These States Were Designed to be Sacrificed in Case of World War 3

These States Were Designed to be Sacrificed in Case of World War 3


These States Were Designed to be Sacrificed in Case of World War 3

There are several U.S. states that still house a large number of nuclear missile silos in a concentrated area. These states are what is known as a nuclear sponge. The question is: do you live in one of the five? If nuclear war breaks out, you may not be as safe as you might think. Check out today’s epic new video to find out!


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Content

0.12 -> Sirens wail across the landscape. Red lights flash  in military bases around the country. Someone has  
6.42 -> launched a barrage of nuclear missiles at the  United States. They sail over New York City,  
10.68 -> blast past San Francisco, and rocket away  from D.C. These major cities all seemed  
16.62 -> like they should have been key targets, but  instead, the missiles are headed to several  
20.22 -> unsuspecting states in the middle of the country;  places where people thought they’d be safe. The  
25.26 -> United States’ nuclear sponge is attracting  the enemy nukes as planned. Unfortunately,  
29.7 -> anyone living in these states is about to be  annihilated in a holocaust of nuclear explosions.
34.68 -> There are five U.S. states that still house  a large number of nuclear missile silos in  
39.72 -> a concentrated area. These states are what is  known as a nuclear sponge. The question is: do  
45.3 -> you live in one of the five? If nuclear war breaks  out, you may not be as safe as you might think.
49.92 -> First, what is a nuclear sponge? During the  Cold War, the U.S. was very concerned about  
54.54 -> major cities and metropolitan areas being  targeted by Soviet nukes. In order to draw  
59.04 -> attention away from these areas, the Department  of Defense came up with an interesting idea.  
63.48 -> They hypothesized that if a large number of ICBM  nukes were placed in the middle of the country,  
67.92 -> then the Soviet Union would have to target them  first if they were to attack. Because if they  
73.26 -> didn’t, the U.S. would be able to retaliate  with nukes of their own. These missile sites  
77.46 -> were placed in rural areas so that the  number of casualties would remain low.
81.3 -> Forcing the Soviet Union to attack these rural  areas would draw fire away from places like New  
86.52 -> York City, Washington D.C., or any other densely  populated part of the country. The remote nuclear  
91.86 -> sites were known as a nuclear sponge since they  would “absorb” the missile fire from the enemy.
96.78 -> The missile silos that originally  made up the United States’ nuclear  
100.38 -> sponge were deep underground and spaced  far enough apart that the Soviet Union  
104.22 -> would need to commit a large percentage of  its nuclear arsenal to destroy them. These  
108.54 -> nuclear launch sites were put in the plains  states so they could be launched northward,  
112.5 -> travel over the arctic, and hit the Soviet  Union on the other side of the planet.
116.04 -> So, just to recap, a nuclear sponge is the  section of the U.S. where large numbers of  
121.26 -> ICBM nuclear missiles are housed in the hope that  if an enemy ever did launch a nuclear attack,  
126 -> they would commit a large number of  their missiles to destroy the nuclear  
129.3 -> sponge. This would hopefully spare major  urban areas from total destruction at the  
133.8 -> expense of the people living within  or anywhere near the nuclear sponge.
137.28 -> Right off the bat, you probably see some problems  with this plan. And even when it was conceived  
142.44 -> during the Cold War, many people voiced their  opposition to having nuclear silos in the  
146.46 -> middle of the country. Yet, the Department  of Defence built the nuclear silos anyways,  
149.94 -> and now, with a renewed nuclear threat  from Putin and the Russian government,  
153.42 -> there has been large amounts of money dedicated  to updating the United States’ nuclear sponge.
157.92 -> Unfortunately, as we are about to explain, this  is a huge waste of money, incredibly dangerous,  
163.68 -> and provides no real safety to anyone in the  U.S. First and foremost, the United States’  
168.96 -> main strategy for surviving a nuclear attack  should be to never let it happen in the first  
173.46 -> place. Diplomacy and de-escalation should take  precedence over everything else. And to be honest,  
178.92 -> updating the nuclear sponge should be  at the very bottom of the list. In fact,  
182.94 -> it should be so far down on the list that  it isn’t even considered an option because,  
186.78 -> in the current era, a nuclear sponge isn’t  effective, as we’ll explain in a bit.
