Originally posted by ggwâ?¢:
Who were the talking heads? (skip the Byrne/Frantz/Weymouth/Harrison jokes please)
And why do they find this likely? North Korea? Pakistan after an Islamist coup? I mean, who has the capability to deliver a 100 kiloton explosion to the U.S. mainland?
I think the more likely scenario is the slow bleed -- bomb a few malls, take out some rail and trucking infrastructure -- and make us suffer under uncertainty and an anemic economy over an extended period.
Originally posted by Mr.Shagslikeadonkey:
No, it was Aaron Brown. The talking heads were saying that a 100 kiloton attack was rather likely. That kind of puts the fear into me.
[/b]
You're probably correct that a conventional explosive attack is more feasible
right now. However, certain cargos could make a big enough bang--and mushroom cloud--that the immediate panic factor would be comparable to a nuclear attack. I have read that a fully loaded LNG tanker would actually pack the wallop of a tactical nuke.
The prospect of al-Quaeda getting its hands on a real nuke, unfortunately, may be less remote than you think. The likely source would be Pakistan, which has decentralized both the physical locations and comand-and-control infrastructure for its nukes, in order to head off a pre-emptive strike by India. Some of those bad boys are parked in places, and under the control of generals who used to be patrons of the Taliban, which make their safekeeping in the event of a coup or major civil disturbance fairly problematic. These are existing, deployable, mobile, and ready-to-go ordnance, not a hypothetical build-from-scratch job for terrorist-sympathizing mad scientists.