Irwin Redlener: How to survive a nuclear attack

Irwin Redlener on surviving a nuclear attack

117,113 views ・ 2008-09-09

TED


Videoyu oynatmak için lütfen aşağıdaki İngilizce altyazılara çift tıklayınız.

00:12
So, a big question that we're facing now
0
12160
3000
Oldukça uzun yıllardır ve şu an hâlâ
00:15
and have been for quite a number of years now:
1
15160
3000
karşılaştığımız büyük soru:
00:18
are we at risk of a nuclear attack?
2
18160
3000
nükleer saldıri riski altında mıyız?
00:21
Now, there's a bigger question
3
21160
2000
Şimdi ise, daha büyük bir soru var
00:23
that's probably actually more important than that,
4
23160
3000
muhtemelen bu soru bir oncekinden daha önemli,
00:26
is the notion of permanently eliminating
5
26160
4000
nukleer saldiri
00:30
the possibility of a nuclear attack,
6
30160
2000
olasılığıni tamamen elimine etmek
00:32
eliminating the threat altogether.
7
32160
2000
bu tehditi ortandan kaldirmak.
00:34
And I would like to make a case to you that
8
34160
3000
Ve size soyle bir aciklamada bulunmak istiyorum
00:37
over the years since we first developed atomic weaponry,
9
37160
3000
yillar boyunca atomik silahlari ilk gelistirmemizden bu yana,
00:40
until this very moment,
10
40160
2000
su anda bulundugumuz zamana kadar,
00:42
we've actually lived in a dangerous nuclear world
11
42160
3000
aslinda tehlikeli nukleer bur dunyada yasadik
00:45
that's characterized by two phases,
12
45160
3000
bu iki faz ile katagorize edilebilir,
00:48
which I'm going to go through with you right now.
13
48160
3000
ve su anda sizinle beraber bunlarin uzerinden gececegim.
00:51
First of all, we started off the nuclear age in 1945.
14
51160
4000
Öncelikle, nükleer çağı 1945'de başlattık.
00:55
The United States had developed a couple of atomic weapons
15
55160
2000
Birleşik Devletler, Manhattan Projesi'nde bir çift atomik
00:57
through the Manhattan Project,
16
57160
2000
silah geliştirdi,
00:59
and the idea was very straightforward:
17
59160
2000
ve düşünce oldukca basitti:
01:01
we would use the power of the atom
18
61160
2000
atomun enerjisini kullanacaktık
01:03
to end the atrocities and the horror
19
63160
2000
Avrupa ve Pasifik'e yayılmış olan
01:05
of this unending World War II
20
65160
2000
2.Dünya Savaşı'nın
01:07
that we'd been involved in in Europe and in the Pacific.
21
67160
3000
vahşet ve korkusunu sonlandırmak için.
01:10
And in 1945,
22
70160
3000
Ve 1945'de,
01:13
we were the only nuclear power.
23
73160
2000
tek nükleer güç bizdik.
01:15
We had a few nuclear weapons,
24
75160
2000
Birkaç nükleer silahımız vardı,
01:17
two of which we dropped on Japan, in Hiroshima,
25
77160
2000
ikisini Japonyada Hiroşimaya ve birkaç gün sonra
01:19
a few days later in Nagasaki, in August 1945,
26
79160
3000
ise Nagasakiye attığımız, 1945in Agustos ayinda
01:22
killing about 250,000 people between those two.
27
82160
3000
bu ikisi nedeniyle 250,000 civarında insan öldü.
01:25
And for a few years,
28
85160
2000
Birkaç yıl süresince
01:27
we were the only nuclear power on Earth.
29
87160
3000
Dünyadaki tek nükleer güç bizdik.
01:30
But by 1949, the Soviet Union had decided
30
90160
4000
Fakat 1949 da Soviyet Birligi suna karar verdi
01:34
it was unacceptable to have us as the only nuclear power,
31
94160
3000
sadece bizim nukleer guc olmamiz kabuledilemezdi,
01:37
and they began to match what the United States had developed.
32
97160
3000
ve Birlesik Devletlerin gelistirdikleriyle denklesmeye basladilar.
