, I think it's Turkey.
There's all these underground,
they're like underground cities.
I believe it's Turkey.
They have, I wish I had more facts on this.
I didn't think we were gonna go here.
But it seems like hundreds of thousands of people
could live in these underground cities.
They never end.
They never find the end of them.
And nobody knows why they were built.
And then you're saying the only way you could survive
is underground.
Yes, I know that site.
I mean, it's very, very interesting.
And I love thinking about those exact questions
that you raise.
In the end of nuclear war scenario, I take the reader to a different ancient site in
Turkey because Turkey is super interesting.
They seem to have these incredibly old sites that are almost now newly becoming, not necessarily
discovered but becoming sort of more people are aware of them.
And I learned that that has to do with the bias from the archaeological world that used to look down on Turkey,
like Greece and Rome or everything, but Turkey, it's a backwater, ignore it.
So I write about Gobekli Tepe, which is a site in Turkey that is the oldest known civilization to date.
Before it was found in the mid-90s by an archaeologist named Klaus Schmidt, and I interviewed the
young student who was with him.
Schmidt died, but I interviewed Michael Morse about finding this site. Okay,
because before this site was found, there was the archaeologists all had one idea about
man. They had this idea that about civilization rather, that man were hunter gatherers, primitives.
And then suddenly, man figured out how to domesticate animals and agriculture evolved and led to
civilization.
By civilization, that means groups of people doing things together, a team.
Well, Gobekli Tepe was unearthed.
And I have pictures of it in the book.
It was a site with, it's like, cocentric circles,
almost like a stadium, an ancient stadium, massive,
with giant 20-foot tall carved stone pillars,
covered with non-domesticated animals, by the way,
cranes, ebis, foxes.
They were hunter-gatherers.
They had not domesticated animals yet,
as far as we can tell,
certainly given the age of everything there.
But they were smart enough to create architectural plans.
You can't build something like that
with like a group of hunter gatherers.
You have to really have a team.
So it's upended the way that archeologists
get to think about man and about the birth of civilization.
And it's super interesting.
And what interests me in terms of this book
is exactly on the question that you're interested in
and so am I, which is like,
well, it's like a two-fold question.
One, what was going on before, okay?
And two, why is it that we, the royal we,
a group of people, like, get to decide
this is what it was and this is how it is
and it's just going to be that way
because we tell you so.
And you have to balance that out with some crazy idea
that I might have out on a hike,
but it is worth thinking about.
And I think that it opens the mind up
to a lot more wonder
and also a lot more flexibility.
It makes you think.
It definitely makes you think.
And, you know, it's,
we're kind of off on a tangent now,
but I mean, I just,
how was, how were we not aware of this stuff before?
The existence of these incredible sites in Turkey?
Yeah.
I mean- Or any of them.
During COVID, I went down a archeological rabbit hole,
because, right?
And like, I bought a bunch of books on eBay,
because here's the thing, if you read the original books, or rather you go back in time
and you read books that were printed then, you can get a really interesting different
sense on what historians say about it.
And so I read all these books, archaeology only really began in sort of the late 1800s.
And I have these books,
like what people were actually saying at the time
about the sites they were uncovering,
the goods which they stole,
which are now in the Louvre
and the British Museum and everywhere.
And that's where I got that,
I kind of figured out that it had to do with
a group of people at the time who were the leading experts,
the British and the French,
deciding this is important, we're gonna study this,
and we're gonna ignore the rest of it.
And that's why Turkey got ignored for a long time.
Up until like the 1950s.
Wow.
Interesting, interesting stuff.
You know, it's, I never really,
I've watched a couple documentaries on it.
And, you know, the commonality between all of them
is what were these people hiding from?
Why were they going underground?
I mean, thousands, it could hold thousands
and thousands of people.
And if I remember correctly, I mean, there's,
I don't know if plumbing's the right word,
but I mean, they have plumbing, they have,
they had everything, you know, it was capable of holding.
And it never occurred to me to think that it could be possibly,
excuse me, some type of nuclear fallout shoulder.
And it's, I mean, almost certainly it had to do with warfare.
That you would create, I think it's called derriam kirk.
Is that right? Derriam, man, I don't know. I don't know. I mean, almost certainly it has to do with
defense. But to create that much of a system underground begs many, many, many questions.
And I think that that's also like why that idea of science fiction is so interesting.
Here's a quote from DARPA that the DARPA director said when I was reporting that book, which is, here
at DARPA, we're where science fiction becomes science fact.
Right?
So you're making me think that site is like a perfect place for like a science fiction
novel or dot dot dot.
Because then when you begin to look at it
and archeologists are studying it,
you realize there is scientific fact here.
And how do you reverse engineer the truth about that,
what it is?
I think only with people having eyes on it.
Which is why I think you and I both appreciate
all these different ideas
that people bring to the table.
You don't have to agree with all of them, but they certainly, anything that gets my
mind going, I consider a value.
Me too, me too.
It kind of, I don't understand people that just shut it off.
It's like we were talking about at the beginning.
They're, they,
people get too into political figures,
their side of things.
It's, people are just too one-sided.
And I don't know,
I don't know why there are not more critical thinkers,
but I love talking to you about this stuff, by the way.
This is great conversation.
This is what it makes me think about,
and I'm really gonna go on a tangent here.
It makes me think about what hill do you wanna die on?
So can I tangent here?
Absolutely.
So I personally think the more
different kinds of people you can talk to,
the more interesting ideas you can hold in your brain,
the more flexible you can be in your thinking,
and then the more amicable you are, right?
