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Command and Control: Nuclear Weapons, the Damascus Accident, and the Illusion of Safety

Command and Control: Nuclear Weapons, the Damascus Accident, and the Illusion of Safety

byEric Schlosser
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Mac Mcvicker
4.0 out of 5 starsWe have been very lucky!
Reviewed in the United States on January 9, 2017
Overall, a very informative book! As a former USAF member, and having worked (as a civilian) with a former member of Little Rock AFB (also a civilian when we worked together) who did missile maintenance at the time of the disaster, I thoroughly enjoyed the fascinating detail presented in this book. Mr. Schlosser is obviously a tenacious researcher, who works around all the road blocks the federal bureaucrats threw up to get the info needed for this book. Very impressive! The reason for giving it 4 stars instead of 5 is the organization of the book. Interleaving the Titan disaster with the history of the nuclear program and other nuclear disasters made for a very disjointed reading experience. Just as I would mentally get comfortable with a theme, the gears would grind, there would be a lurch, and BAM!, the book would transport me 2 or 3 decades forward (or backward) from what I had just been reading. I bet I was half way through the book before I could make the time warp shifts without much pause to figure out where I was time wise. Maybe a calendar heading at the beginning of each chapter would have helped, such as "Jan 1950" or "Sept 1980".

The book does an excellent job of documenting in super detail just how close this country has come to having accidental multi-megatonnage thermonuclear weapons blasts. After reading this book, I feel that one day a thermonuclear weapon with be accidentally discharged, even with the extra layers of safety that have been added over the decades. I will read this book again, to better absorb the information Mr. Schlosser so painstakingly researched and documented.
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Dr. James L. Booker
3.0 out of 5 starsWonderful writing; horrible editing
Reviewed in the United States on September 20, 2018
This isn't just a really good book; it's three really good books, and that is the problem. The author did a fine job of researching and discussing the Damascus incident (Book 1). He also did some good historical and sociological research into the history of nuclear weapons (Book2), and he wrote very competently about the technical and scientific factors involved in developing and manufacturing nuclear weapons and their delivery systems (Book 3). All good so far.

Then he divided those books into chapters, scrambled them together, and came up with a long, utterly disjointed series of chapters that were arranged in no logical order. My suggestion is that the reader thumb through this book and put post-it notes at the beginning of each chapter related to the Damascus incident (They're easy to identify.), then read Book 1 as a continuous narrative.
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From the United States

Dr. James L. Booker
3.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful writing; horrible editing
Reviewed in the United States on September 20, 2018
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This isn't just a really good book; it's three really good books, and that is the problem. The author did a fine job of researching and discussing the Damascus incident (Book 1). He also did some good historical and sociological research into the history of nuclear weapons (Book2), and he wrote very competently about the technical and scientific factors involved in developing and manufacturing nuclear weapons and their delivery systems (Book 3). All good so far.

Then he divided those books into chapters, scrambled them together, and came up with a long, utterly disjointed series of chapters that were arranged in no logical order. My suggestion is that the reader thumb through this book and put post-it notes at the beginning of each chapter related to the Damascus incident (They're easy to identify.), then read Book 1 as a continuous narrative.
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Kyle B.Top Contributor: Philosophy
VINE VOICE
2.0 out of 5 stars Lots of History In Between a Human Story
Reviewed in the United States on March 25, 2019
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This felt like a fairly long read, to be honest, and that is reflected a bit in the rating. I really considered 3 stars, but I can't quite say I liked it.

There are three main reasons for a low-star rating despite some pretty good historical research. First, the book feels like multiple books put together, but not in a way that I would consider most conducive to understanding things best. Second, the topics are broad but often feel tangential and some of the pages I read and I wondered why is this in this particular book? Last, the viewpoint towards nuclear weapons is tinged with a bit of "fearism". That is, it tends to highlight problems in the worst possible light.

The book has many themes: history of nuclear weapons & nuclear weapon safety, history of how nuclear weapons are to be used, history of nuclear weapon accidents, and, of course, the history of a specific incident in Damascus, Arkansas. This broadness, I would argue, detracts from the book at times. The Damascus incident was, I thought, the best part, but it is broken up into so many pieces by intervening historical pieces that keeping the narrative of the Damascus incident together is difficult. I would prefer a book on one topic or the other from a strictly stylistic point of view. In addition, the meandering of topics often just seems unnecessary. For example, there are about three pages talking about Bill Clinton as a governor of Arkansas and his rise. This doesn't really have any bearing on either of the major themes, other than he was contacted during the Damascus incident.

