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The Military United States

A Visit to the Nuclear Missile Next Door (sfgate.com) 126

78-year-old rancher Ed Butcher has, for 60 years, lived with a nuclear missile as his closest neighbor — an active U.S. government nuclear missile, buried just beneath his cow pasture.

"Do you think they'll ever shoot it up into the sky?" asks his wife Pam, during a visit from the Washington Post.

"I used to say, 'No way,' " Ed said. "Now it's more like, 'Please God, don't let us be here to see it.' " The missile was called a Minuteman III, and the launch site had been on their property since the Cold War, when the Air Force paid $150 for one acre of their land as it installed an arsenal of nuclear weapons across the rural West. About 400 of those missiles remain active and ready to launch at a few seconds notice in Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, Colorado and Nebraska. They are located on bison preserves and Indian reservations. They sit across from a national forest, behind a rodeo grandstand, down the road from a one-room schoolhouse, and on dozens of private farms like the one belonging to the Butchers, who have lived for 60 years with a nuclear missile as their closest neighbor.

It's buried behind a chain-link fence and beneath a 110-ton door of concrete and steel. It's 60 feet long. It weighs 79,432 pounds. It has an explosive power at least 20 times greater than the atomic bomb that killed 140,000 people in Hiroshima. An Air Force team is stationed in an underground bunker a few miles away, ready to fire the missile at any moment if the order comes. It would tear out of the silo in about 3.4 seconds and climb above the ranch at 10,000 feet per second. It was designed to rise 70 miles above Earth, fly across the world in 25 minutes and detonate within a few hundred yards of its target. The ensuing fireball would vaporize every person and every structure within a half-mile. The blast would flatten buildings across a five-mile radius. Secondary fires and fatal doses of radiation would spread over dozens more miles, resulting in what U.S. military experts have referred to as "total nuclear annihilation."

"I bet it would fly right over our living room," Ed said. "I wonder if we'd even see it."

"We'd hear it. We'd feel it," Pam said. "The whole house would be shaking."

"And if we're shooting off missiles, you can bet some are headed back toward us," Ed said... "I guess we'd head for the storage room," Ed said.

"Make a few goodbye calls," Pam said. "Hold hands. Pray."

Ed got up to clear his plate. "Good thing it's all hypothetical. It's really only there for deterrence. It'll never actually explode."

"You're right," Pam said. "It won't happen. Almost definitely not."

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A Visit to the Nuclear Missile Next Door

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  • by Eunomion ( 8640039 ) on Sunday April 24, 2022 @11:41AM (#62474074)
    I hate how deluded people are about this. Nuclear deterrence is a glass-fragile holding action, and we are lucky as leprechauns it lasted this long. The only long-term solution is total disarmament coupled with mutual allowances for anti-missile capability to build trust. Once you allow that, an adversary couldn't build enough weapons to overcome it in secret: They would be spotted miles away. Also, disarmament coupled with anti-missile defense opens the door to a conventional response if an attack happened while being less likely to provoke such an attack.

    You don't have to trust the enemy for this to make sense. It makes sense no matter what they do. So it's terrifying that it doesn't even seem to be on the agenda anywhere in the world.
    • by AleRunner ( 4556245 ) on Sunday April 24, 2022 @12:02PM (#62474124)

      The only long-term solution is total disarmament coupled with mutual allowances for anti-missile capability to build trust. Once you allow that, an adversary couldn't build enough weapons to overcome it in secret

      I kind of definitely want to support this, I just have doubts. Given that the designs already exist and they have implemented them, how would you ensure that a country like Russia wouldn't build a nuclear force in secret?

      Although Ukraine probably couldn't have practically maintained a nuclear arsenal, the fact Russia invaded them is pretty clear evidence of the risk of being the first country to give up weapons. Russia promised them security guarantees and to maintain their original borders. Look where that's got them.

      • by reg ( 5428 )

        Technically the second, although South Africa only had experimental weapons.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        It's pretty difficult to build a nuclear arsenal in secret. Every metre of land and sea being covered by satellite imagery (visible and infra-red spectrums), as well as regular monitoring for tell-tale emissions of radioactive materials.

        The real problem is how do you stop them if they try? If they have an effective missile shield then it's going to be difficult to take out any facilities they are using. Short of a full on conventional war, there aren't many options.

        • It's pretty difficult to build a nuclear arsenal in secret. Every metre of land and sea being covered by satellite imagery (visible and infra-red spectrums), as well as regular monitoring for tell-tale emissions of radioactive materials.