01:41
And from 1949 to 1985
33
101160
3000
Ve 1949 dan 1985 e kadar
01:44
was an extraordinary time
34
104160
3000
olaganustu zamanlardi
01:47
of a buildup of a nuclear arsenal
35
107160
3000
"nukleer klup" olarak tanindi.
01:50
that no one could possibly have imagined
36
110160
2000
Ve olagan ustu bir zamandi,
01:52
back in the 1940s.
37
112160
2000
ve bazi mentelitelerinin uzerinden gecegim
01:54
So by 1985 -- each of those red bombs up here
38
114160
3000
biz -- Amerikalilarin ve dunyanin geri kalaninin tecrube edindigi
01:57
is equivalent of a thousands warheads --
39
117160
3000
Fakat sadece sunun uzerinde durmak istiyorum yuzde 95
02:00
the world had
40
120160
2000
Birlesik Devletlerin ve Sovyet Birliginin.
02:02
65,000 nuclear warheads,
41
122160
3000
!985 ten sonra ve Sovyet Birliginin ayrilmasindan once,
02:05
and seven members of something
42
125160
2000
silahsizlanmaya baslatik
02:07
that came to be known as the "nuclear club."
43
127160
3000
nukleer olarak.
02:10
And it was an extraordinary time,
44
130160
2000
toplam 21,000 civarina.
02:12
and I am going to go through some of the mentality
45
132160
2000
Basa cikilmasi zor bir rakam
02:14
that we -- that Americans and the rest of the world were experiencing.
46
134160
3000
cunku yaptigimiz
02:17
But I want to just point out to you that 95 percent
47
137160
3000
Muhtemelen hale daha kullanilabilirler.
02:20
of the nuclear weapons at any particular time
48
140160
3000
fakat birseyleri sayma yontemleri , ki kompleks
02:23
since 1985 -- going forward, of course --
49
143160
2000
1/3 une sahip oldugumuz kanisindayiz
02:25
were part of the arsenals
50
145160
2000
daha once elimizde olan nukleer silahlarin.
02:27
of the United States and the Soviet Union.
51
147160
3000
Fakat biz , ayni zaman periyodunda,
02:30
After 1985, and before the break up of the Soviet Union,
52
150160
3000
nukleer klube iki tane uye daha ekledik:
02:33
we began to disarm
53
153160
2000
Pakistan ve Kuzey Kore.
02:35
from a nuclear point of view.
54
155160
2000
(Kahkaha)
02:37
We began to counter-proliferate,
55
157160
2000
(Kahkaha)
02:39
and we dropped the number of nuclear warheads in the world
56
159160
2000
(Kahkaha)
02:41
to about a total of 21,000.
57
161160
3000
fakat--
02:44
It's a very difficult number to deal with,
58
164160
1000
(Kahkaha)
02:45
because what we've done is
59
165160
2000
(Kahkaha)
02:47
we've quote unquote "decommissioned" some of the warheads.
60
167160
3000
(Kahkaha)
02:50
They're still probably usable. They could be "re-commissioned,"
61
170160
2000
Teşekkür ederim.
02:52
but the way they count things, which is very complicated,
62
172160
3000
02:55
we think we have about a third
63
175160
2000
02:57
of the nuclear weapons we had before.
64
177160
2000
02:59
But we also, in that period of time,
65
179160
2000
03:01
added two more members to the nuclear club:
66
181160
2000
03:03
Pakistan and North Korea.
67
183160
3000
03:06
So we stand today with a still fully armed nuclear arsenal
68
186160
3000
03:10
among many countries around the world,
69
190160
2000
03:12
but a very different set of circumstances.
70
192160
2000
03:14
So I'm going to talk about
71
194160
2000
03:17
a nuclear threat story in two chapters.
72
197160
2000
03:19
Chapter one is 1949 to 1991,
73
199160
3000
03:22
when the Soviet Union broke up,
74
202160
2000
03:24
and what we were dealing with, at that point and through those years,
75
204160
3000
03:27
was a superpowers' nuclear arms race.
76
207160
3000
03:30
It was characterized by
77
210160
2000
03:32
a nation-versus-nation,
78
212160
2000
03:34
very fragile standoff.
79
214160
2000
03:36
And basically,
80
216160
2000
03:38
we lived for all those years,
81
218160
2000
03:40
and some might argue that we still do,
82
220160
2000
03:42
in a situation of
83
222160
2000
03:44
being on the brink, literally,
84
224160
2000
03:46
of an apocalyptic, planetary calamity.
