What Happens If There’s A Nuclear Attack
Aug 10, 2023
What Happens If There’s A Nuclear Attack
Nearly 70% of Americans surveyed by the American Psychological Association said they worry the invasion of Ukraine could potentially lead to nuclear war and they fear that we could be at the beginning stages of World War III. Researchers estimate there are about 12,700 nuclear weapons spread between nine countries, with the United States and Russia holding the majority, but experts consider an attack to be unlikely. Watch the video above to learn how a nuclear attack could play out. The world watched uneasily on Feb. 24 when Russian troops, under the orders of President Vladimir Putin, invaded Ukraine. “The prospect of nuclear conflict, once unthinkable, is now back within the realm of possibility,” U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said March 14. Nearly 70% of Americans surveyed by the American Psychological Association said they “are worried the invasion of Ukraine is going to lead to nuclear war, and that they fear that we are at the beginning stages of World War III.” Researchers estimate there are approximately 12,700 nuclear weapons spread between nine countries, with the United States and Russia holding the majority. Researchers and government officials stress that a nuclear attack is very unlikely. “We are assessing President Putin’s directive and, at this time, we see no reason to change our own alert levels,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Feb. 28. “As long as these weapons are around, the possibility will always be there that they will actually be used,” said Alejandra Munoz, a project officer at the Dutch peace organization PAX. Researchers, academics and advocacy groups for risk reduction and nuclear disarmament have written reports detailing what a hypothetical attack could look like and the long-term impact it could have on the planet and society. » Subscribe to CNBC: https://cnb.cx/SubscribeCNBC » Subscribe to CNBC TV: https://cnb.cx/SubscribeCNBCtelevision About CNBC: From ‘Wall Street’ to ‘Main Street’ to award winning original documentaries and Reality TV series, CNBC has you covered. Experience special sneak peeks of your favorite shows, exclusive video and more. Connect with CNBC News Online Get the latest news: https://www.cnbc.com/ Follow CNBC on LinkedIn: https://cnb.cx/LinkedInCNBC Follow CNBC News on Facebook: https://cnb.cx/LikeCNBC Follow CNBC News on Twitter: https://cnb.cx/FollowCNBC Follow CNBC News on Instagram: https://cnb.cx/InstagramCNBC #CNBC What Happens If There’s A Nuclear Attack
Content
0.18 -> The prospect of nuclear conflict, once unthinkable, is now
back
5.25 -> within the realm of possibility.
7.2 -> A single modern nuclear weapon hitting a major American
city would
11.73 -> be many times worse than the Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
15.72 -> It would be a historic destruction of
20.13 -> unbelievable proportions.
21.72 -> 69% of Americans surveyed said they are worried the invasion
of Ukraine could lead to
26.31 -> nuclear war. And they fear that we could be at the
beginning stages of World War Three.
30.96 -> But the Biden administration is assuring Americans the
threat isn't critical.
35.16 -> We are assessing President Putin's directive, and at this
time, we see no reason to
39.84 -> change our own alert levels.
42.33 -> Even before the invasion of Ukraine.
44.73 -> Over the past few years, the norms and the agreements that
kind of put guardrails on nuclear
49.62 -> weapons have really eroded.
52.35 -> It's a weapon that's not designed to kill soldiers.
55.41 -> It's designed to destroy cities or take out critical
infrastructure.
59.67 -> If you are a activist that cares about climate change or
reproductive health
64.65 -> care or government spending, you should care about nuclear
weapons.
68.73 -> As long as these weapons are around, the possibility will
always be there that they will actually be used.
73.23 -> So while a nuclear attack is very unlikely, here's how it
would hypothetically
78.03 -> look and how the US could respond.
82.89 -> Researchers estimate that there are approximately 12,700
nuclear weapons around the
87.72 -> world, spread across nine different countries: the United
States, Russia, France, China,
92.7 -> the United Kingdom, Pakistan, India, Israel and North
Korea.