So the more welcoming you are to different kinds of people.
And so you just said like,
what hill are you gonna die on, right?
Why do people get so set in their ways?
And I'm just jumping tangent here,
but at the hotel where I'm staying,
here I am in Tennessee.
I haven't been here since I was 20 years old.
And I look at the geology a lot of places.
And outside the window of the hotel, there's like,
I didn't realize Tennessee had so many hills, okay?
And that concept, I immediately had this flashback
to Billy Wah, okay?
Because the concept of what hill are you gonna die on
comes from Vietnam, at least according to Woh.
Did you know this?
I didn't.
Okay, and I didn't either until he told me,
but I went with Billy Woh back to Vietnam.
We were gonna go to Khe Sanh.
I wanted, do you know about Khe Sanh?
I don't.
Okay, Khe Sanh is like,
it's like the equivalent of Fallujah in the Vietnam War.
I mean, it was,
the fight for Kaysan as a Marine base was just,
it's astounding how important that place was
because it was the closest to North Vietnam.
And what happened there and the books that have been...
It's just so tragic to me that it's like completely lost to history.
But it was this incredibly important base.
All kinds of Americans died there.
Billy Wah and I went back there because that's where his...
He was with a unit called MACV SOG, which is kind of the precursor to ground branch
really to...
It was Special Activities Division.
And they had a base underground, a base beneath the base, surrounded by concertina wild, that's how classified
MACV SOG missions were, because they were the cross-border missions into Laos.
And we go back to Quezon, and we were in a little hotel,
just like not that far from the hotel I'm staying in.
And there I am standing with Billy Waa
looking out the window at these hills,
not unlike the hills in Tennessee.
And that's when he explained to me,
you know where the expression,
what hill are you gonna die on comes from.
Okay.
Wow.
And he, I'm like, no, tell me.
And that hill, and now if you look up anything about Vietnam and for your older listeners,
they're sitting there going, uh-huh, uh-huh.
I mean, the expression, let's take that hill.
And it's so powerful and so important and so tragic at the same time.
Because that is what was being done. All these American boys, these young soldiers, Billy was an old soldier.
I mean, by then, he was, Billy was different. He was the guy who raised his hand and said, send me, you know.
But so many of these young kids that were sent to war died taking the hill.
It was like the defense department was like,
we need that hill.
And in Quezon, you could see them out the window.
You could just see the hills.
And it makes, and then I think when I was studying
the war on terror and writing about it, you know,
and I think about that with like the people I've interviewed
who so many of their friends died, you know,
essentially taking a hill, not a hill, but figuratively.
And then here we are talking about the same idea,
which is like, what hill are you gonna die on?
Why is it so important to be right about an idea
which you only know some of?
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah, that's a great point.
Let's take another break.
When we come back, I'd like to talk a little bit about
global strategy with nuclear warfare.
Sound good?
Yeah, anything you want.
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Let's get back to the show.
All right, Andy, we're back from the break.
We're going to get into some world strategy when it comes to nuclear warfare.
So we've kind of talked about if North Korea sends nuclear warheads to the US, US returns, they have to fly over
Russia, Russia fires on us, pretty much automatically, it sounds like.
What about the other, what, six nations that have this type of capability?
What are they going to do?
The scenario I write takes place in 72 minutes.
When the EMP nuclear weapon goes off earlier than that, that was there all along, launched
into space by North Korea disguised as a radio satellite, it takes out the entire grid. That's what an EMP exploded 300 miles over the center of the country would do.
It's just a massive failure.
It's a colossal failure of everything electric.
So in essence, the ability to understand what anyone is doing outside what you can physically see disappears.
So for that reason, that's where the scenario ends other than nuclear winter, meaning what did
China do? What did India and Pakistan do? I don't know. But it was done specifically for that idea that continues
to interest me is how did man become civilized? How did we go from, how did we figure out
how to write? You know, we only know so much about history back to where people started writing it down. It's just guesswork before then, archaeological interpretation.
So man, you know, 5,000 BC figures out how to write.
That wasn't that long.
So we've had a 7,000 year run of history.
And once all electronics cease in the world in which we live today,
just the information goes.
All, everything on your computer is gone.
Who writes longhand anymore besides me
and a couple of others?
Not very many people.
Not very many people.
So it's the end of civilization,
it's the end of history, meaning the ability to report
what happened.
That's for that same reason I don't get into the geopolitics in my book, in the scenario
of why it happens.
Many books have been written about that.
The geopolitical maneuvering China, the long game,
the great powers, all of that.
That's been written by many people
and it's very interesting to think about.
But it's not part of this book.
This book is here's what happens once the missile launches.
Okay.
Did any of your sources start to tangent into that by chance?
Interestingly not. Really? Interestingly not. No, I mean, we just kept the focus. of your sources start to tangent into that by chance?
Interestingly not. Really? Interestingly not.
No, I mean, we just kept the focus.
You only have so much time with the source, you know,
and you might want to just pull them back in.
There were reasons to think about that
in terms of my other books, for sure.
Usually it's about how did we deter the Soviet Union, right? The whole,
the CIA's paramilitary, which you know about from direct personal experience,
was set up to counter the vicious activities of the Soviet Union as if they were trying,
whatever they were doing, it was trying to weaken the United States and then attack us with nuclear weapons.
So I've looked at it from all these different angles,
but in this book, it's just game on, then what happens.
Okay.
And you picked North Korea because...