85
226160
4000
03:50
It's incredible that we actually lived through all that.
86
230160
3000
03:53
We were totally dependent during those years
87
233160
2000
03:55
on this amazing acronym, which is MAD.
88
235160
3000
03:58
It stands for mutually assured destruction.
89
238160
3000
04:01
So it meant
90
241160
2000
04:03
if you attacked us, we would attack you
91
243160
2000
04:05
virtually simultaneously,
92
245160
2000
04:07
and the end result would be a destruction
93
247160
2000
04:09
of your country and mine.
94
249160
2000
04:11
So the threat of my own destruction
95
251160
2000
04:13
kept me from launching
96
253160
2000
04:15
a nuclear attack on you. That's the way we lived.
97
255160
4000
04:19
And the danger of that, of course, is that
98
259160
2000
04:21
a misreading of a radar screen
99
261160
3000
04:24
could actually cause a counter-launch,
100
264160
2000
04:26
even though the first country had not actually launched anything.
101
266160
3000
04:29
During this chapter one,
102
269160
2000
04:31
there was a high level of public awareness
103
271160
2000
04:33
about the potential of nuclear catastrophe,
104
273160
3000
04:36
and an indelible image was implanted
105
276160
2000
04:38
in our collective minds
106
278160
2000
04:40
that, in fact, a nuclear holocaust
107
280160
2000
04:42
would be absolutely globally destructive
108
282160
3000
04:45
and could, in some ways, mean the end of civilization as we know it.
109
285160
3000
04:48
So this was chapter one.
110
288160
3000
04:51
Now the odd thing is that even though
111
291160
2000
04:53
we knew that there would be
112
293160
2000
04:55
that kind of civilization obliteration,
113
295160
3000
04:58
we engaged in America in a series --
114
298160
2000
05:00
and in fact, in the Soviet Union --
115
300160
2000
05:02
in a series of response planning.
116
302160
2000
05:04
It was absolutely incredible.
117
304160
2000
05:06
So premise one is we'd be destroying the world,
118
306160
2000
05:08
and then premise two is, why don't we get prepared for it?
119
308160
3000
05:11
So what
120
311160
2000
05:13
we offered ourselves
121
313160
2000
05:15
was a collection of things. I'm just going to go skim through a few things,
122
315160
2000
05:17
just to jog your memories.
123
317160
2000
05:19
If you're born after 1950, this is just --
124
319160
2000
05:21
consider this entertainment, otherwise it's memory lane.
125
321160
2000
05:24
This was Bert the Turtle. (Video)
126
324160
2000
05:42
This was basically an attempt
127
342160
2000
05:44
to teach our schoolchildren
128
344160
2000
05:46
that if we did get engaged
129
346160
2000
05:48
in a nuclear confrontation and atomic war,
130
348160
3000
05:51
then we wanted our school children
131
351160
2000
05:53
to kind of basically duck and cover.
132
353160
2000
05:55
That was the principle. You --
133
355160
2000
05:57
there would be a nuclear conflagration
134
357160
2000
05:59
about to hit us, and if you get under your desk,
135
359160
2000
06:01
things would be OK.
136
361160
2000
06:03
(Laughter)
137
363160
2000
06:05
I didn't do all that well
138
365160
2000
06:07
in psychiatry in medical school, but I was interested,
139
367160
2000
06:09
and I think this was seriously delusional.
140
369160
3000
06:12
(Laughter)
141
372160
2000
06:14
Secondly, we told people
142
374160
2000
06:16
to go down in their basements
143
376160
2000
06:18
and build a fallout shelter.
144
378160
2000
06:20
Maybe it would be a study when we weren't having an atomic war,
145
380160
3000
06:23
or you could use it as a TV room, or, as many teenagers found out,
146
383160
3000
06:26
a very, very safe place for a little privacy with your girlfriend.
147
386160
3000
06:29
And actually -- so there are multiple uses of the bomb shelters.
148
389160
3000
06:32
Or you could buy a prefabricated bomb shelter
149
392160
3000
06:35
that you could simply bury in the ground.
