

THE EFFECTS OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS
by Russell D. Hoffman
Ayear ago, India surprised the CIA--and nearly everyone else except, perhaps,
Pakistan, who seems to have been nearly ready--by setting off several underground
nuclear explosions. Then Pakistan, claiming self-defense, followed suit.
But what would actually happen if India and Pakistan had a nuclear exchange?
Most people in India and in Pakistan (and in the US) probably do not know
that as many as 9 out of 10 people--or more--who die from a nuclear blast
do not die in the explosion itself. Most people probably think that if they
die from a nuclear blast, they will simply see a flash and get quickly cooked.
Those within approximately a six-square-mile area (for a 1-megaton blast)
will indeed be close enough to "ground zero" to be killed by the
gamma rays emitting from the blast itself. Ghostly shadows of these people
will be formed on any concrete or stone that lies behind them, and they
will be no more. They literally won't know what hit them, since they will
be vaporized before the electrical signals from their sense organs can reach
their brains.
Of the many victims of a nuclear war, these are the luckiest ones, of course.
Outside the circle where people will be instantly vaporized from the initial
gamma radiation blast, the light from the explosion (which is many times
hotter than the sun) is so bright that it will immediately and permanently
blind every living thing, including farm animals (including cows, sacred
or otherwise), pets, birds in flight, not to mention peasants, Maharajah's,
and Government officials--and soldiers, of course. Whether their eyes are
opened or closed. This will happen for perhaps 10 miles around in every
direction (for a 1 megaton bomb)--further for those who happen to be looking
towards the blast at the moment of detonation. Even from fifty miles away,
a 1 megaton blast will be many times brighter than the noonday sun. Those
looking directly at the blast will have a large spot permanently burned
into their retinas, where the light receptor cells will have been destroyed.
The huge bright cloud being nearly instantly formed in front of them (made
in part from those closer to the blast, who have already "become death"),
will be the last clear image these people will see.
Most people who will die from the nuclear explosion will not die in the
initial gamma ray burst, nor in the multi-spectral heat blast (mostly X-ray
and ultraviolet wavelengths) which will come about a tenth of a second after
the gamma burst. Nor will the pressure wave which follows over the next
few seconds do most of them in, though it will cause bleeding from every
orifice. Nor even will most people be killed by the momentary high winds
which accompany the pressure wave. These winds will reach velocities of
hundreds of miles an hour near the epicenter of the blast, and will reach
velocities of 70 miles per hour as far as 6 miles from the blast (for a
1 megaton bomb). The high winds and flying debris will cause shrapnel-type
wounds and blunt-trauma injuries.
Together, the pressure wave and the accompanying winds will do in quite
a few, and damage most of the rest of the people (and animals, and structures)
in a huge circle-perhaps hundreds of square miles in area.
Later, these people will begin to suffer from vomiting, skin rashes, and
an intense unquenchable thirst as their hair falls out in clumps. Their
skin will begin to peel off. This is because the internal molecular structure
of the living cells within their bodies is breaking down, a result of the
disruptive effects of the high radiation dose they received. All the animals
will be similarly suffering. Since they have already received the dose,
these effects will show up even if the people are immediately evacuated
from the area--hardly likely, since everything around will be destroyed
and the country would be at war.
But this will not concern them at this time: Their immediate threat after
the gamma blast, heat blast, pressure wave and sudden fierce wind (first
going in the direction of the pressure wave-outwardly from the blast-then
a moment later, a somewhat weaker wind in the opposite direction), will
be the firestorm which will quickly follow, with its intense heat and hurricane-force
winds, all driving towards the center where the radioactive mushroom-shaped
cloud will be rising, feeding it, enlarging it, and pushing it miles up
into the sky.
The cloud from a 1 megaton blast will reach nearly 10 miles across and equally
high. Soon after forming, it will turn white because of water condensation
around it and within it. In an hour or so, it will have largely dissipated,
which means that its cargo of death can no longer be tracked visually. People
will need to be evacuated from under the fallout, but they will have a hard
time knowing where to go. Only for the first day or so will visible pieces
of fallout appear on the ground, such as marble-sized chunks of radioactive
debris and flea-sized dots of blackened particles. After that the descending
debris from the radioactive cloud will become invisible and harder to track;
the fallout will only be detectable with geiger counters carried by people
in "moon suits". But all the moon suits will already be in use
in the known affected area. Probably, no one will be tracking the cloud.