191.52 -> But first, let's examine why the U.S. is even  considering upgrades to its nuclear sponge,  
195.66 -> the history behind the original idea,  
197.82 -> and what states are part of the plan to draw  fire away from major cities. All you can do is  
202.8 -> hope that you don’t live in one of these  states if nuclear war becomes a reality.
207.12 -> The main reason we are talking about the nuclear  sponge in the middle of the United States is that  
211.68 -> as Russia continues to suffer defeat after defeat  in Ukraine, Putin has stated he is considering  
216.72 -> putting nuclear options on the table. The weapons  he is talking about are likely tactical nukes,  
221.58 -> which can vary in size from a few kilotons up to  50 kilotons. These low-yield nukes would still  
227.22 -> cause massive destruction and irradiate the  surrounding area, but they are nowhere near  
232.02 -> as devastating as strategic nukes, which  have yields of 1000 kilotons or more.
236.64 -> The problem is that if Putin starts launching  nukes in Ukraine, regardless of size, NATO  
241.62 -> will need to respond in some way. And let’s be  honest, Putin is not the most stable individual,  
247.02 -> so if he feels threatened by NATO, he could  launch the entire Russian nuclear arsenal at  
251.82 -> western countries. He is probably thinking  at this point if he can’t win, no one can.  
255.96 -> This has put the U.S. and NATO on high alert.  As a result, the United States is dumping huge  
261.24 -> amounts of money into its military. Hundreds of  billions of dollars have been put into the United  
265.62 -> States’ nuclear weapons program in recent years.  Some of this money has gone towards upgrading the  
270.24 -> nuclear sponge in the middle of the country, which  makes zero sense, as you are about to find out.
274.92 -> At the end of the 1950s, when the Cold  War was in full swing and the Red Scare  
279.3 -> had just destroyed the lives of  countless innocent Americans,  
282.24 -> the development of the original nuclear  sponge began. After some consideration,  
286.26 -> the U.S. government decided that the best location  to install their ICBM missile silos that would be  
291.78 -> far enough away from major cities were in the  plains of Colorado, Wyoming, Nebraska, Montana,  
297 -> South Dakota, and North Dakota. It was here that  the first Minuteman nuclear missile silos were  
302.28 -> constructed in the early 1960s. After the Cold  War ended, the silos in South Dakota were retired,  
307.38 -> which left the other five states as the  current nuclear sponge of the United States.
311.34 -> Since their conception, the nuclear sites  in these states have housed Atlas, Titan,  
316.08 -> Minuteman, and Peacekeeper rockets. However,  the most favorable option was the Minuteman  
320.4 -> missiles due to their solid fuel and ability  to be launched from a safe distance. The  
325.44 -> reason these states were chosen to house  the silos was because their landscapes  
328.86 -> allowed for relatively easy development while  also having the space to build Launch Control  
333.42 -> Facilities that could launch missiles  from several silos at any given time.
337.38 -> By the 1990s, there were around 1,000  Minuteman silos and approximately 100  
342.6 -> Launch Control Facilities spread across  Colorado, Wyoming, Nebraska, Montana,  
347.1 -> and North Dakota. However, there were several  other reasons why these states made such a good  
351.78 -> nuclear sponge. The distance between them  and Russia was short enough to hit Moscow,  
356.28 -> which is approximately 5,100 miles away  when traveling over the north pole. Also,  
361.26 -> the distance from the coast would give these sites  enough time to launch even if the enemy fired  
366 -> nukes from submarines along the coast. But the  biggest motivator for building the missile silos  
370.44 -> in these five states was that they were sparsely  populated, and if they were targeted, they would  
375.18 -> keep enemy missiles from hitting major cities.  For all of these reasons, if you live in Colorado,  
379.8 -> Wyoming, Nebraska, Montana, or North Dakota, you  are in the nuclear sponge of the United States.
