You're wrong of course. Because one bomb landing in downtown (your city here) is going to destroy hundreds of thousands of people, which alone is enough for 'Bad End' in any post-war situation. Effectively gutting a country does not mean killing every single human being there.Count Chocula wrote:Just for shits and grins, I went to ye olde nuclear weapons effects calculator and plugged in 1MT. I discovered that I would survive a 1MT burst in Tampa, since I'm 45 miles away. In fact, it appears that the blast from that kind of detonation would not even reach Clearwater, across the bay from Tampa, although fallout would be a factor. The implication, to me, is that it would take hundreds of megaton detonations to cripple an opposing state's production capability, and that that ability would be severely impaired in any attack on the US, Russia, or China, which each have hundreds of defense-related manufacturing plants distributed across their rather large land masses. Hell, the Boeng plant all on its own would need at least a 500 kiloton warhead to destroy. Again, that would imply that we should have more nukes, not less, if mutual annihilation is our standing doctrine for a nuclear exchange.Omega18 wrote: You also have B-83 nuclear bombs which apparently can go up to 1.2 megatons. (Keep in mind the Hiroshima bomb was only about 13 to 18 kilotons.) It doesn't actually take many nuclear weapons of this size to destroy cities and other key targets.
If one SSBN can destroy 96 major cities, what the hell is that country going to do post-war? Add in a few hundred more for military and other government targets, and what kind of country do you exactly have left? A bunch of small, economically ruined townships in an area covered in destroyed urban wasteland is not a country.