          I'm assuming state level resources, so hollowing out a mountain, probably one that's already been mined for minerals, and building your bombs inside that is not unreasonable. If you had an advanced industrial society capable of building it's own centrifuges, explosives and so on, I don't see how you would detect the building of a uranium bomb, especially if there are doubts about even detecting HE Ur at ports [nrdc.org].

          Difficult to build an arsenal in secret? Yes, very. Achievable? probably.

          The real problem is how do you stop them if they try? If they have an effective missile shield then it's going to be difficult to take out any facilities they are using. Short of a full on conventional war, there aren't many options.

          This is the Iran (and form

    • Reality vs Ideal (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Anon42Answer ( 6662006 ) on Sunday April 24, 2022 @12:13PM (#62474154)

      That may be an idealistic naive logic path. That assumes the other party will not attack you nor allies, is LOGICAL, plays by the rules, and cares more for the people they govern than themselves. With Ukraine as a recent example - is that logical? is that playing by the rules? is that caring more for civilians than those in power?
      Would China have already invaded Taiwan without a nuclear threat against them?
      As uncomfortable as it has been, nuclear deterrence has worked pretty well historically. The major powers have not had direct military conflicts, no formal allies under signed nuclear umbrella have been in major direct military conflict. Korea may be the exception, but it was limited to an isolated peninsula that could not go any further. Anti-missile systems are good for smaller, rouge countries (North Korea, middle east, etc) that would not have large number of missiles. But anti-missile systems actually encourage major powers to increase the number of warheads (both actual and fake).

    • by k6mfw ( 1182893 )
      The unfortunate thing is other countries desire nuclear weapons. 20 years ago when Iran, Iraq, and NK labeled terrorist countries, one of them (that had no nuclear capability) was invaded while the others were not. If Ukraine still retained nuclear missiles they probably wouldn't have been invaded.
      • They desire them because mutually assured destruction is stupidly legitimized in geopolitics by our delusions of invincibility as survivors of a Cold War that we barely escaped. It's a perfect recipe for proliferation, which is a perfect recipe for inevitable use.

        To get a substantial nuclear arsenal, a country first needs to build a small one. But if they built a small one against a backdrop of the entire world having resigned them, and having built anti-missile capability instead, it would have the op
      • The unfortunate thing is other countries desire nuclear weapons. 20 years ago when Iran, Iraq, and NK labeled terrorist countries, one of them (that had no nuclear capability) was invaded while the others were not. If Ukraine still retained nuclear missiles they probably wouldn't have been invaded.

        Gwynne Dyer had a good opinion piece on this recently. I sometimes agree and sometimes vehemently disagree with him, but I always enjoy his take. https://gwynnedyer.com/2022/uk... [gwynnedyer.com]

    • Ever notice we havent had a major world war since the nuke was invented? If you know your history at all you should know how rare it is on this planet for us to go this long without a war happening between major powers that kills hundreds of thousands of people (or an equivalent ratio of global population going back in time). Nuclear powers don't fight with each other and that's all down to nukes.

      Just take the conflict in Ukraine. Literally the only reason this thing hasnt escaladed into a major regional wa

      • Yes until someone does something stupid and uses it. Do you really think Fat Boy in North Korea, for example, wouldn't use them if he feels insulted on Twitter? At some point, a mentally unstable person will become the leader of a heavily nuclear-armed state. It's just a matter of statistical probability. A lot of national leaders believe that God is on their side, and because they have consistently gotten away with crime and abusing other people, think they can survive a nuclear war too.

        • At some point, a mentally unstable person will become the leader of a heavily nuclear-armed state.

          Man, are you going to be surprised at what happened since you went into that coma in 1962....

        • by skam240 ( 789197 )

          Do you really think Fat Boy in North Korea, for example, wouldn't use them if he feels insulted on Twitter?

          And us getting rid of our nukes would only put as at the mercy of such people.

      • What I notice is the confirmation bias of someone surviving three pulls in Russian Roulette and deciding it's a sustainable game.

        The world war prior to WW1 was the Napoleonic wars a century earlier, and by the early 1900s there were plenty of statesmen and philosophers who decided the world had achieved some kind of perpetual balance. Likewise, at the turn of this century, the incredible nincompoop Francis Fukuyama had declared the "end of history," where everything from then on was going to just be an
        • by skam240 ( 789197 )

          The world war prior to WW1 was the Napoleonic wars a century earlier, and by the early 1900s there were plenty of statesmen and philosophers who decided the world had achieved some kind of perpetual balance. Likewise, at the turn of this century, the incredible nincompoop Francis Fukuyama had declared the "end of history," where everything from then on was going to just be an asymptotic growth toward greater prosperity, peace, and freedom, because the Magic Formula had been found due to the resolution of the Cold War.