Because Garwin made me think about this idea of a mad king, this sort of mad man with a
nuclear arsenal, which I mean, I think your reference to suicide bombers is very, and
it's a reason why most people in the West would tell you that Iran should never have a nuclear bomb.
The fundamentals of their governance is religion-based, and their ideas about the end of the world
are frightening. I mean, they are very apocalyptic.
They are very apocalyptic in their thinking.
Like the apocalypse is fine.
That's not someone you want with a nuclear arsenal.
Yeah.
Yeah, no kidding.
Do you know how many nuclear warheads
the other six countries have?
How many does India have?
And also just to shout out to anyone who wants to nerd out on this is that there's an organization
led by a guy called Hans Christiansen.
He writes the Nuclear Notebook with a team of people, Matt Korda, Ileana Reynolds,
and that's inside the Federation of American Scientists.
And they keep track of the nuclear warheads
to the best of their ability
based on what is transparent.
That's why they change every year.
So they write these long monographs,
which are profoundly important to people like me.
Who has what, where, what we know about them and why.
Really important to understand
the system of systems we're up against.
So my information comes from them.
And so China, of systems we're up against. So my information comes from them.
And so China, last year was reported to have 400 nuclear weapons.
This year, they have 500.
That is deeply concerning.
The Defense Department believes that in the next 10 years, China will have 1,500.
That's deeply concerning.
Russia is not building new nuclear weapons, allegedly.
Neither are we.
India and Pakistan are said to have, are understood to have about 165, I think it is each.
But when you really drill down on it, you realize that we don't really know.
The transparency from them is limited, and how much intelligence the agency has on it
is anyone's guess.
What about our allies?
What about UK and France?
UK, I believe, has about 200, and I'm forgetting the exact number of France right now
But the UK is interesting because they have reduced their weapons systems
down to only submarines
Which is really interesting a lot of
disarmament advocates believe that the United States, for safety
and security reasons, should get rid of the ICBMs, that they're just too dangerous, that
the nuclear-armed, nuclear-powered submarines, they have enough capacity to end civilization
in a single submarine. We have 14 of them. So why do you need all of the other equipment?
Well, you can get into that whole like sort of deterrent spin,
but that is a legitimate point,
that the ICBMs are dangerous.
The ICBMs are the one also that could be misinterpreted
as coming over the pole.
The sub-launched ballistic missiles can land on a target in under 10 minutes.
There's a document that I located in a budget request from the Pentagon asking for more
money from Congress.
One of the reasons they ask for more money has to do with the threats from the submarines that are owned by China
and Russia.
And I had never seen this map before, and I reprinted in the book so that people do
not take my word for it.
They're like, can say, holy wow.
You can't tell where a submarine is moving in real time.
They're stealthy.
As Admiral Conner told me, he was the former commander of the nuclear sub-forces for the
United States.
He said to me, Annie, it's easier to find a grapefruit-sized object in space than it
is to find a nuclear submarine under the sea.
Are you serious? That's from the man who ran the program.
Okay?
So these are not called handmaidens of the apocalypse for nothing.
They can really do everything that you would never want to have happen.
So why do we need the ICBMs?
Why do we need the bombers? The bombers aren't even
going to get to the targets in time, I learned from the bomber pilots. They have a multi-hour
trip. The whole scenario ends in 72 minutes. That, you could say, has to do with posturing,
has to do with the perception of deterrence,
and has to do with the military industrial complex.
Which is, I'm not talking about fighter jets for conventional warfare.
I'm just talking about the B-52s and the B-2s that carry our 66 nuclear-capable bombers.
And they're very threatening.
Whenever we want North Korea to know
we mean business, we do like drills over the Korean Peninsula. I mean, is that agitating
or is it... I don't know.
I think it just, it lets them know we're watching and we've got our eye on them.
Could be taken as a threat, but, and it probably is, but I don't, I mean...
The leader of North Korea recently said, America has a sinister intention to provoke nuclear
war.
When I hear or read that, and then I think about the UN Secretary General saying, we're
one misunderstanding, one miscalculation away from nuclear arm, again, it's the word miscalculation
that troubles me.
That's what the scenario is built upon.
Because the miscalculation can't be undone in the same way that the ballistic missile
can't be recalled.
Once it sparks, it's fire and dry grass.
Yeah.
Man, it's a...
I would love to dive into it.
I don't know how it would go, but I would love to.
I mean, especially with BRICS.
Are you familiar with BRICS?
Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa.
It's basically, it's like the counterpart to NATO.
And India, Russia, China, they're all in there, you know,
and I feel like a nuclear attack would be,
could turn into an alliance against us instead of just one country and then a misunderstanding.
I feel like China would probably be in there as well.
One of the-
And Pakistan.
One of the more sort of keeps you up at night things to consider is that, and again, this
is just from interviews I did where we did kind of discuss the geopolitical ideas about
things is that Russia has thought about nuclear weapons for a long time.
Their command and control has been in place since 1949 when they got the bomb. The
countries that have newer nuclear weapons do not have that same long lens of history.
And if you also consider what I was told about the knowledge depth of the American president on nuclear
war should it happen.
And you consider if that's the same for the leaders of some of these other nuclear armed
nations that are not reliable, then you have another problem where you have somebody actually thinking, like you just said, like a nuclear war, a nuclear strike could...
instead of realizing you can't ever have a nuclear war
because it would end in Armageddon.
Now, before the Ukraine War, I would have told you that
the president of Russia knew that and would never threaten that way.
So the nuclear threats coming from Putin are so alarming to someone like me.