150
395160
2000
06:37
Now, the bomb shelters at that point --
151
397160
2000
06:39
let's say you bought a prefab one -- it would be a few hundred dollars,
152
399160
2000
06:41
maybe up to 500, if you got a fancy one.
153
401160
2000
06:43
Yet, what percentage of Americans
154
403160
2000
06:45
do you think ever had a bomb shelter in their house?
155
405160
2000
06:47
What percentage lived in a house with a bomb shelter?
156
407160
2000
06:50
Less than two percent. About 1.4 percent
157
410160
3000
06:53
of the population, as far as anyone knows,
158
413160
2000
06:55
did anything,
159
415160
2000
06:57
either making a space in their basement
160
417160
2000
06:59
or actually building a bomb shelter.
161
419160
3000
07:02
Many buildings, public buildings, around the country --
162
422160
2000
07:04
this is New York City -- had these little civil defense signs,
163
424160
3000
07:07
and the idea was that you would
164
427160
2000
07:09
run into one of these shelters and be safe
165
429160
2000
07:11
from the nuclear weaponry.
166
431160
2000
07:13
And one of the greatest governmental delusions
167
433160
3000
07:16
of all time was something that happened
168
436160
2000
07:18
in the early days of
169
438160
2000
07:20
the Federal Emergency Management Agency, FEMA, as we now know,
170
440160
3000
07:23
and are well aware of their behaviors from Katrina.
171
443160
3000
07:26
Here is their first big public
172
446160
3000
07:29
announcement.
173
449160
2000
07:31
They would propose --
174
451160
2000
07:33
actually there were about six volumes written on this --
175
453160
2000
07:35
a crisis relocation plan
176
455160
2000
07:37
that was dependent upon
177
457160
2000
07:39
the United States having three to four days warning
178
459160
3000
07:42
that the Soviets were going to attack us.
179
462160
2000
07:44
So the goal was to evacuate the target cities.
180
464160
3000
07:47
We would move people out of the target cities
181
467160
2000
07:49
into the countryside.
182
469160
2000
07:51
And I'm telling you, I actually testified at the Senate
183
471160
3000
07:54
about the absolute ludicrous idea
184
474160
3000
07:57
that we would actually evacuate,
185
477160
1000
07:58
and actually have three or four days' warning.
186
478160
2000
08:00
It was just completely off the wall.
187
480160
2000
08:02
Turns out that they had another idea
188
482160
3000
08:05
behind it, even though this was --
189
485160
2000
08:07
they were telling the public it was to save us.
190
487160
2000
08:09
The idea was that we would force the Soviets
191
489160
2000
08:11
to re-target their nuclear weapons -- very expensive --
192
491160
3000
08:14
and potentially double their arsenal,
193
494160
2000
08:16
to not only take out the original site,
194
496160
2000
08:18
but take out sites where people were going.
195
498160
3000
08:21
This was what apparently, as it turns out, was behind all this.
196
501160
3000
08:24
It was just really, really frightening.
197
504160
3000
08:27
The main point here is we were dealing with
198
507160
2000
08:29
a complete disconnect from reality.
199
509160
3000
08:32
The civil defense programs were disconnected
200
512160
3000
08:35
from the reality of what we'd see in all-out nuclear war.
201
515160
2000
08:37
So organizations like Physicians for Social Responsibility,
202
517160
4000
08:41
around 1979, started saying this a lot publicly.
203
521160
3000
08:44
They would do a bombing run. They'd go to your city,
204
524160
3000
08:47
and they'd say, "Here's a map of your city.
205
527160
2000
08:49
Here's what's going to happen if we get a nuclear hit."
206
529160
3000
08:52
So no possibility of medical response to,
207
532160
2000
08:54
or meaningful preparedness for
208
534160
2000
08:56
all-out nuclear war.
209
536160
2000
08:58
So we had to prevent nuclear war
210
538160
2000
09:00
if we expected to survive.
211
540160
2000
09:02
This disconnect was never actually resolved.
212
542160
3000
09:05
And what happened was --
213
545160
2000
09:07
when we get in to chapter two
214
547160
2000
09:09
of the nuclear threat era,
215
549160
3000
09:12
which started back in 1945.
216
552160
2000
09:14
Chapter two starts in 1991.
217
554160
2000
09:16
When the Soviet Union broke up,
218
556160
2000
09:18
we effectively lost that adversary
219
558160
2000
09:20
as a potential attacker of the United States, for the most part.