96.84 -> The U.S. and Russia hold the majority.
99.18 -> As of 2022, the U.S.
100.92 -> has more than 5,400 nuclear weapons, while Russia has close
to 6,000.
105.09 -> The total explosive power of all the nuclear weapons today
is
110.19 -> so large that if you took a Hiroshima bomb and dropped it
every 2
114.91 -> hours, 12 times a day, every day, starting in 1945, on
August
119.53 -> 6th, up till today, you still couldn't use up our current
arsenal in terms of its explosive power.
124.26 -> It can be used as one single nuclear weapon, which already
has
128.58 -> devastating humanitarian consequences.
131.04 -> Researchers, academics and advocacy groups have written
reports detailing what a hypothetical
135.96 -> attack could look like.
137.22 -> There would be blast, there would be radioactivity, and
there would be fires, and those would be
142.05 -> horrific and horrible direct effects on the people where
the bombs would be dropped.
146.85 -> In 2014, the Dutch peace organization PAX put together a
report examining what
151.74 -> would happen if a nuclear bomb exploded in a cargo ship in
the port of Rotterdam in the
156.3 -> Netherlands, where PAX is based.
158.28 -> Susi Snyder was one of the authors of that report.
161.16 -> And we took it as the least impactful way it could explode,
which is at the
165.72 -> ground level.
167.4 -> It's not dropped from the air.
169.26 -> So it minimizes fallout, it minimizes blast.
172.14 -> Eight thousand people dying immediately who would find
themselves within one kilometers of
176.73 -> distance. Others suffering from severe burns and other
injuries.
180.78 -> And then there's, of course, radiation, which over the
course of a few days would result in the
185.55 -> deaths of another estimated 60,000 people, and double that
amount would
190.53 -> maybe not survive but would have massive health
consequences.
194.01 -> Location can significantly change how destructive an
explosion is.
198.3 -> So you have an explosion on Wall Street.
200.07 -> You're going to have blast damage probably into the Lower
East
204.93 -> Side and to the East Village that far away.
207.21 -> And you're going to have fire damage, maybe Upper East
Side, maybe even
212.19 -> up to Harlem. And that's in New York, where the design and
the buildings of New York
217.08 -> actually contain things in a great way.
219.09 -> If it's a smaller city, a lower city, a city that's more
spread out.
222.27 -> Where we did our study around Rotterdam, Rotterdam does not
have a lot of skyscrapers.
226.11 -> So the blast damage and the impact of the firestorm is much
greater if something
230.58 -> happens. No adequate medical response would be
235.17 -> possible. There's a high number of deaths, the destruction
of infrastructure.
240.03 -> And then, of course, because of the radiation, medical
personnel would not
244.98 -> be able to come close and tend to those in need.
249.69 -> The plans I've seen in the US, the plans are you isolate the
center, the
254.67 -> very center of the explosion.
255.93 -> You don't allow emergency services in there and that's just
it.
259.44 -> You hope people can help each other, pull each other out of
rubble and you triage around
264.33 -> that where you can have more services and the broader
concentric circles the further
268.95 -> out. But because that fireball also sets everything on fire
and goes out
273.81 -> from there, a firestorm might erupt.
276.48 -> If Putin feels that his efforts are stalled.
279.63 -> There's a possibility of a desperation move.
282.27 -> He could use a nuclear weapon in a demonstration strike
outside, in a
287.19 -> rural area or even at sea, just to say, look, I've got
these weapons that I could use them.
292.47 -> I personally think that's not that likely because that to
me would signal irresolution.
297.36 -> What's more likely is that he could use a nuclear weapon on
a Ukrainian target,
302.31 -> use it on a city, and then demand that Ukraine government
has unconditional
306.99 -> surrender. That's what we did in 1945, Hiroshima and
Nagasaki.
311.91 -> I believe that that would be a war crime.