Finally, while Schlosser does do a good job of explaining the history, his anti-nuclear weapon viewpoint tends to make him shade things towards the worst conclusions. When there are safety improvements in nuclear weapons, it feels like it is being spun as "why wasn't this done before?". In later parts of the book, this is justified because there were scientists like Peurifoy who did try to improve safety for years, but at other times it just is more ambiguous. Also, the safety of the weapons isn't ever very clearly spelled out. Schlosser admits there's never been an unintended nuclear weapon detonation in the world's history, but wants to claim that they are more unsafe than we think (presumably, fairly unsafe) so that we've been lucky. If you believe that the weapons are unsafe, then we'd have to be astronomically lucky not to have had an unintended nuclear detonation, so that that view is essentially self-refuting. If you want to believe we're in an astronomically unlikely situation, it's not easy to disprove, but by definition you admit you're unlikely to be right.

The real answer, I think is that Schlosser believes "Anything less than 100 percent control of them, anything less than perfect safety and security, would be unacceptable." There has been, and never will be perfect safety. To use the Drell report that Schlosser cites 'It is important to recognize at the outset that there is no clear answer to the question "How safe is safe enough?". What is called for is judgment, informed by careful analyses and an adequate data base, as to how far to push, or to relax, safety standards.' Schlosser also makes quite a big deal out of the 1961 Goldsboro B-52 crash, but even reading Wikipedia you can find that we weren't one step away from a nuclear explosion as Maggelin and Oskins pretty clearly show (they have a blog that one can find with documents showing what they say is true). Schlosser then calls into question the safety of many of the older designs (mostly Mk 28 to fires), but he never actually gives any estimates for how likely or unlikley this was. I haven't delved into the sources for this completely, but without this information it really isn't possible to ascertain how much of a problem this was. I'd agree that we should have improved the safety faster, but how safe were they? Also, from what I've seen, the spreading of plutonium dust would have been bad and was the main concern, and it's not clear that any of the reports think a nuclear explosion was likely.

As a final warning on this, Schlosser states for a report by physicst Kidder "It gave a safety "grade" to each nuclear weapon in the American stockpile. The grades were based on their potential risk of acccidental detonation or plutonium scattering. Three weapons received an A. Seven received a B. Two received a C plus. Four received a C. Two received a C minus. And twelve received a D, the lowest grade." The first line from the abstract of this report "The principal safety features included in the design of modern nuclear weapons are described briefly, and each nuclear weapon currently in the stockpile or under development is given a comparative safety rating from "A" through "D", indicating the extent to which these safety features are included in its design." That is, modern safety. If you look at the rating system, it means that new safety features are included making them safer. The report notes Mechanical Safing (not included in the safety grade but used in every weapon) "Can virtually eliminate the possibility that any significant nuclear yield will result from an accident in which the wearhead's high explosive is detonated... Mechanical safing has been used successfully for more than 20 years."

Schlosser doesn't give enough information to actually evaluate what the ratings mean in my opinion. In fact, my last criticism is that he never really goes over how the safety features all work on a nuclear weapon in enough detail to explain how unlikely or likely an accidental explosion would be. I think just explaining how all the safety systems work together would have been quite useful regardless of how safe they may be.