220
560160
3000
09:23
It's not completely gone. I'm going to come back to that.
221
563160
2000
09:25
But from 1991
222
565160
2000
09:27
through the present time,
223
567160
2000
09:29
emphasized by the attacks of 2001,
224
569160
2000
09:31
the idea of an all-out nuclear war
225
571160
3000
09:34
has diminished and the idea of a single event,
226
574160
3000
09:37
act of nuclear terrorism
227
577160
2000
09:39
is what we have instead.
228
579160
2000
09:41
Although the scenario has changed
229
581160
3000
09:44
very considerably, the fact is
230
584160
2000
09:46
that we haven't changed our mental image
231
586160
2000
09:48
of what a nuclear war means.
232
588160
2000
09:50
So I'm going to tell you what the implications of that are in just a second.
233
590160
3000
09:53
So, what is a nuclear terror threat?
234
593160
2000
09:55
And there's four key ingredients to describing that.
235
595160
3000
09:58
First thing is that the global nuclear weapons,
236
598160
3000
10:01
in the stockpiles that I showed you in those original maps,
237
601160
2000
10:03
happen to be not uniformly secure.
238
603160
3000
10:06
And it's particularly not secure
239
606160
2000
10:08
in the former Soviet Union, now in Russia.
240
608160
2000
10:10
There are many, many sites where warheads are stored
241
610160
3000
10:13
and, in fact, lots of sites where fissionable materials,
242
613160
3000
10:16
like highly enriched uranium and plutonium,
243
616160
3000
10:19
are absolutely not safe.
244
619160
2000
10:21
They're available to be bought, stolen, whatever.
245
621160
3000
10:24
They're acquirable, let me put it that way.
246
624160
3000
10:27
From 1993 through 2006,
247
627160
3000
10:30
the International Atomic Energy Agency
248
630160
2000
10:32
documented 175 cases of nuclear theft,
249
632160
3000
10:35
18 of which involved highly enriched uranium or plutonium,
250
635160
4000
10:39
the key ingredients to make a nuclear weapon.
251
639160
4000
10:43
The global stockpile of highly enriched uranium
252
643160
3000
10:46
is about 1,300, at the low end,
253
646160
2000
10:48
to about 2,100 metric tons.
254
648160
3000
10:51
More than 100 megatons of this
255
651160
2000
10:53
is stored in particularly insecure
256
653160
3000
10:56
Russian facilities.
257
656160
3000
10:59
How much of that do you think it would take
258
659160
2000
11:01
to actually build a 10-kiloton bomb?
259
661160
2000
11:03
Well, you need about 75 pounds of it.
260
663160
4000
11:07
So, what I'd like to show you
261
667160
3000
11:10
is
262
670160
2000
11:12
what it would take to hold 75 pounds
263
672160
2000
11:15
of highly enriched uranium.
264
675160
3000
11:18
This is not a product placement. It's just --
265
678160
2000
11:20
in fact, if I was Coca Cola, I'd be pretty distressed about this --
266
680160
2000
11:22
(Laughter)
267
682160
3000
11:25
-- but
268
685160
2000
11:27
basically, this is it.
269
687160
3000
11:30
This is what you would need to steal or buy
270
690160
3000
11:33
out of that 100-metric-ton stockpile
271
693160
2000
11:35
that's relatively insecure
272
695160
2000
11:37
to create the type of bomb
273
697160
2000
11:39
that was used in Hiroshima.
274
699160
2000
11:41
Now you might want to look at plutonium
275
701160
2000
11:43
as another fissionable material that you might use in a bomb.
276
703160
3000
11:46
That -- you'd need 10 to 13 pounds of plutonium.
277
706160
4000
11:50
Now, plutonium, 10 to 13 pounds:
278
710160
2000
11:53
this. This is enough plutonium
279
713160
3000
11:56
to create a Nagasaki-size atomic weapon.
280
716160
4000
12:01
Now this situation, already I --
281
721160
2000
12:03
you know, I don't really like thinking about this,
282
723160
3000
12:06
although somehow I got myself a job
283
726160
2000
12:08
where I have to think about it. So
284
728160
2000
12:10
the point is that we're very, very insecure
285
730160
3000
12:13
in terms of developing this material.