          You're glossing over a lot of major wars that killed a lot of people. Major powers with large militaries used to fight each other far more frequently then you're making out. Just because the only major war you've ever heard of before the World Wars was the Napoleonic doesnt mean they didnt happen.

          But weapons built will get used. This is an inevitable fact unless you actively do something about it.

          No it's not, how the hell is that inevitable? We've literally built and then decommissioned hundreds of nukes in this country.

          The threat of MAD is not self-defense.

          No it is which is exactly why it has kept the peace between major powers for a completel

          • "Major powers with large militaries used to fight each other far more frequently then you're making out."

            I said world war, not just any conflict between sizable militaries. There is no evidence that all-encompassing, far-ranging, colossally destructive wars have been discouraged by nuclear weapons, because they were never common in the first place.

            Moreover, we have fought sizable militaries since the advent of nuclear weapons: Mao's hordes in Korea; large, multi-national Communist forces in Vietnam;
      • by sd4f ( 1891894 )

        Just take the conflict in Ukraine. Literally the only reason this thing hasnt escaladed into a major regional war that kills hundreds of thousands is because Russia and NATO countries have nukes.

        The deterrent is real, but even WW2 took a good 8 months to really get going, when Germany then progressed to Norway. That period is known as the phoney war, purely because they were technically at war, but Poland had already been carved up by Germany and the USSR, and no one was about to jump in to try to undo it at that stage (or in the case of Poland, at any stage).

        We're starting month 3 with the Ukraine conflict, and for the time being, it appears that with the exception of Ukraine, Russia, nor the west

        • by skam240 ( 789197 )

          Yes and Russia attacked Ukraine exactly because it wasn't yet part of NATO and therefore had no nuclear backing. Had Ukraine already been part of NATO Russia never would have done this.

    • That's easier said than done. The fact of the matter is that the world is still run by the baby boomers - who are, by and large, self-entitled, goody-goody assholes for whom war still is a potential source of glory. Things will probably be different once they are, for all practical purposes, gone.
      • They at least had generational experience with its reality; with being drafted as cannon fodder in a war of aggression. Any nuclear scenario would be the most extreme version of that rather than proxy wars fought by volunteer armies.

        I would be more concerned with cohorts whose only understanding comes from videogames and TV shows: People inclined to believe there's a meaningful narrative structure to chaos, because all they know about it are the stories created to fill the vacuum of meaning. Anything y
    • That's assuming people only want to avoid nuclear war, and you are 100% correct on your solution.

      The other reason countries have nuclear weapons is to avoid being invaded, and your solution doesn't work there.

      • It doesn't assume that at all. If someone wants nuclear war in this scenario, they would have to (a) conduct a buildup of offensive weapons, (b) do so at a large enough scale to overwhelm your defenses, (c) do it secretly and quickly enough that it escapes the notice of the world the whole time, avoiding a conventional response or complementary defensive buildup that makes their efforts pointless, and (d) actually be technically and operationally competent enough to pull off the attack rather than just sta
        • ok, you wrote a lot, but you ignored my point.

          People have nuclear weapons to prevent other countries from invading with conventional weapons. If they get rid of those weapons, then they will be invaded.

          • Slight problem with your theory: The vast majority of countries have no nuclear weapons, but somehow manage to avoid being invaded.

            There's no basis whatsoever for the claim that lacking nuclear weapons encourages being invaded, and no evidence that being nuclear statistically discourages armed conflict more than simply being a military power.
            • Fact: if Ukraine had nuclear weapons, they wouldn't have been invaded.

              • > Fact: if Ukraine had nuclear weapons, they wouldn't have been invaded.

                You misspelled speculation.

                • We've seen how countries respond to those with nuclear weapons. There is plenty of evidence supporting the fact that nuclear deterrence is real.

                  What evidence is there that nuclear weapons don't act as a deterrence? Has any country with nuclear weapons been invaded?

                  You are not living in an evidence based world.