314.55 -> Beyond the immediate catastrophe, a nuclear attack would
have a serious long term impact on
319.53 -> the planet. A 2014 report from the International Campaign
to Abolish Nuclear
324.09 -> Weapons concluded that a nuclear blast anywhere could lead
to the collapse of public services
328.98 -> infrastructures, which would disrupt the entire economy,
including communication networks and food
333.81 -> supplies.
334.65 -> If there was a nuclear war, bombs would be dropped on cities
and industrial areas which
339.63 -> would burn and the fires would produce smoke which would be
pumped
344.49 -> up into the atmosphere.
346.11 -> And a lot of it would get up into the stratosphere where
there's no rain to wash it out.
350.58 -> And so the amount of climate change we would get would
depend on how much smoke there would
355.2 -> be once our food supplies ran out.
357.42 -> If we couldn't grow any more food, there would be famine,
and so many more people could
362.19 -> die in the rest of the world.
363.84 -> For example, if there was a war between the U.S.
365.61 -> and Russia, more people in China could die from starvation.
368.73 -> And then the U.S. and Russia combined.
370.59 -> Survival is going to become the number one most important
thing that we will have left if we
375.39 -> ever do see a full blown nuclear war.
377.13 -> If the U.S. or an ally nation were attacked with a nuclear
weapon, there's a chance the U.S.
381.99 -> would respond with a nuclear attack of its own.
384.27 -> The Defense Department runs exercises to try to simulate
various military scenarios in
389.1 -> order to practice how it would respond.
391.17 -> These exercises are called wargames.
393.84 -> Wargames are used by academics by people in government to
basically
399.42 -> lay out a scenario that could happen and go through it step
by step to see
404.01 -> how things might play out.
406.14 -> Sometimes these war games simulate a nuclear attack on
either the U.S.
409.98 -> or one of its allies.
411.45 -> In February 2020, the Pentagon disclosed it had conducted a
military exercise
416.37 -> which simulated what it called a limited nuclear exchange
with Russia.
420.78 -> According to a senior Defense Department official, this
exercise featured a hypothetical scenario
425.58 -> where Russia attacked NATO territory.
427.59 -> In Europe, the military personnel undergoing the exercise
decided to respond with a nuclear
432.24 -> weapon. But these war games don't always end in a nuclear
response from the US.
437.31 -> Journalist Fred Kaplan reports on a
441.09 -> 2016 war game held inside the Obama
445.98 -> White House in which the Russians intervened in one of the
Baltic countries, a
450.78 -> NATO country, and they used a single nuclear weapon against
a NATO airbase
455.55 -> trying to end the war.
457.05 -> The United States had to decide what would we do under that
circumstance?
460.32 -> And they made a decision in the first round that we're
going to respond conventionally in a large scale
465.24 -> retaliation, presumably against the base from which the
Russians had launched this
470.07 -> initial nuclear attack.
471.96 -> That, to my mind, was the appropriate thing to do, to be
tough, firm,
476.73 -> but to de-escalate rather than escalate the war.
479.55 -> But in the second round of that war game, military personnel
undergoing the exercise
484.02 -> reportedly decided to respond with a nuclear exchange.
487.86 -> When told If we, the US uses a nuclear weapon on Russian
territory, they
492.84 -> will consider that to be an attack by the United States and
will respond attacking the United
497.52 -> States directly.
498.99 -> And so in this war game, the principals reportedly chose to
use nuclear
503.49 -> weapons and targeted them at Belarus rather than Russia,
trying to
508.68 -> stop escalation. Even though Belarus wasn't involved in the
initial war game
513.09 -> operation.
513.96 -> In the United States, the president has the sole authority
to order the use of nuclear weapons using
518.91 -> what is frequently referred to as the nuclear football.
522 -> The president is the only person who makes the decision to
launch those weapons, and sometimes
526.92 -> they have as little as 7 minutes to make that choice, which
doesn't really allow for a lot of critical thinking.
532.31 -> Presidential administrations typically publish a nuclear
posture review within the first year
537.2 -> in office. This document outlines the White House's policy
on the use of nuclear weapons and arms
542 -> control.