384.6 -> During the Cold War, when both the Soviet Union  and the United States could only launch nukes  
389.4 -> at one another using ICBMs, the nuclear sponge  sort of made sense. There was still the problem  
395.04 -> of putting the populations in these states  in danger of being killed by enemy nukes,  
399.12 -> but the nuclear sponge would likely attract much  of the Soviet’s nuclear arsenal if they ever did  
404.16 -> decide to attack the United States. Today,  this argument does not hold any weight.
408 -> The main reason why the nuclear sponge is useless  now is that if Russia were to attack, they have  
413.4 -> enough nukes to hit every nuclear silo and every  major city many times over. It’s estimated that  
419.46 -> Russia has somewhere around 5,977 nuclear warheads  at its disposal. The nuclear sponge obviously  
426.42 -> doesn’t require 5,977 missiles to be destroyed.  Therefore, if Russia really wanted to attack  
432.54 -> the U.S., they could fire several nukes at each  of the five states where the ICBMs are located  
437.04 -> and still send several thousand other missiles  to hit all major cities in the United States.
441.66 -> Today, Russia and the United States can launch  nukes from submarines, which means that having  
446.1 -> a lot of stationary silos doesn’t serve any  advantage, and there is no reason to waste  
451.08 -> hundreds of nukes to destroy them. The missile  silos in the nuclear sponge of the U.S. are highly  
455.7 -> visible and would definitely be easy targets;  however, strategically, it doesn’t make any  
460.62 -> sense for Vladamir Putin or anyone else to waste  their nukes on them in the current age of warfare.
465.54 -> This brings us to another huge problem  with the nuclear sponge. The original  
469.56 -> intention was for these states to draw  nuclear fire away from major cities,  
473.52 -> but what about the people living in  Colorado, Wyoming, Nebraska, Montana,  
477.42 -> and North Dakota? It’s messed up that the United  States government willingly admits they built the  
481.92 -> nuclear sponge to sacrifice one part of the  country to save another. But that’s exactly  
485.94 -> what they did. Instead of sacrificing anyone,  we might suggest that world powers work towards  
490.8 -> getting rid of nukes altogether rather than  deciding who is worth saving and who isn’t.
495.42 -> Just having a nuclear sponge at all  is terrible, and since the original  
499.32 -> arguments as to why the U.S. needs one are no  longer valid, there should be no reason for  
503.76 -> the United States to spend money updating  it. However, billions of dollars are still  
507.72 -> being allocated to the silos in the middle of  the country. And the reason why is appalling.
512.4 -> Before we get into why money is continuously being  funneled into an obsolete U.S. nuclear sponge,  
517.62 -> let’s imagine a terrifying scenario. What  would actually happen if the military  
521.88 -> thought there were nukes headed toward  the silos in the middle of the country?
525.06 -> A group of highly trained NORAD analysts at  Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Alaska sit  
531 -> at their stations. They are constantly monitoring  thousands of data points to ensure the United  
535.14 -> States is safe from nuclear strikes. It’s the  middle of the night, but the sun is still up.  
539.82 -> During the summer months, there are almost 24  hours of daylight. It seemed to be just another  
544.26 -> normal night when suddenly, a red light  started flashing on one of the consoles.
548.22 -> The technician sitting near the station pushes  their rolling chair over to the computer to get  
552.24 -> a better look at the flashing light. Their  eyes open wide as they read the label. “I’ve  
556.32 -> got a nuclear launch indicator light going  off over here!” they yell. Everyone turns  
560.4 -> to look at them. Then a light at another  station begins to blink, then another,  
563.94 -> and another… and another. “Get the Secretary of  Defense on the Phone!” a commander yells. Everyone  
569.34 -> scrambles to figure out exactly where the nukes  are being fired from and where they are headed.