With all that said, Schlosser has collected a lot of information and the bibliography and notes he put in are very appreciated. His analysis of how people thought about using nuclear weapons is also quite useful, as well as thinking about who should have the power to use nuclear weapons. I disagree with his analysis of nuclear weapons accidents with nuclear reactors (and other systems). Nuclear weapons require extremely demanding conditions to produce large yields, whereas nuclear reactors are in a precarious balance of just enough fission but not too much and so it requires much, much more to go wrong for a nuclear weapon explosion. The Damascus incident information is also very good reading. I wish the Damascus Incident sections were put all together and that the book were more focused. Schlosser's views on weapons are fairly defensible (while I disagree with accidental explosions, terrorism, guardianship, and decisions when to use nuclear weapons remain important topics that Schlosser covers pretty well), and I would have given 3-4 stars if I felt the narrative flow were better.
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Mac Mcvicker
4.0 out of 5 stars We have been very lucky!
Reviewed in the United States on January 9, 2017
Verified Purchase
Overall, a very informative book! As a former USAF member, and having worked (as a civilian) with a former member of Little Rock AFB (also a civilian when we worked together) who did missile maintenance at the time of the disaster, I thoroughly enjoyed the fascinating detail presented in this book. Mr. Schlosser is obviously a tenacious researcher, who works around all the road blocks the federal bureaucrats threw up to get the info needed for this book. Very impressive! The reason for giving it 4 stars instead of 5 is the organization of the book. Interleaving the Titan disaster with the history of the nuclear program and other nuclear disasters made for a very disjointed reading experience. Just as I would mentally get comfortable with a theme, the gears would grind, there would be a lurch, and BAM!, the book would transport me 2 or 3 decades forward (or backward) from what I had just been reading. I bet I was half way through the book before I could make the time warp shifts without much pause to figure out where I was time wise. Maybe a calendar heading at the beginning of each chapter would have helped, such as "Jan 1950" or "Sept 1980".

The book does an excellent job of documenting in super detail just how close this country has come to having accidental multi-megatonnage thermonuclear weapons blasts. After reading this book, I feel that one day a thermonuclear weapon with be accidentally discharged, even with the extra layers of safety that have been added over the decades. I will read this book again, to better absorb the information Mr. Schlosser so painstakingly researched and documented.
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R. Smith
4.0 out of 5 stars Great book with a lot of information presented in a slightly frustrating manner
Reviewed in the United States on October 2, 2019
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Probably like most Americans, I went through life assuming that our nuclear arsenal was safe, and that it was impossible for nuclear weapons to go off accidentally or to fall into the wrong hands. This book disabused me of those notions, and presented the terrifying reality that luck has prevented accidental nuclear detonations in the United States, and that for much of the nuclear age, anyone with a gun and knowledge of how to fly a plane could have stolen nuclear bombs.

The book also does mention, however, that the United States' nuclear arsenal is much more secure since the 1980s when a concerted effort was made to modernize it.

This book is so thoroughly researched and contains so much information about a really interesting topic that I wanted to give it five stars. However, I'm taking one star off for the way in which it was organized.

I'm not a writer, and so I don't know how this could have been done better. It would not have worked to present everything chronologically from the invention of nuclear weapons onward. However, this book jumps around in time from incidents, to background, to politics, to personal histories of people involved. There were a number of times I wanted to throw the book across the room because, for example, in the middle of describing the reaction to a serious incident involving a nuclear ICBM in Arkansas, the book digresses for two pages about the life and background of a reporter who went to cover the scene. There is a missile silo filling with flammable and toxic fuel, and now I have to read about some guy whose dream is to make it to Hollywood. WHO CARES?!?

Ultimately, the thoroughness of the book won me over, and made up for its flaws.
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John Walker
5.0 out of 5 stars Thorough examination of safeguards against an accidental nuclear detonation
Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2020
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On the evening of September 18th, 1980 two U.S. Air Force airmen, members of a Propellant Transfer System (PTS) team, entered a Titan II missile silo near Damascus, Arkansas to perform a routine maintenance procedure. Earlier in the day they had been called to the site because a warning signal had indicated that pressure in the missile's second stage oxidiser tank was low. This was not unusual, especially for a missile which had recently been refuelled, as this one had, and the procedure of adding nitrogen gas to the tank to bring the pressure up to specification was considered straightforward. That is, if you consider any work involving a Titan II “routine” or “straightforward”. The missile, in an underground silo, protected by a door weighing more than 65 tonnes and able to withstand the 300 psi overpressure of a nearby nuclear detonation, stood more than 31 metres high and contained 143 tonnes of highly toxic fuel and oxidiser which, in addition to being poisonous to humans in small concentrations, were hypergolic: they burst into flames upon contact with one another, with no need of a source of ignition. Sitting atop this volatile fuel was a W-53 nuclear warhead with a yield of 9 megatons and high explosives in the fission primary which were not, as more modern nuclear weapons, insensitive to shock and fire. While it was unlikely in the extreme that detonation of these explosives due to an accident would result in a nuclear explosion, they could disperse the radioactive material in the bomb over the local area, requiring a massive clean-up effort.