But then again, they began with the US president, former president Trump, talking that way with
North Korea.
So we're into a dangerous rhetoric that didn't exist 10 years ago.
So the US set the precedent to bring up nuclear war.
I believe so.
And now it's spreading.
Now it's spreading.
And nuclear threats, nuclear saber rattling is so dangerous because it somehow minimizes or rather it maximizes
the possibility that, and that people are talking about tactical nuclear weapons.
I mean, shall I give you like the, do you know the difference between tactical and strategic
nuclear weapons to listeners?
Does it...
Go ahead.
Should I...
I mean, in a nutshell, a tactical nuclear weapon is a battlefield weapon.
It's just a bigger bomb, but not just because it's nuclear.
We, in the Cold War, we were building tactical weapons like they were going out of style.
In the Cold War, we were building tactical weapons like they were going out of style. And we've pulled back entirely from that to only having this leading concept of strategic
nuclear weapons is like a euphemism for ballistic missiles.
And then our bombers carry gravity bombs.
But the tactical nuclear weapons that Putin keeps threatening potential use
of, or that he moved into Belarus recently, that's like moving the red line in the sand
to a dramatic new position, which is saying this could be a possibility. And I can only imagine
possibility. And I can only imagine what the National Security Council must be going, the gymnastics they must be doing, to try to figure out how to position
themselves against this kind of rhetoric. Scary, scary stuff. scary stuff, another tangent. Why do you think,
why do you think we are seeing so much UFO activity
around nuclear sites?
Well, I was gonna say,
what I was gonna say is we're on such a dark topic,
maybe we should talk about UFOs, right?
Which is, which may answer that question.
I mean, how do I answer this in an interesting,
informative way?
I mean, I love narrative, I love stories.
I love storytelling, I love talking.
It's how people tell each other stories to communicate.
You have to have an interesting story
to be able to grab somebody's attention and talk about them.
And UFOs are so interesting.
The idea that these spaceships would carry people
from outer space to us.
What could be more interesting than that?
So the idea of UFOs to my eye has been around forever.
As long as man has been writing history
or before he was writing history.
When I was writing the book Phenomena,
I interviewed Jacques Vallee,
who is the sort of perhaps the world's leading ufologist.
And he wrote this amazing book, which I have a copy of,
like a hardcover book with beautiful illustrations in it
that takes the reader through some of the oldest images in art history.
And Jacques has curated them all to show UFOs, the idea of UFOs throughout recorded history.
It's always been there.
The nuclear thing is interesting. I do know that a theory has developed a narrative
around this idea that, you know, aliens or people from outer space were somehow concerned that
we invented this weapon that could end civilization and they therefore came to
could end civilization and they therefore came to aid or help or make themselves noticed. I mean, it's an interesting narrative.
It is an interesting narrative.
All different kinds of people have different things to add to that narrative, including
Jacques Vallée, including Hal Puthoff, including a lot of these people who are leaders in that,
in the field.
My lens of UFOs comes from very specifically
from sources I have worked with
who have a different take on that,
who see that as part of a strategic deception campaign.
Should I give you a little more detail? Yes, please.
So the early book I wrote,
the first book I wrote, Area 51,
is about a CIA base in the middle of the Nevada desert
inside the Nevada test and training range
where we set off nuclear weapons.
Did you know this?
I did.
Okay.
I mean, people know that now and it's great.
And then that base is inside an even bigger test and training range where pilots fly out
of Nellis.
But in the 50s, Area 51 was specifically set up by the CIA to develop the U-2 spy plane,
which was this high flying aircraft 70,000 feet up it flew. I mean in 1950
that is just nothing short of a miracle. It was out of the range of Russian
surface-to-air missiles. For Area 51 I got to interview the guys who built that
airplane from scratch literally. It did not come with a manual. They built it. I interviewed
the pilots who flew it, flew it over the Soviet Union, flew it over all kinds of places. And
it was so secret that Eisenhower knew about it, the director of the CIA and the guys at
Area 51 working on it.
That's it.
That's it.
It was like as, because it needed to be secret because if the Russians knew about it, they'd
shoot it down, which they ended up doing with Gary Powers in 1960.
So the CIA knew it was inevitable that it would get shot down, but they were just playing
with fire until it did. And, but the point of all this is when,
when that was flying, it was mistaken for a UFO.
Think about something flying 70,000 feet up.
People didn't know airplanes fly at 25,000 feet-ish.
Imagine you're somebody that looks up
and also the U2 has these incredibly long wings.
So it just looks like a flying cross.
And the reflection of it looks like a UFO because it's not where it's supposed to be.
Yeah.
I mean, could you even see it's 70,000 feet?
You could.
And people did.
You could tell it was a cross.
Well, it just, they didn't know what it was.
But the CIA learned about that and it was like,
oh shit, moment, our project's gonna become busted open,
the public's gonna know about it.
And people started writing to their congressmen,
I have seen these letters declassified from the CIA.
We're really concerned there's a UFO over their state.
And then the CIA decided to use this as part of a strategic deception campaign.
Well, let's goose this idea that there are UFOs because it's going to hide its cover
for the actual U2.
Does that mean that every UFO or every UFO sighting is a U2?
Of course not.
But when you look at that as a fact,
it becomes interesting in the narrative.
When the CIA built the follow-on plane,
which was called the A12 Oxcart,
so did you ever see any of the X-Men movies?
Oh yeah.
Okay, so you know that plane they fly?
I do.
