THREAD: Now would be a good time to revisit what senior military leaders have said on the record about how they would respond if Donald Trump were to order them to launch one or more nuclear weapons—which, to be clear, he can do at any time on his own authority.
At a hearing of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on November 14, 2017, retired US Strategic Command commander Gen. Robert Kehler testified that if ordered to use nuclear weapons outside of the legally-vetted, pre-planned options available to the president, he would say ...
“I have a question about this … and I’m not ready to proceed.” Watch (starting at 49:05): c-span.org/video/?437317-…
Asked by Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI), “And then what happens?,” Kehler sheepishly and not very reassuringly replied, “Well, as I say, I don’t know, exactly. You know, no … fortunately we’ve never, these are all hypothetical scenarios.”
On November 18, 2017, at the Halifax International Security Forum in Nova Scotia, Canada, USAF General John Hyten, commander of US STRATCOM (and now vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff) said, “I provide advice to the president, he’ll tell me what to do.“
Hyten continued that if Trump illegally ordered him to use nuclear weapons, “I’m gonna say, ’Mr. President, that’s illegal.’ And guess what he’s gonna do? He’s gonna say, ‘What would be legal?’ ...”
”And we’ll come up with options, of a mix of capabilities to respond to whatever the situation is. And that’s the way it works. It’s not that complicated.”
Today, the United States officially withdrew from the 1992 Open Skies Treaty, having given notice of its intentions on May 22, citing fictitious Russian "violations." In less than four years, Donald Trump and his unilateralist wrecking crew of an administration have abandoned ...
the 2016 Paris Agreement on climate change, the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (the Iran nuclear deal), the 1987 Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty, and the OST. And New START—the last treaty constraining US and Russian nuclear arsenals—expires on February 5, 2021.
In a final slap at the innovative, multilateral, functioning, confidence-building Open Skies Treaty, the Trump administration is taking steps to make it physically impossible for future administrations to participate in the agreement:
Tonight in 1975, the guided missile cruiser USS Belknap (CG-26) collided with the aircraft carrier USS John F. Kennedy (CV-67) when the Belknap turned into the Kennedy's path in rough seas during night-flying exercises in the Mediterranean Sea about 70 miles east of Sicily.
The Kennedy's massive flight deck sliced into the Belknap's superstructure, severing a fuel line on the Kennedy and setting off multiple fires on the Belknap, which burned out of control for two-and-a-half hours and came within 40 feet of the Belknap's nuclear weapons magazine.
Inside that magazine were Terrier surface-to-air missiles armed with W45 nuclear warheads (with a yield of 1 or 5 kilotons). The Kennedy was also carrying nuclear weapons at the time of the accident: approximately 100 air-delivered gravity bombs.
Tonight in 1983, more than 100 million Americans saw multiple thermonuclear weapons destroy Lawrence, Kansas, in "The Day After" on ABC. A.C. Nielsen Co. reported that 62% of television sets that night were tuned in the film. I watched in my college dorm lounge. Where were you?
Nothing can re-create the feeling of collectively watching that night—during rapidly escalating tensions with the Soviet Union while the Reagan administration openly advocated fighting and winning a nuclear war—but you can stream “The Day After” here:
Here is the parental advisory ABC ran before the film began regarding its depiction of a nuclear war: "The emotional impacts of these scenes may be unusually disturbing, and we are therefore recommending that very young children not be permitted to watch."
THREAD: Fifty-eight years ago today—October 27, 1962—was arguably the most dangerous day of the Cuban Missile Crisis, a day when tensions ran so high that World War III could have started by accident three separate times.
While flying a pre-planned air-sampling mission out of Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska, over the North Pole to collect debris from Soviet atmospheric nuclear tests, Capt. Charles Maultsby’s U-2 accidentally strayed into Soviet airspace for more than an hour …
starting at 8:00am Alaska time (Noon in Washington, DC) because he was blinded by the aurora borealis and unable to navigate accurately using the stars. MiG fighters were scrambled from Pevek Airport on the Chukotka Peninsula at 11:56am EDT (and a little later from Anadyr) …
Drunkenness and nuclear weapons are never, ever a good combination, whether or not grilled chicken is involved. independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-n…
Talk about burying the lede: "HMS Vigilant is one of the four submarines … which make up the UK's nuclear deterrent. The submarine was reportedly at the centre of a suspected Covid-19 outbreak following a recent port visit to the US Navy Submarine Base Kings Bay in Georgia."
During a recent visit to Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay in Georgia, several of the HMS Vigilant crew disobeyed orders and traveled as far as 200 miles away to visit strip clubs, bars, and restaurants, infecting more than 30 crewmates with COVID-19. news.usni.org/2020/10/14/u-k…