The PTS team worked on the missile wearing what amounted to space suits with their own bottled air supply. One member was an experienced technician while the other was a 19-year old rookie receiving on the job training. Early in the procedure, the team was to remove the pressure cap from the side of the missile. While the lead technician was turning the cap with a socket wrench, the socket fell off the wrench and down the silo alongside the missile. The socket struck the thrust mount supporting the missile, bounced back upward, and struck the side of the missile's first stage fuel tank. Fuel began to spout outward as if from a garden hose. The trainee remarked, “This is not good.”

Back in the control centre, separated from the silo by massive blast doors, the two man launch team who had been following the servicing operation, saw their status panels light up like a Christmas tree decorated by somebody inordinately fond of the colour red. The warnings were contradictory and clearly not all correct. Had there indeed been both fuel and oxidiser leaks, as indicated, there would already have been an earth-shattering kaboom from the silo, and yet that had not happened. The technicians knew they had to evacuate the silo as soon as possible, but their evacuation route was blocked by dense fuel vapour.

The Air Force handles everything related to missiles by the book, but the book was silent about procedures for a situation like this, with massive quantities of toxic fuel pouring into the silo. Further, communication between the technicians and the control centre were poor, so it wasn't clear at first just what had happened. Before long, the commander of the missile wing, headquarters of the Strategic Air Command (SAC) in Omaha, and the missile's manufacturer, Martin Marietta, were in conference trying to decide how to proceed. The greatest risks were an electrical spark or other source of ignition setting the fuel on fire or, even greater, of the missile collapsing in the silo. With tonnes of fuel pouring from the fuel tank and no vent at its top, pressure in the tank would continue to fall. Eventually, it would be below atmospheric pressure, and would be crushed, likely leading the missile to crumple under the weight of the intact and fully loaded first stage oxidiser and second stage tanks. These tanks would then likely be breached, leading to an explosion. No Titan II had ever exploded in a closed silo, so there was no experience as to what the consequences of this might be.

As the night proceeded, all of the Carter era military malaise became evident. The Air Force lied to local law enforcement and media about what was happening, couldn't communicate with first responders, failed to send an evacuation helicopter for a gravely injured person because an irrelevant piece of equipment wasn't available, and could not come to a decision about how to respond as the situation deteriorated. Also on display was the heroism of individuals, in the Air Force and outside, who took matters into their own hands on the spot, rescued people, monitored the situation, evacuated nearby farms in the path of toxic clouds, and improvised as events required.

Among all of this, nothing whatsoever had been done about the situation of the missile. Events inevitably took their course. In the early morning hours of September 19th, the missile collapsed, releasing all of its propellants, which exploded. The 65 tonne silo door was thrown 200 metres, shearing trees in its path. The nuclear warhead was thrown two hundred metres in another direction, coming to rest in a ditch. Its explosives did not detonate, and no radiation was released.

While there were plenty of reasons to worry about nuclear weapons during the Cold War, most people's concerns were about a conflict escalating to the deliberate use of nuclear weapons or the possibility of an accidental war. Among the general public there was little concern about the tens of thousands of nuclear weapons in depots, aboard aircraft, atop missiles, or on board submarines—certainly every precaution had been taken by the brilliant people at the weapons labs to make them safe and reliable, right?

Well, that was often the view among “defence intellectuals” until they were briefed in on the highly secret details of weapons design and the command and control procedures in place to govern their use in wartime. As documented in this book, which uses the Damascus accident as a backdrop (a ballistic missile explodes in rural Arkansas, sending its warhead through the air, because somebody dropped a socket wrench), the reality was far from reassuring, and it took decades, often against obstructionism and foot-dragging from the Pentagon, to remedy serious risks in the nuclear stockpile.

In the early days of the U.S. nuclear stockpile, it was assumed that nuclear weapons were the last resort in a wartime situation. Nuclear weapons were kept under the civilian custodianship of the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC), and would only be released to the military services by a direct order from the President of the United States. Further, the nuclear cores (“pits”) of weapons were stored separately from the rest of the weapon assembly, and would only be inserted in the weapon, in the case of bombers, in the air, after the order to deliver the weapon was received. (This procedure had been used even for the two bombs dropped on Japan.) These safeguards meant that the probability of an accidental nuclear explosion was essentially nil in peacetime, although the risk did exist of radioactive contamination if a pit were dispersed due to fire or explosion.