573.48 -> The President of the United States is startled  out of his slumber by a dozen secret service  
577.74 -> agents bursting into his bedroom. “Sir, we  need to get you to the bunker immediately,”  
581.52 -> the lead agent says. There is no time for  the president to get dressed. He throws on  
586.02 -> a robe and is escorted deep underground, where  the Secretary of Defense waits for him along  
590.46 -> with several other high-ranking generals.  “What is going on?” the President asks.
594.06 -> “We just received word from NORAD,” the Secretary  of Defense responds. “They are tracking several  
598.68 -> nuclear missiles headed toward our Minuteman silos  in the midwest.” There is very little time for  
602.82 -> discussion. The generals lay the options out on  the table, but the President must make the final  
607.02 -> decision. It has been about ten minutes since  the warning lights started flashing at NORAD,  
611.4 -> and whatever path the President is going  to choose, he has to choose it now.
615.06 -> The President’s predicament is made worse  by the fact that there is no way to know if  
619.08 -> the sensors at NORAD are malfunctioning or if  there are actually dozens of nukes rocketing  
623.88 -> toward the middle of the country. Therefore, the  President has to use his best judgment and the  
628.5 -> data available to make a choice that could  change the world forever. On the one hand,  
632.28 -> he could just wait and let the events unfolding  play out. If the nukes really were launched,  
636.48 -> the middle of the country would be decimated, and  thousands of U.S. missiles would be obliterated.
640.98 -> However, the United States would still  have thousands of nuclear weapons still  
644.88 -> active aboard submarines and in storage  sites around the country. The fear is  
648.96 -> that if the sensors are malfunctioning and  the readings coming into NORAD are wrong,  
652.56 -> the President could inadvertently  start a nuclear war if he launches  
655.86 -> the U.S.’s arsenal. This would be a fatal  mistake that could destroy the world.
659.82 -> The President has to think hard before coming  to a decision, but he is out of time. “Hold  
664.68 -> your fire,” he whispers to the generals  sitting around the table. “We built the  
668.1 -> nuclear sponge for this very reason. We will know  soon enough if nuclear missiles really were fired  
672.48 -> at the United States. I am not about to start  World War III over a malfunctioning computer.”
675.9 -> The President and his generals wait for what seems  like an eternity. They receive confirmation that  
680.94 -> the skies are clear. The warning lights were  triggered by a series of unfortunate events  
685.14 -> that mimicked a nuclear attack. Russia was testing  several new rockets that it had just developed.  
690.06 -> A series of solar flares scrambled radiation  readings aboard surveillance satellites. And  
694.68 -> a meteor shower was responsible for the  atmospheric disturbances detected. If the  
698.88 -> President had been too hasty and fired  the United States’s nukes prematurely,  
702.48 -> he would have caused all-out war and  the irradiation of our entire planet.
706.38 -> This is a fictitious scenario that is  based on very real events. There have  
711.12 -> been at least three false alarms in the  past that could have led to nuclear war.  
714.66 -> All three of these events came about due to  malfunctioning equipment. Around 40 years ago,  
719.34 -> heads of the Department of Defense received  a very ominous phone call in the middle of  
723 -> the night. The analysts working at a nuclear  defense office acquired data that indicated  
727.56 -> 200 ICBMs were launched from the Soviet Union  and headed straight for the United States.
732.42 -> Everyone scrambled to identify  if the readings were accurate.  
735.42 -> The world was on the brink of war when it  was determined that the signals were the  
739.38 -> result of a computer glitch. Everyone  stood down, and the planet was saved.
742.98 -> An even more terrifying event occurred in the  Soviet Union. On September 26, 1983, the Soviet  
748.68 -> Union’s early-warning radar system showed that  the United States had launched five ICBM nukes at  
753.78 -> them. An officer in the Soviet Air Defence Force  named Stanislav Petrov suspected that this was  
758.82 -> a false alarm and double-checked the readings.  Rather than immediately calling Yuri Andropov,  
763.98 -> the current dictator of the Soviet Union,  and causing nuclear war to break out,  
768.54 -> Petrov waited for corroborating evidence.  When none came, it was clear that the supposed  
773.4 -> missiles launched from the United States were  just the result of a satellite malfunction.