Right, so that's the SR-71.
Okay.
That's the Air Force version of it. It's a two-seater.
The CIA precursor plane, which was totally secret,
not declassified till, I don't know,
15 years ago, 20 years ago.
It was a one-seater.
It had a CIA pilot in it.
They flew it out at Area 51.
It went Mach 3-something in 1960,
2,300 miles an hour at 90,000 feet. Okay?
In 1960, think of what a refrigerator looked like in 1960.
Okay?
So, this was like technology that no one could even comprehend and they had to keep it secret.
And in my interviews with Colonel Slater, who was in charge of the whole program, he took me through the exact details of like people seeing the plane,
even in a commercial airplane.
The example he gave me was a group of people in a, I think it was an American Airlines flight,
saw the Oxcart as it was coming down from 90,000 feet to try to land at Area 51.
And they saw it.
And they all thought they saw UFOs.
And Slater told me the story and showed me some documentation of the FBI meeting the
plane in Los Angeles when it landed, saying, like, you did not see a UFO.
You must sign this disclosure paper saying you will never share that you saw a UFO.
So it built this mystique in, I mean, if the FBI shows up and said, you did not see that
UFO.
Who were they doing this to?
The civilians on the American airline.
They had them all signed. So the point of this is the CIA would use the sort of mythology of a UFO in its to help
cover the programs that it's trying to hide.
So was the FBI in on it?
The FBI was only, the FBI did not know, good question, the FBI did not know about the A-12
OXCARD.
The FBI was told, make all those people sign those nondisclosures and tell them they didn't
see a UFO.
So then you have all these FBI agents now who are prone to thinking, that was a UFO.
Again does it mean all UFO sightings are the A12 Oxcart which doesn't fly anymore?
Of course not.
Yeah. But if you have that information
I think you can think more on balance
for me
But yeah the deception that the government's capable of and does and and also when you're talking about
aircraft and airspace
it's very difficult for me to accept that our
It's very difficult for me to accept that our sacredly guarded airspace is regularly intruded by craft that somebody at the Defense Department doesn't know what it is.
I just have trouble believing that, knowing, having written the books that I've written
about high-performance aircraft.
But I don't even bother getting into this argument with, it's not an argument, but this
discussion with the people who really believe that these are UAPs, the new term which I'm
fascinated by.
Have you looked into Skinwalker Ranch at all by chance?
I mean, I've interviewed all the guys who are at Skinwalker.
Not all of them, but many of them.
This is before, not the current situation,
but this is when Bigelow owned it.
And the original team that was there
that claimed to have seen the portals
and the werewolves and the...
And by the way,
these are PhDs with DARPA contracts telling me all this.
It's just hard for my brain to conceptualize that
other than their perception,
which is what we were talking about at break.
Yeah.
Yep, yep.
With that being said now
You know now they see all these radiation spikes right as these uap's ufo's these
Phenomenons happen if you looked into that at all
Well, I haven't because I would say my first thing would be like who's they and where are these radiation spike documents coming from?
would be like, who's they? And where are these radiation spike documents coming from?
So in other words, when I worked with all the Bigelow,
the people that were at the Skinwalker Ranch
when it was Bigelow, it was always an internal situation
and it was the documents are Bigelow's
and you can't look at them
because they're in his possession.
So it seemed like a closed loop.
But I do wanna say, and we were talking about this at break,
the analogy that
I think of that of all of this, so that it's clear that I'm not just dismissively self-righteous,
which I would never want to be. I'm much more curious than that. But the analogy I used
was what I told you about hearing things, right? because I believe this is an issue of perception. What you can see.
You know, you think of some people being colorblind.
What I see is so different than what they see.
Then I think of, as I told you before,
like sometimes, you know, you have like,
you hear a high-pitched frequency,
and maybe it's because you were listening
to your ear pods too long, you were you know in an airplane and
So you suddenly say to someone do you hear that because it's you know, you hear you actually hear something
Is that in your brain? Is that in your perception? Is that in the environment?
perhaps
when people see
UAPs they are seeing them and others aren't.
For me, that's my current position on how I think about that.
So are you saying it originates in the mind?
I do not have the answer.
I'm just curious about what it might be,
because, and I'm also, the reason why it's really interesting
is millions of people are interested in this.
We talked about this before.
I mean, who wants to talk about nuclear holocaust
when you can talk about possible aliens among us?
Right? Yeah, yeah.
But they don't have to cancel one another out.
I mean, it's interesting because now even a lot of what astrophysicists are starting to say that the
astrophysicists are starting to say that the, you know, the expansive universe and
no matter how far out we look,
something will be there. And,
and I think what they're alluding to is that our minds are creating
the unseeable universe.
Yeah.
I mean, you had said when we were discussing earlier,
like, is it also have something to do with people's perception
of religion or spirituality?
And what comes to mind on that is one of my favorite thinkers,
Carl Jung.
Have you ever read any Jung?
I haven't.
Oh, my goodness.
I mean, he was just, he was so interested in consciousness. And, and in,
he's almost the, like the, I don't want to say the inventor, but he did a lot of work
on archetypes. What archetypes mean, you know, the wizard, the priest, the king, the queen, the witch, archetypes of humans and symbols.
And he wrote all about this.
He wrote a book on UFOs and that the UFOs were the product,
the modern day UFOs were the product
of people's fear of nuclear annihilation.
Very interesting book.
But Jung and Pauli, a Nobel laureate,
I'm forgetting his first name, they were friends
and they would have a lot of discussions
about the phenomena of UFOs.