As the 1950s progressed, and fears of a Soviet sneak attack grew, pressure grew to shift the custodianship of nuclear weapons to the military. The development of nuclear tactical and air defence weapons, some of which were to be forward deployed outside the United States, added weight to this argument. If radar detected a wave of Soviet bombers heading for the United States, how practical would it be to contact the President, get him to sign off on transferring the anti-aircraft warheads to the Army and Air Force, have the AEC deliver them to the military bases, install them on the missiles, and prepare the missiles for launch? The missile age only compounded this situation. Now the risk existed for a “decapitation” attack which could take out the senior political and military leadership, leaving nobody with the authority to retaliate.

The result of all this was a gradual devolution of control over nuclear weapons from civilian to military commands, with fully-assembled nuclear weapons loaded on aircraft, sitting at the ends of runways in the United States and Europe, ready to take off on a few minutes' notice. As tensions continued to increase, B-52s, armed with hydrogen bombs, were on continuous “airborne alert”, ready at any time to head toward their targets.

The weapons carried by these aircraft, however, had not been designed for missions like this. They used high explosives which could be detonated by heat or shock, often contained few interlocks to prevent a stray electrical signal from triggering a detonation, were not “one point safe” (guaranteed that detonation of one segment of the high explosives could not cause a nuclear yield), and did not contain locks (“permissive action links”) to prevent unauthorised use of a weapon. Through much of the height of the Cold War, it was possible for a rogue B-52 or tactical fighter/bomber crew to drop a weapon which might start World War III; the only protection against this was rigid psychological screening and the enemy's air defence systems.

The resistance to introducing such safety measures stemmed from budget and schedule pressures, but also from what was called the “always/never” conflict. A nuclear weapon should always detonate when sent on a wartime mission. But it should never detonate under any other circumstances, including an airplane crash, technical malfunction, maintenance error, or through the deliberate acts of an insane or disloyal individual or group. These imperatives inevitably conflict with one another. The more safeguards you design into a weapon to avoid an unauthorised detonation, the greater the probability one of them may fail, rendering the weapon inert. SAC commanders and air crews were not enthusiastic about the prospect of risking their lives running the gauntlet of enemy air defences only to arrive over their target and drop a dud.

As documented here, it was only after the end of Cold War, as nuclear weapon stockpiles were drawn down, that the more dangerous weapons were retired and command and control procedures put into place which seem (to the extent outsiders can assess such highly classified matters) to provide a reasonable balance between protection against a catastrophic accident or unauthorised launch and a reliable deterrent.

Nuclear command and control extends far beyond the design of weapons. The author also discusses in detail the development of war plans, how civilian and military authorities interact in implementing them, how emergency war orders are delivered, authenticated, and executed, and how this entire system must be designed not only to be robust against errors when intact and operating as intended, but in the aftermath of an attack.

This is a serious scholarly work and, at 632 pages, a long one. There are 94 pages of end notes, many of which expand substantially upon items in the main text.
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Julian Douglass
4.0 out of 5 stars Great book explaining the pitfalls of Nuclear Weapons
Reviewed in the United States on May 8, 2019
Verified Purchase
What a book by Mr. Schlosser in describing the pros and many cons of having nuclear weapons. By not only explaining the political infighting between our civilian government and the military, but also the many near disasters, this book sheds a new light on how nuclear weapons and energy do not make us safe and instead puts us at a greater risk for war and a catastrophic disaster that no government is set for. The prose is very good and the way he describes how the weapons work is very good for someone who doesn't know a lot about nuclear physics.
The biggest issue is how he jumps back and forth between the Damascus incident and the history of Nuclear Weapons in the United States. I think there should have been a prologue setting the scene at Damascus and then a linear history from 1945 to 1980. Other than that, it was a great read. Highly recommend.
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mr. burgers
5.0 out of 5 stars good book
Reviewed in the United States on March 31, 2020
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excellent book. you'd like it i think. it held my attention and interest. it took me a long time to finally read it, but that's no fault of the book. all the words were in there since the day it was printed, but i had a lot of prior commitments, and work, and you know it is...
anyway, when i finally got around to it after like a year, it was very interesting and easy to read. it's pretty long but it keeps moving. i'm a big fan of the cold war and all that. i always thought we were gonna get nuked. i was a little disappointed that we never did, but i never realized how close we actually came, and how often.
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OleMissLaw
4.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic history of the Nuclear History of the United States
Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2020
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Buckle up, this book is the history channel on steroids. If you would like to read a through, and I mean completely deep-dive through, history of the nuclear enterprise in the United States, then this is your book.