777.3 -> It’s these types of scenarios that should  make us nervous when there are unstable  
780.84 -> dictators or presidents in control of  nations that have nuclear weapons. All  
784.62 -> it would take is one malfunctioning  computer or one mistaken reading to  
788.46 -> plunge the world into nuclear war. And  in a nuclear war, there are no winners.
792.66 -> More recently, a bigger problem has been  brought up around having a large number  
796.62 -> of nuclear missile silos in a relatively  concentrated area of the United States.  
800.52 -> As the nuclear sponge is upgraded and more  sophisticated launch systems are put into place,  
804.84 -> there have been concerns that vulnerabilities  may allow hackers to access parts of the nuclear  
809.46 -> weapons’ programming. This would obviously lead  to a devastating series of events. If hackers  
814.5 -> ever gained access to the missiles in the nuclear  sponge, they could hold them for ransom. The U.S.  
819.24 -> would likely have to pay huge sums of money  to regain control of its nukes and then would  
823.56 -> have to figure out how the hackers got into  the system to keep it from happening again.
826.92 -> In a worst-case scenario, hackers or terrorists  that gained access to a nuclear device by  
832.2 -> infiltrating its software could detonate the  nuke right in its silo. This would cause a  
837.18 -> massive amount of destruction and would irradiate  the surrounding area. Even more horrifying would  
842.16 -> be if the hackers managed to launch the nukes.  Perhaps they’d target populated U.S. cities,  
846.78 -> which were the one thing that the nuclear sponge  was meant to protect. Connecting land-based  
851.52 -> nuclear missiles to computer systems that hackers  might infiltrate is the stuff of nightmares.
855.9 -> The nuclear sponge is obsolete, dangerous, and  puts the lives of certain American citizens ahead  
861.36 -> of others. The nuclear silos in the middle of  the country should be retired and demolished. And  
866.04 -> since all of these facts are rather obvious, you  may be wondering why the United States still has a  
870.24 -> nuclear sponge. Or an even more pressing question  is: why are huge amounts of money being funneled  
875.7 -> into an outdated Cold War era set of silos that  no longer serve any strategic significance?
880.92 -> Like the answer to so many baffling  questions that come out of politics  
884.34 -> and the government's choices,  it all has to do with money.
887.04 -> It has been reported that the United States  plans to spend around $264 billion on its  
892.26 -> next-generation ICBM program. This  money would be used to upgrade the  
895.98 -> silos and missiles in the nuclear sponge  of the country. This is not being done to  
900.06 -> enhance the defense capabilities of  the U.S. or even to make the nuclear  
903.48 -> sponge more attractive to enemy missiles.  Instead, the tremendous amount of money  
907.14 -> being spent on upgrades is the result  of greedy politicians and corporations.
911.1 -> Companies like Northrop Grumman get paid vast  amounts of money to develop missile tech for  
916.14 -> the U.S. Military. This means that if the funding  for programs such as the nuclear sponge ran dry,  
921.36 -> it would severely hurt the company’s profits.  Therefore, defense contractors tend to do a  
926.34 -> lot of shady things to ensure that the government  keeps spending money on missile tech. To be fair,  
930.54 -> Northrop Grumman isn’t the only private business  contracted by the U.S. government, and it’s not  
935.28 -> the only company benefitting greatly from money  being spent on unnecessary military technology.
939.9 -> However, in 2018 Northrop Grumman contributed  5.6 million dollars to specific campaigns to  
946.14 -> ensure candidates who supported their cause  were elected. Northrop Grumman spends more  
950.64 -> money lobbying than any other defense  contractor and only slightly less than  
954.96 -> tech companies like Amazon and Facebook. These  huge corporations pay unfathomable amounts of  
960.3 -> money to influence the laws being made and the  way the U.S. government spends its funds. This,  
965.16 -> of course, is technically illegal,  yet it still happens all the time.
