Grumman, how much do you know about real nuclear attack plans?Grumman wrote:Even if it's with nukes - if nuclear counterattack is inevitable like Simon suggests - making some kind of effort to aim the minimum number of nukes at the right people would at least be less bad than systematically exterminating their entire civilisation.ChaserGrey wrote:"Nuke me and I'll kill specific people inside your country without using nukes" is a lot harder- I have a conventional force able to do the deed, I have good enough intelligence to figure out where to aim it that you can't spoof, I have enough redundant firepower to make sure it will hit its target no matter what, and these things will all continue to function even if you burn my country down around me. It's a tall order...
No one drafts serious plans involving "kill everyone in the country by carpeting it with nuclear fireballs." No, you make a list of things you want blown up, and you figure out how many bombs need to be dropped where to blow them up. Which is probably how you'd go about it if someone really needed you to do it, so think carefully.
I am a country fighting another country. We both have nukes. Which of their stuff do I blow up first?
1) Their nukes. If I can possibly blow up any of their nuclear weapons on the ground, I should do so whenever I can. I should also target any facility that can be used to launch their nukes. Enemy missile silos are obvious targets. So are airbases that contain planes which can drop nukes. So are facilities that house ships or submarines that might carry nuclear weapons- if I can blow up one of their missile submarines while it's tied to the pier at a naval base, that's about the only way to be sure of killing it before it lobs missiles at me and blows the shit out of millions of my people.
2) Their conventional armed forces. This is especially important if I'm relying on aircraft to drop the nukes, because enemy air defense will do everything it can to shoot down my nuclear bombers. Throwing enough nukes to destroy the entire enemy army is impractical, though, so my missiles will be concentrated on targets like HQs, supply dumps, and air defense radar installations.
3) Command and control centers. But I have to be careful here- what if I win and do enough damage that the enemy is willing to surrender? Who will still be in a position to issue that surrender? I have to leave someone alive with enough authority to give up, and to issue stand-down orders to the armed forces. This is one problem with fighting a nuclear war against Iran: who has authority to issue a surrender that will be honored by all the different factions in their government? Especially the really hardcore ones?
4) Key industrial and transportation centers. This is if I'm worried that they will be able to quickly rebuild, or cobble together some improvised nuclear strike capability (say, loading up a cargo plane with a nuclear bomb, flying it toward my own country whose air defenses were crippled by the nuclear war, and shoving the bomb out the back of the plane instead of using a military fighter jet). These become targets proportional to the amount of damage that is done to me- if I somehow manage to stop all their bombs, I don't actually need to hit the targets on list 4, not the way I need to hit 3, 2, and 1.
Now, there are many variations on the theme of this kind of plan. One thing to notice is that cities are in trouble. Cities are transportation centers, are often centers of government administration, and are often located very close to military production and maintenance facilities. This is why during a nuclear war it's a bad idea to live in Washington DC- not because the attacker is trying to kill the people living in DC as such, but because they're damned sure going to want to kill the Pentagon, the White House, and the other government agencies that reside in Washington. But an attacker would be most foolish to go out of their way to kill extra millions of people just to kill millions of people. If I have any bombs left, it gives me an incentive to retaliate against his own population (instead of, say, lobbing a second wave of missiles at an enemy airfield to make sure it's wrecked permanently). And it contributes nothing to decreasing my ability to strike back, when the whole point of fighting a nuclear war is to reduce the enemy to a state unable to fight a nuclear war as soon as possible.
Realistically, if I try to base my nuclear attack plan on killing "whoever ordered the attack..." Well. I can't know just by looking at a missile who pushed the button that launched it. The shape of a mushroom cloud does not offer clues as to the intentions of the attacker. So I have to be sure of hitting the person responsible- probably a senior official in their government or military... which means I'm hitting command centers, military HQs, airports by which they might leave the country.
I'd hit those anyway. I'd also hit their nuclear forces, just to make sure they don't fire off even more megadeaths my way while I'm dealing with the attack.
When the smoke clears, the result looks very much like it would if I hadn't been methodically trying to kill specific individuals in the country. Because to be reasonably confident of hitting them, I have to hit all the places they might be. And if any of them happened to survive the bombing, I run into the problem I was just talking about- they will be hard to find and constantly muddying the waters, in the sheer, incredible, nightmarish chaos that would result from a serious nuclear attack on a civilized country.
I would argue that they do.irishmick79 wrote:From that point of view, do collaborative international efforts to curb the spread of nuclear weapons have any value at all?
In the 1950s, sober theorists predicted that by 2000, virtually every developed nation on Earth would have its own nuclear weapons, and it was taken for granted that small nuclear wars would break out on a semi-regular basis. Thankfully, that prediction did not come true. One of the reasons it didn't happen is because of the NPT, and the idea the NPT represents, which is that major nuclear powers will not help small nations acquire nuclear capability as proxies.
NPT is not and never was perfect, but it bought us decades of 'nuclear peace.' I don't know what could replace it and do a better job, aside from something like a world enforcement arm that had a monopoly on nuclear weapons which it would itself enforce with nuclear weapons. Since we couldn't possibly create an organization like that which would use its power justly (people have been suggesting that we do it since a few weeks after Hiroshima, and it never caught on)...
I don't think there is a better way. I don't think dropping all the arms control treaties is a better way, or even a good-ish way.
I wish to God I knew how to address the Iranians in a way that would make them calm down. I can't figure out how to do it except by building a time machine and giving Dwight D. Eisenhower a smack upside his big bald head.Shroom Man 777 wrote:Trying to stop nations from acquiring nukes through sanctions or military force is like trying to stop people from getting angry and blowing themselves up in acts of terrorism through the use of... sanctions or military force. Turns out there's actually a driving force that forcefully drives people and/or nations or societies or whatever to do negative actions like wanting to have combat oriented lethal devices or Hezbollah-branded designer bomb jackets and maybe even using them in anger. And unless these force-driving things are addressed or acknowledged to even exist, well, everything will stay the same.
I can't blame the Iranians for being constantly pissed off. I don't like them for it, but I don't blame them.
You're probably right- the US did a lot to bring this about with the invasion of Iraq in 2003, which was very much an unprovoked attack and proved beyond doubt that the US would attack nations it disliked, NPT status or not.Stas Bush wrote:I think the NPT has failed, and not least because of the behaviour of nuclear powers. They demonstrated that adhering to the NPT was not protecting a Third World nation from internvetion on part of a larger nation, and on the other hand, breaching the NPT would not cause the sky to fall down on you. Right now quite a few nations don't trust the NPT, India and Pakistan (who influence quite a few Third World nations) openly deride it for being an imperialistic tool, and several examples of breaching it are known in history.irishmick79 wrote: I'm wondering if you think the NPT still has value, if a new framework should be developed, or if we should simply do away with a global arms control regime all together and let nations sort these issues out on an ad hoc basis.
The 2011 NATO intervention in Libya just underlined the point.