The disaster at Damascus is told over the entire course of the book, which frustrated me a little bit as the writer is a brilliant storyteller and I really wanted to focus on the Damascus incident without all of the history. I made it through though, all 400+ pages. It is a great book that will really open your eyes to the dangers we face here at home with our nuclear triad.
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CCGlazier
5.0 out of 5 stars Officially the 'Scariest Book I've ever read'.
Reviewed in the United States on March 1, 2017
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Saddest Book I ever read: Peter W. Singer's "Children at War", about the escalating and profoundly disturbing rise of the use of child-soldiers around the globe in the late 20th/early 21st century. This however is officially the Scariest Book I ever read.

For those who haven't read the description or other reviews, Mr. Schlosser's book examines the development of America's nuclear arsenal and the history of its deployment, and interweaves that with the account of an 'accident' (understatement) in a Titan 2 missile silo in Arkansas in 1980.

It has taken me a while to finish, not because it's dry and academic, (on the contrary, it's remarkably well written) but I kept putting it down, shaking my head and muttering profanities at the repeated, outrageous incidents of institutionalized myopia and near criminal levels of ignorance and incompetence exhibited in the handling of the most dangerous weapons ever made. It is a flat out MIRACLE there hasn't been an accidental nuclear detonation on American soil.

Seems there's a companion documentary of the same name. Haven't seen it but according to friends, it will simultaneously spike your blood pressure and gray your hair. But, if you're at all interested in the Cold War, nuclear weapons, and engaging but sobering history, then the book is for you.
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Scott Russell
5.0 out of 5 stars The best non-fiction book I've ever read. Schlosser makes the characters relatable, and the technical understandable.
Reviewed in the United States on February 23, 2017
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The account of the Damascus incident is rich with detail. You get both the technical inter workings of the site and the missile, but you also get a wonderful color and feel for what the people who were involved with the incident were really like in their lives outside the incident. Of all the books I've ever read, this one does THE best job of giving the reader a real world understanding of what the people were actually like. To be honest, at first, I was thinking "why is he telling me all this?", but when you get into the sections involving these people, it's amazing how their body language and mannerisms come to life because of the foundations he lays out for the reader.

I may never sleep again. The Damascus story itself is riveting, but a couple of the accident stories are absolutely hair raising. Some of those B52 crashes with 4 megaton Hydrogen bombs on board could easily have killed tens of millions of people each. I still get chills when I think of the accident where a bomb was released by the (then) unmanned and crashing plane, and the wiring tore loose between bomb and plane, making the bomb believe it was dropped on purpose, fully armed, and the only thing that kept it from detonating with full atomic yield was a switch on the instrument panel in the cockpit, where "air" or "ground" burst had not be selected. It still raises the hair on my arms when I think about it.

The book is written like a great Tom Clancy novel, to the point where I had to keep reminding myself this is all 100% factual information. People (myself included) have NO IDEA how close we've come to vaporizing millions of people and dooming millions more to fates far worse than death (before they too eventually die), simply due to hap hazard accidents with nuclear weapons. I had no idea there had been so many.

The book speaks volumes about how military strategy is thought out, and the politics that drive poor decision making. So many examples of when rivalries between competing branches of the military lead to some really bad choices. It's also very eye opening to see how petulant some members of our military leadership could be when things didn't go their way.

The book is so well researched, and the researched so well put together, you don't have to be fan of history, or non-fiction to enjoy reading it. There were times I couldn't put it down. There's not a lot of non-fiction I can honestly say that about. I'd highly recommend this book. It's fun to read, and in the end, it makes you a far better informed citizen.
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