968.82 -> The craziest part is that whenever congress  tries to pass a bill to reduce the number of  
972.96 -> missiles in the nuclear sponge states,  they are often met with resistance from  
976.44 -> representatives of those very states. You would  think that politicians and constituents would no  
981.36 -> longer want nuclear weapons within their  borders, especially if it's going to put  
984.66 -> them in danger of being blown up. However,  this doesn’t seem to be the case. In fact,  
989.04 -> politicians from North Dakota, Wyoming, and  Montana are known as the “Missile Caucus”  
993.84 -> because they constantly try to shoot down any  bills that would remove nukes from their states.
998.22 -> Why do politicians and people living  in the nuclear sponge of the United  
1002 -> States want to keep nukes there?  The answer, once again, is money.
1005.54 -> The building, maintenance, and upgrading of  nuclear silos and weapons creates an enormous  
1009.8 -> amount of jobs and brings in a ton of money to  these states. Many citizens living within the  
1014.3 -> nuclear sponge work for the U.S. government or  one of the defense contractors that maintain the  
1018.74 -> missiles and their silos. Therefore, if the  government ever decided to remove the silos  
1023.06 -> and get rid of the nuclear sponge in Colorado,  Wyoming, Nebraska, Montana, and North Dakota,  
1027.68 -> tens of thousands of people could become  unemployed. Obviously, many in these states  
1032.54 -> don’t want this, which is why they vote to  keep nuclear weapons within their borders.
1036.62 -> Until the U.S. government is willing to admit  that the nuclear sponge idea from the Cold War  
1041.54 -> is no longer valid and can break their ties with  defense contractors who rely on the nukes as a  
1046.52 -> source of income, it’s highly unlikely that the  silos in the middle of the country will be retired  
1051.02 -> any time soon. It can’t be stated enough that  the nuclear sponge no longer has any strategic  
1055.94 -> significance. Yes, if nuclear war broke out, the  U.S. could launch its missiles from these silos,  
1061.1 -> but at that point, who cares? If it ever came  to nuclear war, the world would come to an end.
1066.02 -> The amount of nuclear weapons that are still  active between the U.S. and Russia is appalling.  
1070.4 -> It’s clear that land-based missile silos serve no  purpose and are outdated because you can literally  
1075.68 -> find them on Google Maps. The real threat in terms  of nuclear wars are submarines and stealth bombers  
1081.56 -> that can deliver their payload anywhere in the  world at a moment's notice. The nuclear sponge  
1085.94 -> hasn’t been a valid strategy for a very long  time, and no matter how many upgrades go into the  
1090.56 -> silos in the middle of the United States, it will  likely never become a good strategy in the future.
1094.4 -> Even though some jobs are created by building and  maintaining nuclear silos, many more jobs could  
1099.5 -> be created if the silos were decommissioned  and the land was used for other purposes,  
1103.52 -> such as harnessing renewable energy. Also, if  the U.S. government decided to remove the silos,  
1108.56 -> it would not only save tons of money, but  it would also reduce the threat of these  
1112.46 -> states being nuked in the future, which  should be a win for everyone living there.
1116.12 -> Perhaps the best argument for getting rid  of the nuclear sponge in the United States  
1119.84 -> is that the money being used to fund it could  go to other programs. Imagine how much of a  
1124.58 -> difference it would make if the 100 billion  dollars spent on upgrading nuclear missiles  
1128.6 -> and their silos went towards improving health  care and education instead. Even if the U.S.  
1133.4 -> removed its nuclear sponge, it still has  plenty of nukes to wage war and destroy the  
1137.6 -> world if it really wants to. Therefore,  the U.S. might as well retire the Cold  
1141.44 -> War-era nuclear sponge and invest the money into  programs that might actually make a difference.
1145.82 -> Now watch “US World War 3 Plan.” Or check  out “US Plans for a Nuclear Attack.”

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ej-PCoUS9PI