And I write about this in my phenomena book
because Pauli had this crazy quality about him
that he would go walk into places
and somehow disturb the electronics.
Okay, so he was like a Nobel laureate physicist.
Wow.
But the cameras would shut off.
Things would fall over.
This is documented.
Are you serious? Read the book, you'll. Things would fall over. This is documented.
Are you serious?
Read the book.
You'll love this part of it.
And he couldn't explain why.
But it was known and notable.
And so he had some kind of different energy going on or however you want to interpret
it.
But this led to these discussions between Jung and Pauli about whether or not ESP was
real.
Because of course, ESP, extrasensory perception, and UFOs often get linked together.
And their takeaway, one of their takeaways was that whenever you're talking about it
or thinking about it, you have to think about the age that you are in
when you are thinking about it,
having to do with technology.
So again, diluting that down,
it's almost like my takeaways,
they were saying there's the narrative of it,
and then there's the technology
that exists in the present day.
And then you can begin to maybe think more deeply
about the whole issue,
without getting the answer.
Yeah, yeah.
Fascinating stuff.
Let's get back to Nukes.
So when you went to Brussels,
I would like to talk about your discussions there and and how you came up
How you came up on their radar?
Mm-hmm. Actually, yeah, let me let's go further
Who were you who what was this event that you were speaking at? It was a nuclear expo
Put together in Brussels. The host was the ICRC,
the International Committee for the Red Cross,
the Norwegian Red Cross,
the Belgian Red Cross, and the Norwegian People's Aids.
There was many doctors, physicians, who were there as well,
because the emphasis of the symposium was on what
nuclear weapons do to the human body.
How horrific of a weapon it is, not just to war fighters who are, you know, sign up for
war or are drafted into war, who are fighting a war hopefully away from the
civilian population, but rather that nuclear weapons kill millions of civilians indiscriminately.
And their job, these organizations, these aid organizations, is to put the emphasis
on that so that they can have more people interested and kind of open the
pathway to why regular people like you and me should be thinking about nuclear weapons. And it shouldn't just be left to the military or the geopolitical thinkers.
And because it's in Brussels, the members of the European Parliament were invited. and I took questions from some of them.
Some of us, many of us did.
So these organizations have been hard at work
for decades on this issue
and they don't want it to go away.
What were some of the most relevant questions
in your opinion that you were asked?
I mean, it was a day long, you know, there were panels,
there were, I was the keynote speaker, it was a day long, you know, there were panels, there were, I was the keynote
speaker, it was an incredible honor.
The other main speaker was an 80 year old woman who was a hibakusha.
I'm not saying the word right, but that is a survivor of, if you're a survivor of the
Nagasaki or the Hiroshima bombing. She was 80 years old.
And she was one year and 10 months old when Nagasaki destroyed her city and she survived.
So that gives you some context of who I was with.
But back up for a second, because you asked me how I wound up there, because this might
be interesting.
The book published in the end of March,
and I was doing a book event at
a bookstore in Washington DC called Politics and Prose.
Normally authors just sign books and you maybe give a little talk,
but for this event,
I had asked two colleagues to participate.
One was John Wolfsthal who was
the National Security advisor to President
Obama. And the other was Lieutenant General Charles Moore, who just retired as the deputy
commander of cyber command. And before that, he was in the Pentagon running the J3, maybe it was
the J2, so reporting directly to the Joint Chiefs.
Before that, he was running nuclear war scenarios for NORAD.
You could say that Obama's national security advisor was on the side of disarmament, and
you could say that General Moore was on the side of military nuclear command and control, because
that's the truth.
So these are maybe even two people that don't normally have a conversation with one another.
They might consider themselves on different sides of the aisle.
But again, one of my great, hopefully the good kind of pride of my reporting is that
I talk to both sides, I talk to everybody.
And in fact, want them at my book signings to have a conversation.
And we had this profound conversation. It was so excellent.
It's on tape. And the audience was filled. I mean, there was standing room only.
And there were two really interesting people in that audience. I mean, there was standing room only. And there were two really interesting people in that audience.
I mean, everybody was interesting.
All the questions were interesting.
But the director of Los Alamos Nuclear Laboratory was in,
the current director was in the audience.
No kidding.
And he came up to me afterwards and asked me
if I would speak at the lab.
And I said, of course.
And he said, many people at the lab
designing the nuclear future don't know what's in my book.
They're under five-year employees at the lab.
I mean, that's astonishing.
Super grateful for his candor about that.
And another person that was in the audience
was with NTi,
which is a disarmament group that is affiliated
with the Nuke Expo.
And I think between the two of them,
that's how I wound up at the Nuke Expo.
So you just show up and do your book signings
and you never know what can come of it.
Wow.
Wow.
When are you going to speak at Los Alamos?
It hasn't been arranged yet,
but I'm really intrigued by that.
And here's another thing.
I know you're not a big fan of Hollywood necessarily.
I will convert you yet.
I know you trained Keanu shooting for John Wick,
so that's another story.
Then we roll reversal and I ask you
questions. But films Hollywood, the Oppenheimer movie, which you may or may not have seen,
it was such a billion dollar success around the world. And from what I understand from
my sources at Los Alamos, it profoundly impacted Los Alamos., meaning I've been reporting on nuclear weapons
for what, 15 years now,
and Los Alamos has always been like this with me.
I've been there, I've been to their library,
their archives, but they'd always been like this,
as if the journalist is somehow the opponent,
as if Joe or Jane Public is somehow the opponent.