286
733160
3000
12:16
The second thing is, what about the know-how?
287
736160
2000
12:18
And there's a lot of controversy about
288
738160
2000
12:20
whether terror organizations have the know-how
289
740160
3000
12:23
to actually make a nuclear weapon.
290
743160
3000
12:26
Well, there's a lot of know-how out there.
291
746160
2000
12:28
There's an unbelievable amount of know-how out there.
292
748160
3000
12:31
There's detailed information on how to assemble
293
751160
2000
12:33
a nuclear weapon from parts.
294
753160
3000
12:36
There's books about how to build a nuclear bomb.
295
756160
3000
12:39
There are plans for how to create a terror farm
296
759160
3000
12:42
where you could actually manufacture and develop
297
762160
2000
12:44
all the components and assemble it.
298
764160
3000
12:47
All of this information is relatively available.
299
767160
3000
12:50
If you have an undergraduate degree in physics,
300
770160
2000
12:52
I would suggest --
301
772160
2000
12:54
although I don't, so maybe it's not even true --
302
774160
2000
12:56
but something close to that would allow you,
303
776160
2000
12:58
with the information that's currently available,
304
778160
2000
13:00
to actually build a nuclear weapon.
305
780160
3000
13:04
The third element of the nuclear terror threat
306
784160
4000
13:08
is that, who would actually do such a thing?
307
788160
3000
13:11
Well, what we're seeing now is a level of terrorism
308
791160
3000
13:14
that involves individuals who are highly organized.
309
794160
3000
13:17
They are very dedicated and committed.
310
797160
2000
13:19
They are stateless.
311
799160
2000
13:21
Somebody once said, Al Qaeda
312
801160
2000
13:23
does not have a return address,
313
803160
2000
13:25
so if they attack us with a nuclear weapon,
314
805160
2000
13:27
what's the response, and to whom is the response?
315
807160
3000
13:30
And they're retaliation-proof.
316
810160
2000
13:32
Since there is no real retribution possible
317
812160
3000
13:35
that would make any difference,
318
815160
2000
13:37
since there are people willing to actually give up their lives
319
817160
3000
13:40
in order to do a lot of damage to us,
320
820160
2000
13:42
it becomes apparent
321
822160
2000
13:44
that the whole notion
322
824160
2000
13:46
of this mutually assured destruction would not work.
323
826160
2000
13:48
Here is Sulaiman Abu Ghaith,
324
828160
2000
13:50
and Sulaiman was a key lieutenant of Osama Bin Laden.
325
830160
3000
13:53
He wrote many, many times statements to this effect:
326
833160
2000
13:55
"we have the right to kill four million Americans,
327
835160
3000
13:58
two million of whom should be children."
328
838160
2000
14:00
And we don't have to go overseas
329
840160
2000
14:02
to find people willing to do harm, for whatever their reasons.
330
842160
2000
14:04
McVeigh and Nichols, and the Oklahoma City attack
331
844160
3000
14:07
in the 1990s
332
847160
2000
14:09
was a good example of homegrown terrorists.
333
849160
2000
14:11
What if they had gotten their hands on a nuclear weapon?
334
851160
2000
14:13
The fourth element
335
853160
2000
14:15
is that the high-value U.S. targets
336
855160
2000
14:17
are accessible, soft and plentiful.
337
857160
3000
14:20
This would be a talk for another day, but the level of the preparedness
338
860160
2000
14:22
that the United States has achieved
339
862160
2000
14:24
since 9/11 of '01
340
864160
2000
14:26
is unbelievably inadequate.
341
866160
2000
14:28
What you saw after Katrina
342
868160
2000
14:30
is a very good indicator
343
870160
2000
14:32
of how little prepared the United States is
344
872160
3000
14:35
for any kind of major attack.
345
875160
2000
14:37
Seven million ship cargo containers
346
877160
2000
14:39
come into the United States every year.
347
879160
2000
14:41
Five to seven percent only are inspected --
348
881160
3000
14:44
five to seven percent.
349
884160
3000
14:47
This is Alexander Lebed,
350
887160
3000
14:50
who was a general that worked with Yeltsin,
351
890160
2000
14:52
who talked about, and presented to Congress,
352
892160
3000
14:55
this idea that the Russians had developed --
353
895160
3000
14:58
these suitcase bombs. They were very low yield --
354
898160
2000
15:00
0.1 to one kiloton,
355
900160
3000
15:03
Hiroshima was around 13 kilotons --
356
903160
2000
15:05
but enough to do an unbelievable amount of damage.