              • Demonstrably false. Israel already had a significant nuclear arsenal by the time it was attacked in the Yom Kippur War in 1973. If you think Vladimir Putin is more cautious and pragmatic than Anwar Sadat, I don't know what history or what current events you're reading about.
    • If MAD was working, USA would not be fomenting color revolutions in Russias backyard. USA is no longer scared of MAD and thinks it can win a nuclear exchange so it will keep salami slicing the Russian sphere of influence till they do an Ottoman empire style dismantling of Russia.
      • by sd4f ( 1891894 )

        I don't think the USA is innocent, but the point needs to be made that unfortunately Russia's core territory, that is where most ethnic Russians live, is practically indefensible, so Russia's security has always been to expand itself at the expense of its neighbours independence. The USSR with the warsaw pact hit the zenith of land area, in order to more or less be in control of all attack corridors, but in the process, you can see how many individual nations needed to be subjugated and oppressed in order t

    • The only long-term solution is total disarmament

      How is that a long term solution? How would you persuade Putin and Kim Jong-Il to disarm? What about China? And Israel who won't even admit to being armed. And France. They've been invaded and occupied twice in living memory (just) and their policy is basically "whatever it takes to prevent this again".

      And then there's Japan. Nope, they're not nuclear armed (I believe them), but they're at a holding point which puts them a few months away from being nuclear

      • Disarmament is literally the only solution. Deterrence is Russian Roulette: It only has to fail once. Whereas global pushes to end nuclear weapons can have ups and downs while still being a net security benefit to the world.

        You persuade dictators to give up nuclear weapons by taking away their effectiveness as either a deterrent or an active weapon. Defensive anti-missile capability coupled with conventional offensive strength and global diplomatic solidarity does that. If they insist on taking on th
  • Good idea (Score:5, Funny)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Sunday April 24, 2022 @11:44AM (#62474084)

    It's always better to visit a missile than for a missile to come visit you.

  • by splutty ( 43475 ) on Sunday April 24, 2022 @11:45AM (#62474088)

    No. Not a few seconds notice. There are so many fail safes and cross checks in place that the time from the decision to launch those things to the actual launch is quite a lot more minutes than people have been taught by movies, not seconds.

    • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Sunday April 24, 2022 @12:29PM (#62474192)

      Having visited a decommissioned site in South Dakota, you are correct when you say minutes. Less than 10 minutes from decision to launch to the launch itself. At the visitor's center there is graphic showing who gets notified in what order and how much time elapses between each step.

      This article [wagingpeace.org] gives a good overview of what it takes to launch a nuclear missile from the U.S. There are protocols in place to prevent an errant launch, but in the end, if a president orders a launch no one can stop them from doing so. PBS had a discussion about this [pbs.org] when the con artist was threatening North Korea. Some are thinking the process might need updating with more built-in safe guards.

      Meanwhile, this broadcast [npr.org] goes over how the nuclear program came into being in the U.S. and how the process evolved from the military having sole control to the president being the only one able to launch.

      • Some are thinking the process might need updating with more built-in safe guards

        Not actually possible. The military is in control of the weapons, and ultimately their oath to protect the Constitution over-rides whatever safeguards you attempt to impose; they will still believe themselves required to use their own judgement.

        For example, the safeguard of having a launch code built into the missile, and only the President and a few other people having access to the codes, was built into the technology; but the actual codes programmed into the missiles is all-zeros, and none of the steps r

        • OTOH, people below him might order the strike anyway.

          Cite your source on this because only if the president is incapacitated can someone below him order a strike.

          • by chihowa ( 366380 )

            OTOH, people below him might order the strike anyway.

            Cite your source on this because only if the president is incapacitated can someone below him order a strike.

            Only if the president is incapacitated is it intended for someone below him to order a strike.The mechanism to implement this is the launch codes that only the president (and a few others) knows. If everybody knows the codes, that mechanism isn't functional.

            Of course, in practice people are more likely to not launch when ordered instead of launch without orders.

        • by PPH ( 736903 )

          It all depends on what the Pentagon is responding to. If it's a "launch on warning", they are the ones that woke up the prez and informed him that we are under attack, by whom and what the recommended countermeasures should be. The president can amend them, but most of that stuff has been gamed out. A very rapid response is possible. But a significant number of people have already reviewed the warning, judged it to be accurate and in need of action. Not much room for one crazy person pushing the button here

      • by nmb3000 ( 741169 )

        Having visited a decommissioned site in South Dakota, you are correct when you say minutes. Less than 10 minutes from decision to launch to the launch itself. At the visitor's center there is graphic showing who gets notified in what order and how much time elapses between each step.

        For anyone interested in US nuclear weapons tech and history, and military systems in general, Command and Control [amazon.com] is a fantastic book that gets deep into the technical details of a launch as well as the history of nuclear weapons in the United States. Cannot recommend highly enough.