One US test in the South Pacific resulted in a cigar-shaped contamination
area 340 miles long and up to 60 miles wide. It spread 20 miles upwind from
the test site, and 320 miles downwind. Where exactly it goes all depends
on the winds and the rains at the time. It is difficult to predict where
the cloud will travel before it happens, and it is likewise difficult to
track the cloud as it moves and dissipates around the globe. While underground
testing is bad enough for the environment, a single large above-ground explosion
is likely to result in measurable global increases of a whole spectrum of
health effects. India or Pakistan will deny culpability for these deaths,
of course. The responsible nations, including my own, always do.
But the people who were affected by the blast itself will not be worrying
about the fallout just yet.
A 1 megaton nuclear bomb creates a firestorm that can cover 100 square miles.
A 20 megaton blast's firestorm can cover nearly 2500 square miles. Hiroshima
and Nagasaki were small cities, and by today's standards the bombs dropped
on them were small bombs.
The Allied firebombing of nearly 150 cities during World War Two in Germany
and Japan seldom destroyed more than 25 square miles at a time, and each
of those raids required upwards of 400 planes, and thousands of crew members
going into harm's way. It was not done lightly. And, they did not leave
a lingering legacy of lethal radioactive contamination.
In the span of a lunch hour, one multi-warhead nuclear missile can destroy
more cities than all the incendiary raids in history, and the only thing
the combatant needs to do to carry off such a horror is to sit in air-conditioned
comfort hundreds or even thousands of miles away, and push a button. He
would barely have to interrupt his lunch. With automation, he wouldn't even
have to do that! The perpetrator of this crime against humanity may never
have seen his adversary. He only needs to be good at following the simplest
of orders. A robot could do it. One would think, that ONLY a robot WOULD
do it.
Nuclear war is never anything less than genocide.
The developing firestorm is what the survivors of the initial blast will
be worrying about - if they can think straight at all. Many will have become
instantly "shell-shocked"- incapacitated and unable to proceed.
Many will simply go mad. Perhaps they are among the "lucky" ones,
as well.
The firestorm produces hurricane-force winds in a matter of minutes. The
fire burns so hot that the asphalt in the streets begins to melt and then
burn, even as people are trying to run across it, literally melting into
the pavement themselves as they run. Victims, on fire, jump into rivers,
only to catch fire again when they surface for air. Yet it is hard to see
even these pitiable souls as the least lucky ones in a nuclear attack.
For the survivors of the initial blast who do not then die in the firestorm
that follows, many will die painfully over the next few weeks, often after
a brief, hopeful period where they appear to be getting better. It might
begin as a tingling sensation on the skin, or an itching, which starts shortly
after the blast. These symptoms are signs that the body is starting to break
down internally, at the molecular level. The insides of those who get a
severe dose of gamma radiation, but manage to survive the other traumas,
whose organs had once been well defined as lungs, liver, heart, intestines,
etc., begin to resemble an undefined mass of bloody pulp. Within days, or
perhaps weeks, the victims, usually bleeding painfully from every hole and
pore in their bodies, at last die and receive their final mercy.
But this too will probably not be how most victims of a nuclear attack will
die. A significant percentage, probably most, of the people who die from
a nuclear attack will die much later, from the widespread release of radioactive
material into the environment. These deaths will occur all over the world,
for centuries to come. Scattered deaths, and pockets of higher mortality
rates, will continue from cancer, leukemia, and other health effects, especially
genetic damage to succeeding generations.
Nuclear weapons do not recognize the end of a war, or signed peace treaties,
or even the deaths of all the combatants. They simply keep on killing a
percentage of whoever happens to inhale or ingest their deadly by-products.
Some deaths will occur hundreds and even thousands of miles away, because
low levels of ionizing radiation are capable of causing the full spectrum
of health effects, albeit at a lower rate within the population. Not to
mention the radioactive runoff from the rivers and streams that flow through
the blast area and the area under the radioactive mushroom cloud's drift.
It may carry its deadly cargo for thousands of miles, raining a fallout
of death only on some cities, and not on others. It will land upon nations
which had not been involved in any way in India's dispute with Pakistan.
These nations will be mighty hurt and mighty upset.
Nuclear weapons do not recognize international borders.