357
905160
3000
15:08
And Lebed came to the United States
358
908160
2000
15:10
and told us that many, many --
359
910160
3000
15:13
more than 80 of the suitcase bombs
360
913160
2000
15:15
were actually not accountable.
361
915160
2000
15:17
And they look like this. They're basically very simple arrangements.
362
917160
2000
15:19
You put the elements into a suitcase.
363
919160
3000
15:22
It becomes very portable.
364
922160
2000
15:24
The suitcase can be conveniently dropped
365
924160
2000
15:26
in your trunk of your car.
366
926160
2000
15:28
You take it wherever you want to take it, and you can detonate it.
367
928160
2000
15:30
You don't want to build a suitcase bomb,
368
930160
3000
15:33
and you happen to get one of those insecure
369
933160
2000
15:35
nuclear warheads that exist.
370
935160
2000
15:37
This is the size of
371
937160
2000
15:39
the "Little Boy" bomb that was dropped at Hiroshima.
372
939160
2000
15:41
It was 9.8 feet long,
373
941160
2000
15:43
weighed 8,800 pounds. You go down to
374
943160
2000
15:45
your local rent-a-truck
375
945160
3000
15:48
and for 50 bucks or so,
376
948160
2000
15:50
you rent a truck that's got the right capacity,
377
950160
2000
15:52
and you take your bomb,
378
952160
2000
15:54
you put it in the truck and you're ready to go.
379
954160
3000
15:57
It could happen. But what it would mean and who would survive?
380
957160
3000
16:00
You can't get an exact number for that kind of probability,
381
960160
3000
16:03
but what I'm trying to say is that
382
963160
2000
16:05
we have all the elements of that happening.
383
965160
2000
16:07
Anybody who dismisses the thought
384
967160
2000
16:09
of a nuclear weapon
385
969160
2000
16:11
being used by a terrorist is kidding themselves.
386
971160
2000
16:13
I think there's a lot of people in the intelligence community --
387
973160
3000
16:16
a lot of people who deal with this work in general
388
976160
3000
16:19
think it's almost inevitable, unless we do certain things
389
979160
3000
16:22
to really try to defuse the risk,
390
982160
3000
16:25
like better interdiction, better prevention,
391
985160
2000
16:27
better fixing, you know, better screening
392
987160
2000
16:29
of cargo containers that are coming into the country and so forth.
393
989160
3000
16:32
There's a lot that can be done to make us a lot safer.
394
992160
3000
16:35
At this particular moment,
395
995160
2000
16:37
we actually could end up
396
997160
2000
16:39
seeing a nuclear detonation in one of our cities.
397
999160
3000
16:42
I don't think we would see an all-out nuclear war
398
1002160
3000
16:45
any time soon, although even that is not completely off the table.
399
1005160
3000
16:48
There's still enough nuclear weapons
400
1008160
2000
16:50
in the arsenals of the superpowers
401
1010160
2000
16:52
to destroy the Earth many, many times over.
402
1012160
3000
16:55
There are flash points in India and Pakistan,
403
1015160
3000
16:58
in the Middle East, in North Korea,
404
1018160
2000
17:00
other places where the use of nuclear weapons,
405
1020160
3000
17:03
while initially locally,
406
1023160
2000
17:05
could very rapidly
407
1025160
2000
17:07
go into a situation
408
1027160
2000
17:09
where we'd be facing all-out nuclear war.
409
1029160
3000
17:12
It's very unsettling.
410
1032160
2000
17:15
Here we go. OK.
411
1035160
2000
17:17
I'm back in my truck, and we drove over the Brooklyn Bridge.
412
1037160
3000
17:20
We're coming down,
413
1040160
2000
17:22
and we bring that truck
414
1042160
2000
17:24
that you just saw
415
1044160
2000
17:26
somewhere in here, in the Financial District.
416
1046160
3000
17:40
This is a 10-kiloton bomb,
417
1060160
3000
17:43
slightly smaller than was used
418
1063160
2000
17:45
in Hiroshima. And I want to just conclude this
419
1065160
3000
17:48
by just giving you some information. I think --
420
1068160
2000
17:50
"news you could use" kind of concept here.