And Oppenheimer seems to have shifted that.
Suddenly Los Alamos, at least the historian there, Glenn McDuff,
shared with me, has gotten softer.
They were inundated with questions about the lab after the Oppenheimer film
by regular people wanting to know things.
And they responded with a kind of openness and transparency
that if you're a journalist, you think is a great thing.
And I think that effect may have also carried up to the top.
And that's why the director was at my book signing
as opposed to.
I'm excited for you.
That's gonna be really cool.
We're kind of all on the same page
when you really think about it.
Like, no one should be for nuclear war.
Yeah.
The question is, should no one be for nuclear weapons?
before nuclear weapons.
What are some questions I should be asking you that I haven't asked yet?
I mean, I think it's just so interesting
that we get to have a conversation
when we kind of go back and forth and down the rabbit holes
because I think that's where the more interesting
thoughts happen, you know, and also the takeaways, you know.
Sometimes you go away from a conversation a little bit changed about an idea or excited to explore a
new idea, you know. I also think it's interesting that we have probably a number of colleagues in common,
but since those worlds are classified, I only know their code names and you only know their
code names.
And they're different.
Different code names.
You might know their real name, I might know the code name.
I might know the real name.
Or vice versa. And yeah, that's a,
that's just a part of living in that world, you know? It's, it gets a little confusing.
But how do you, this is back to the Eisenhower question. I mean, what is your take on how you you know, liberty and defense and if you parse out Liberty you want
Security you want times of peace you don't want war
You know, I often think about the president's options, you know, he has diplomacy. That's his first option. He has war and
Then the third option is
covert action which you were involved in, which I've written about.
So the idea would be, you know, to be living in a permanent state of diplomacy.
But that's not practical.
How do you think one balances liberty and security?
Wow.
That's a tough, tough question.
But I mean, I think it's definitely constantly has to evolve because we gain enemies, we
lose enemies, we gain allies. We lose allies. We I mean we
just as America we have
so many targets on our back and
We have so many enemies throughout the world with which
With a lot of them,
I can't even blame them.
On the show, I talked to you this morning and told you how this podcast kind of started
and it was all former colleagues and we dissect,
I'm getting off on a tangent
here, but we dissect, you know, are we the bad guys in some of these scenarios?
And you know, after 20 plus years of, you know, this generation's war, the GWOT, should
we have been if we were invaded by a country? Would we have fought against
the invading country? And it opens up a really interesting discussion because a lot of people think that maybe we're not the good guys in all of these conflicts.
But back to your question, security, diplomacy, I mean, in my opinion, you have to take into
account that we have a lot of enemies, whether we created them, whether they just hate us, that doesn't,
that's another discussion, but
with as much as we have going on,
we have the world currency.
We, I mean, we are the superpower.
And I don't,
as much as I would love to say, yep, we should all, we should get rid of our nuclear warheads, strive more towards peace, I just, I don't think that's a viable option because
we're the world's superpower.
We have a lot of targets on our back and we have to be able to
show force. We have to have people know somewhat what our capabilities might be
and that there will be repercussions if they launch anything at us. And as far as balancing that, man, it's,
I don't know, I haven't thought about that.
When you say we have a lot of targets on our back,
it sends like a shiver up the spine
because it's absolutely true.
And when just when you're thinking,
diplomacy is everything, you must always couple that with, we are a target. And there are
enemies out there. I wonder, perhaps more than any other book I've written, this book has made me
book I've written, this book has made me wonder about POTUS as a concept, not political, not him or him, as a concept, the President of the United States.
Because an interesting thing happens when many presidents, this speaks to your point
of like,
could we ever get rid of nukes?
I don't know.
And then we think of the deterrence gone.
Many presidents go into office, and I mean many,
like almost all the modern presidents,
learning a little bit about nuclear weapons
before their debrief, their presidential debrief.
And then you hear them say things like,
I'm going to get rid of the launch on warning policy.
It's inexcusably dangerous.
So you, they hear things as a civilian.
And then a mysterious thing happens.
They get into office and they learn something
that then you never hear from that,
you never hear talk of that again.
And I wanna know what it is they hear.
Hmm, that's a great point.
I mean...
I sometimes feel like it's a metaphor for that
has to do with the immigration crisis,
right?
And again, not to politicize it, but like, I mean, let's just say a baseline that everyone
could agree that illegal immigration is a bad thing because it's illegal.
And we are a nation of laws and you want to have rule of law.
So that's all that, right?
But as a concept, you hear the same thing.
You hear presidents have really big ideas about immigration.
And then, and they say certain things,
they espouse certain things.
I mean, president elect or running for office candidates.
And then they learn something
and you never hear from it again.
And I know that has changed a little bit in the past few years because immigration And then they learn something and you never hear from it again.
And I know that has changed a little bit in the past few years because immigration has
become a different issue.
But you get the analogy.
Like what is it that POTUS learns that we the people don't get to know about these issues on completely opposite sides of the existential
threat margin, maybe or maybe, right?
But kind of exist as equal threats.
What do they learn and why can't we know that?
Yeah, what information are they getting that changes their mind?
Maybe it's not information, maybe it's money.
And I have that same thought, meaning whatever information they're getting is perhaps a moneyed piece of information, meaning a lot of money has gone into
telling the president that, whatever that is.
I mean, back to, sorry, I got the security versus diplomacy
running through my mind.
I mean, I think we kind of,
I kind of talked about it a little bit at the beginning.