        Another great book is The Titan II Handbook [titan2handbook.com], written by Chuck Penson who runs the Titan II museum in Arizona. Extremely detailed with lots of pictures and schematics. Very cool for both nuclear and 60s tech nerds.

  • by cuda13579 ( 1060440 ) on Sunday April 24, 2022 @12:21PM (#62474178)

    So, you've lived next to a missile silo for 60 years?
    "yep"
    Do you think they'll ever shoot it off?
    "maybe"
    What do you think it will be like if that happens?
    "bad"

     

  • Submarines (Score:4, Informative)

    by RonVNX ( 55322 ) on Sunday April 24, 2022 @12:38PM (#62474210)

    All the military-oriented people I know say the land missiles aren't really what matters, it's the missiles on the submarines that protect against a first strike. The theory goes, you can get us, but the subs will take revenge.

  • The home of farmers visiting their neighbor military installations and keyboard nuclear techs fighting over points that make no sense or difference. I'd put in my two cents, being a former installation tech for the minute man 3 and peacekeepers, but there really isn't a point.
  • You should have grown up around Nike installations [themilitarystandard.com], there were many of them and most thought they were just early warning radar installations instead of missile and aircraft defense batteries. They also weren't told that there were nuclear warheads on most of the missiles that would have been used to go after incoming ICBMs and bomber fleets.

  • by AlanObject ( 3603453 ) on Sunday April 24, 2022 @01:18PM (#62474300)

    "I used to say, 'No way,' " Ed said. "Now it's more like, 'Please God, don't let us be here to see it.' "

    A little more than just four years ago we had a new president with no military or civilian oversight experience asking military planners why he couldn't use the nukes if he wanted to.

  • This story fails to include a picture of the silo, nor does it identify it. This would appear to be silo E-07 located E-07 5.6 mi NxNE of Hilger MT at 47 20 04 N 109 21 40 W [google.com].

  • Are people really so scared that their higher brain functions just aren't working at all anymore? Read my lips: there is NOT going to be a nuclear war!
    Nobody wins in a nuclear war, everyone loses. EVERYONE. And by 'everyone' I mean THE ENTIRE PLANET. Only a madman would use them. Putins' own people won't allow it. They can sabre-rattle all they want about this-and-that nuclear missile they have but it's all just terror tactics, propaganda intended to scare people into doing what Putin wants. Don't fall fo
    • Lets theory craft some possible scenarios :

      - the US gives Ukraine an almost unlimited supply of offensive UAVs and Pantsir/Tor prove utterly incapable of dealing with it, ringing in an entire new stage of asymmetric warfare which pushes Russian ground forces to complete collapse. Russia tries to bomb civilian targets in Ukraine conventionally to force them into submission even moreso than now, but they simply refuse out of obstinacy. What happens?

      - Russia takes Ukraine in the coming week and they feel they

      • I meant to say "coming weeks". Ukraine folding in a week is somewhat too unlikely at this point. A blitz this was not.

    • Only a madman would use them

      And that's what's scary. If you want proof that not a single person would ever consider ending humanity, look at our current problem with the environment.

      A huge percentage of people, every day, take dozens of decisions without a single afterthought about the consequences of their actions.

      If you want further proof that the human race as a whole is not yet advanced enough, just look at this website [darwinawards.com], where tales of idiots dying of their own stupidity are not uncommon.

      So yes, be afra

    • The same is true, albeit on a smaller scale, of almost every war. Yet they still happen.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Do they do regular maintenance, or has it just been there, buried for 60 years?
    • by Alcari ( 1017246 )
      The missiles (at least, western missiles) are all solid rocket fuel and don't really require all that much maintenance. But electronics are fickle and occasionally need checking, fixing and replacing. Things like reentry vehicles have heatshields and they can degrade, they have maneuvering systems which require checking and replacing, etc. etc. etc.

      Nuclear weapons themselves actually need a lot of maintenance; not so much for the fissile material, but the chemical explosives have a relatively short shelf
  • > Ed got up to clear his plate. "Good thing it's all hypothetical. It's really only there for deterrence. It'll never actually explode."
    > "You're right," Pam said. "It won't happen. Almost definitely not."

    When reading these sentences, I saw Jim and Hilda Bloggs, the elderly couple from “when the wind blows” telling this before my inner eye.
    I hate to think about these things again after nearly 40 years, I feel as if I have to throw up.

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

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