542.6 -> President Biden, as a candidate, said that he supported a
policy of "sole
547.13 -> purpose", which is that the only purpose of nuclear weapons
should be to deter
552.11 -> the use of nuclear weapons.
553.94 -> As of April 5, 2022.
555.95 -> The Biden administration had not released its Nuclear
Posture Review.
559.67 -> To get an idea of what to expect from the Biden
administration, experts look to the Obama White
564.5 -> House for precedent.
565.73 -> While the Obama administration pledged in its Posture
Review to accelerate efforts to prevent
570.62 -> nuclear terrorism, it did not go as far as adopting a "sole
purpose" policy.
575.24 -> I think already we were not expecting the Biden
administration to adopt this
580.04 -> policy of sole purpose because of the
584.84 -> current climate, which even before the actual war was very
bad with Russia,
589.7 -> as well as concerns about China's growing arsenal in it,
and a concern that our
594.56 -> allies who rely on us for their defense would be unnerved.
600.58 -> There's a paradox when it comes to nuclear deterrence.
605.23 -> Nuclear deterrence works only if an adversary believes that
you might
609.55 -> actually execute a nuclear attack if you are attacked
first.
614.95 -> So the US government and other governments practice nuclear
war
619.99 -> all the time so that we are confident that we could
retaliate
624.94 -> if necessary.
625.99 -> That creates an inherent tension because adversaries don't
know whether we would
630.34 -> only use nuclear weapons in retaliation or whether we might
use them first.
635.2 -> The theory of mutually assured destruction has been around
for almost as long as nuclear weapons
640 -> have, and we have been at risk of nuclear war for as long
as nuclear weapons have
644.89 -> been around.
645.61 -> There have been many efforts to create international
agreements in order to reduce risk.
650.26 -> The Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons was
an international initiative,
655.18 -> first launched in 1968 by the United Nations.
658.15 -> Its goal is to work toward a world without nuclear weapons.
661.9 -> A total of 191 states have joined the treaty, including
five nuclear weapons
666.46 -> states.
667.33 -> States agreed to negotiate nuclear disarmament and would
also work toward reducing their nuclear
672.31 -> arsenals. But that's not happening.
675.35 -> On the contrary, actually, states are all nuclear armed
states are continuing to
680.24 -> modernize their nuclear arsenals also and spending
686.54 -> a lot of money on it as well.
688.1 -> The US and Russia also signed a separate agreement in 2010
called the New START
692.63 -> Treaty.
693.23 -> It's a treaty that's still enforced today and in fact that
is the only treaty
698 -> right now that regulates the limits US and Russian nuclear
forces.
702.5 -> 18 times a year, United States inspectors go to Russian
territory
708.23 -> and literally look at their strategic nuclear weapons and
vice versa.
713 -> Now, these inspections have been paused because of COVID,
but not because of the
717.86 -> political situation.
719.57 -> And in fact, I think the inspections will be resuming soon.
723.2 -> And there are other means of verification provided for in
the
727.37 -> treaty, including we send each other notifications every
time
731.72 -> a delivery vehicle, a plane, a sub, an ICBM
736.69 -> that's mobile. If it leaves the place where it normally is,
we send an instant
741.5 -> notification to Russia.
742.76 -> So we have complete pictures at all times of where each
side's nuclear weapons are.
747.47 -> I personally would like to see the United States move
towards a no first use policy.
752.36 -> I just think this is not the time to be doing that right
now given this particular
756.77 -> crisis. I do think that we should say that we will
761.75 -> respond appropriately.
763.79 -> We will never target civilian targets and that we
768.17 -> will use our nuclear forces against military targets only
in
772.85 -> response to grave threats to national security.
776 -> I am not saying that nuclear war would end the world.
780.08 -> It would just end the world as we know it.
782.24 -> But humans are resilient creatures, and we know how
787.22 -> to work together when we have to.
Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gObuL6CcRF0