And I think if you want to,
because essentially we're talking about no nukes worldwide
starting here.
I think the,
the only way I could see that happening
is by influencing the military industrial complex
companies with money to develop better defense systems, to develop the next generation weapon.
Maybe that is AI.
I don't know.
But you have to have something that defeats nuclear capabilities and or something that's more
powerful than a nuke to add to your arsenal.
That doesn't necessarily need to be mass destruction.
Maybe it's, I mean, it's, it's, I don't know what's possible.
I'm not a physicist and I'm not an inventor.
Maybe we could get our buddy Chris Beck on here and he'll tell us, but you know,
maybe it's some type of a laser weapon from space.
Maybe, who knows, you know?
But I think that's the only viable way
that we could essentially get rid of our nuclear program
is by better defense systems that is proven
to work and a more capable weapon system that is that, you know, that...
And so what's interesting and problematic is at the end of that statement, which just
when you're thinking that sounds, then you realize,
wait a minute, now I'm caught in the military industrial complex loop and the deterrence
loop, which seems to be a moneyed, again, a loop that's an empire of money, an empire
of industry wants to exist as a paradox.
The directed end, the laser weapons, by the way, are a massive program at the Defense of industry wants to exist as a paradox.
The laser weapons, by the way, are a massive program at the Defense Department.
They're called directed energy weapons.
When I was asking about that, what makes them more powerful?
I got a great answer, so I'm just going to share it with you, because it seems so hard to comprehend sometimes, like laser weapons.
But it was the inventor of the laser who shared this with me, Charles Townes,
who died at the age of 99 and gave me his last interview at like age 97.
Still clear as a bell.
And speed.
So a laser moves at the speed of light.
So that even shortens the 33 minute ballistic window.
You could have a laser weapon on the moon
and you're talking about less than a second.
So, but then you have the problem,
oh, laser weapons aren't any kind of solution
for anything having to do with no nukes.
It's just a whole different set of weapons for the military industrial complex to promote
and build and then watch the other side promote and build and so you have to have new systems.
It's the self-licking ice cream cone, as they call it at DARPA. So the no-nukes idea, I really do think, exists.
And I'll end with, you know, I want to get this in because I was influenced by the nuke
expo.
I was influenced by meeting the physicians against nuclear weapons, by meeting people
who survived an atomic bomb, and by hearing them talk about how this is
possible to reduce nuclear weapons. And they use the word taboo. And I thought that was interesting,
me who loves narrative. It just the simple, oh, right, biological weapons have become taboo.
right? Biological weapons have become taboo. No one sits around and says like,
our arsenal of bubonic plague weapons is better than your arsenal. And we need some more and we need to update them and we need better delivery systems and faster. No one says that. They say,
my God, a bubonic plague weapon, are you insane? And what the doctors and the humanitarians are attempting to do,
which is a very noble effort, is put taboo on nuclear weapons,
demonstrate how horrific they are to people,
and then begin the reduction from all the nations.
And they can say, ideally, to zero.
Perhaps the pragmatist would say, at some point, okay, maybe everybody keeps a few.
Is the world going to end with a few nuclear weapons?
Well, certainly not with the same assurity than with thousands of them.
How do you do that?
How do you label them taboo?
How do you label them taboo?
Yeah, how do you start that?
I mean, listen, it was a great honor to have some of these
people say to me, great job, thank you for writing the book. You just condensed down
and made our job a little bit easier, which is not what I intended. Me who was worried
about fear mongering in air quotes, why I asked all of my sources. I mean, this book
is frightening. People read it. The Amazon reviews are like, oh my God, I read it in one sitting because I had to know how it
ended.
But then on this idea of taboo, and so at the convention, I met a doctor named Dr. Carlos
Umana.
And he is part of the international, he's a part of a group of physicians that are working to get rid of nuclear weapons.
And he himself was a recipient
of the Nobel Peace Prize in 2017.
And he said to me that he and his colleagues
were going to meet the Pope on May 10th.
And he asked me if I would inscribe a copy of Nuclear War,
a scenario for the Pope as a gift,
so the Pope could read it and in a condensed manner
understand what nuclear weapons do to people.
And writing that out was pretty cool.
That is, that's incredible.
So you don't know what will happen on your journey in life
if you just keep showing up.
Yeah, no kidding.
Well, wow, wow.
Is that happened?
May 10th, they meet with him,
but I did write the inscription, you know, to his holiness,
comma, Pope Francis.
Oh, man, that is so cool.
Congratulations.
That's, you know, I had to Google that.
Yeah.
What do you, how do you, right?
You can't know everything.
I didn't know how to address the Pope.
Yeah. Wow. That is really cool. That is something. Congratulations. That is very cool. Well, Annie, this has been a fascinating discussion and we were going to dive into some more topics,
but off camera, I had expressed how much I love talking to you and how much I'm having
how I love this conversation.
And I don't think it would do this interview justice to try to compile some of your other work into this episode.
And so we'll keep it at nuclear war with a little bit of UFO stuff.
And I can't wait to have you back.
Thank you so much for having me.
I am really looking forward to that.
So it was an honor to have you here.
It was an honor to be here.
Thank you What a show you have and congratulations to you on the massive
Viewership listenership getting the word out
Helping people to realize we're all so much more alike than different. Thank you. That means a lot and so I
Can't wait to see again your. Your book, all your social,
everything will be linked in the description.
So everybody go buy Nuclear War, a scenario.
And Annie, I love this conversation.
I love talking to you and I can't wait to see you again.
Thank you so much.
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