Finally, an atmospheric blast of a nuclear "device" creates an
EMP (Electro-Magnetic Pulse) which can be as large as Pakistan or even India
- perhaps even larger than India and Pakistan together. The higher the altitude
of the blast, the bigger the circle of damage will be from the EMP. This
is a very serious concern for those of us in the high-tech industries, such
as myself.
The Electro-Magnetic Pulse will electrify all sorts of metallic structures
that are not normally electrified except by the occasional short circuit
or lightning strike. This will be a lot like the whole country getting struck
by lightning all at the same time. As computer chips make better and better
use of "real estate", using more and more delicate electronic
circuits, the more tightly-packed transistors, capacitors, diodes, and resistors
become more and more vulnerable to the EMP which will be carried into the
chips via the connecting wires. The Electro-Magnetic Pulse is one of the
reasons above-ground testing was stopped. (The other reason was that it
became impossible to deny that the radiation dispersed by the tests was
killing people.)
Pacemakers, for example, may stop working because of the "hit"
from the EMP. It will be quite something to see people in a thousand mile
radius of the epicenter of the blast (or further) who are using pacemakers,
suddenly drop dead, and all the computers permanently go down and all the
lights go out, all at the same time. And commercial and private aircraft
will drop out of the sky, since their sensitive electronics and fly-by-wire
systems are not very well shielded from the EMP. These planes will then
not be available for evacuation purposes, nor will they be available to
air-drop food, water, morphine and cyanide, all of which will be in great
demand throughout the area.
A year ago people were dancing in the streets over this in both India and
Pakistan. Why?
Home plumbing systems and most other plumbing systems are good examples
of large metallic structures that will suddenly become electrified, destroying
the motors, gauges, electronics, etc. which are attached to the plumbing
systems. More and more pumping equipment is computer controlled nowadays
for efficiency. Imbedded controllers are becoming prevalent but as they
do, the potential damage from the Electro-Magnetic Pulse increases dramatically.
Train tracks will also carry the charge, as well as telephone wiring. All
these things will have a nearly simultaneous surge of energy sent through
them, igniting gas containers such as fuel storage tanks, propane tanks,
and so on. Whatever doesn't blow up will at least stop working.
My country has lived under the Russian and Chinese threat of nuclear war
for many decades now, and it is not a pleasant thought. This is nothing
to dance about. There is no benefit to having, or using, nuclear weapons.
I think the world would be a better place if we all stopped and said, "I
will not be a part of this. I do not need these weapons, for I would never
commit this sin against my own children, nor against my neighbor's children,
nor against my enemy's children, nor even against my enemy. I choose not
to be a part of this madness." There is a greater battle mankind must
fight than against each other. Humanity's fight right now is for humanity's
general survival despite depleted and poorly used resources, environmental
degradation (there is none greater than that from a nuclear explosion),
dwindling effectiveness of antibiotics and other wonder drugs, an uneven
distribution of available food, knowledge and wealth, and against weapons
of mass destruction.
America had three excuses for her previous use of nuclear weapons in war,
which we plead every time it is mentioned. First, we claim that we did not
understand back then (over 50 years ago) all the ways nuclear weapons damage
the Earth and her living inhabitants. Second, we claim that there was a
war going on, and that had we not used these weapons, perhaps a million
soldiers would have died invading Japan instead. But this second excuse
is weakened by the knowledge that Japan was at that time very near collapse
anyway. She was without an air defense or sea defense; she did not have
advanced radar, she had lost all her good pilots; millions of soldiers were
either dead, wounded, captured, or uselessly stuck on nameless islands in
the middle of the Pacific, and towns in her homeland were being firebombed
on almost a nightly basis. Our third excuse was that both Japan (and definitely
Germany) were building their own nuclear weapons, and DEFINITELY would have
used them against us had they succeeded in developing "the bomb"
before the war ended. The war could not go on forever. We were, indeed,
running out of time.
Perhaps these excuses are insufficient, but India and Pakistan haven't even
got them. India can, and therefore should, along with Pakistan, renounce
nuclear weapons and the nuclear option. Perhaps her populace does not understand
the full nature of the threat of nuclear weapons, and thus they are dancing
in the streets, but I hope that her leaders do. However, I strongly suspect
most of them are unaware of the things I have written about in this newsletter.
Perhaps you, dear reader, will help me to educate them in this matter.
---Russell Hoffman is a computer programmer, writer, and environmental activist,
who works with local and national environmental organizations as a volunteer.
He is grateful for the assistance of Pamela Blockey-O'Brien and others in
the research and preparation of this article.
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