421
1070160
3000
17:53
So, first of all, this would be horrific
422
1073160
2000
17:55
beyond anything we can possibly imagine.
423
1075160
2000
17:57
This is the ultimate.
424
1077160
2000
17:59
And if you're in the half-mile radius
425
1079160
2000
18:01
of where this bomb went off,
426
1081160
2000
18:03
you have a 90 percent chance of not making it.
427
1083160
2000
18:05
If you're right where the bomb went off,
428
1085160
2000
18:07
you will be vaporized. And that's --
429
1087160
2000
18:09
I'm just telling you, this is not good.
430
1089160
2000
18:11
(Laughter)
431
1091160
2000
18:13
You assume that.
432
1093160
2000
18:15
Two-mile radius, you have a 50 percent chance
433
1095160
3000
18:18
of being killed,
434
1098160
2000
18:20
and up to about eight miles away --
435
1100160
2000
18:22
now I'm talking about killed instantly --
436
1102160
2000
18:24
somewhere between a 10 and 20 percent
437
1104160
2000
18:26
chance of getting killed.
438
1106160
2000
18:28
The thing about this is that
439
1108160
2000
18:30
the experience of the nuclear detonation is --
440
1110160
4000
18:34
first of all, tens of millions of degrees Fahrenheit
441
1114160
3000
18:37
at the core here, where it goes off,
442
1117160
2000
18:39
and an extraordinary amount of energy
443
1119160
2000
18:41
in the form of heat, acute radiation
444
1121160
3000
18:44
and blast effects.
445
1124160
2000
18:46
An enormous hurricane-like wind,
446
1126160
2000
18:48
and destruction of buildings almost totally,
447
1128160
3000
18:51
within this yellow circle here.
448
1131160
2000
18:53
And what I'm going to focus on, as I come to conclusion here,
449
1133160
2000
18:55
is that, what happens to you
450
1135160
3000
18:58
if you're in here?
451
1138160
2000
19:00
Well, if we're talking about the old days
452
1140160
2000
19:02
of an all-out nuclear attack,
453
1142160
2000
19:04
you, up here,
454
1144160
1000
19:05
are as dead as the people here. So it was a moot point.
455
1145160
3000
19:08
My point now, though, is that there is a lot
456
1148160
2000
19:10
that we could do for you who are in here,
457
1150160
2000
19:12
if you've survived the initial blast.
458
1152160
2000
19:14
You have, when the blast goes off --
459
1154160
2000
19:16
and by the way, if it ever comes up, don't look at it.
460
1156160
2000
19:18
(Laughter)
461
1158160
2000
19:20
If you look at it, you're going to be blind,
462
1160160
2000
19:22
either temporarily or permanently.
463
1162160
2000
19:24
So if there's any way that you can avoid,
464
1164160
2000
19:26
like, avert your eyes, that would be a good thing.
465
1166160
3000
19:29
If you find yourself alive, but
466
1169160
2000
19:31
you're in the vicinity of a nuclear weapon,
467
1171160
3000
19:34
you have -- that's gone off --
468
1174160
2000
19:36
you have 10 to 20 minutes, depending on the size
469
1176160
2000
19:38
and exactly where it went off,
470
1178160
2000
19:40
to get out of the way before
471
1180160
2000
19:42
a lethal amount of radiation
472
1182160
2000
19:44
comes straight down from the mushroom cloud that goes up.
473
1184160
3000
19:47
In that 10 to 15 minutes, all you have to do --
474
1187160
2000
19:49
and I mean this seriously --
475
1189160
2000
19:51
is go about a mile
476
1191160
2000
19:53
away from the blast.
477
1193160
2000
19:55
And what happens is -- this is --
478
1195160
2000
19:57
I'm going to show you now some fallout plumes. Within 20 minutes,
479
1197160
2000
19:59
it comes straight down. Within 24 hours,
480
1199160
2000
20:01
lethal radiation is going out with prevailing winds,
481
1201160
3000
20:04
and it's mostly in this particular direction --
482
1204160
2000
20:06
it's going northeast.
483
1206160
2000
20:08
And if you're in this vicinity, you've got to get away.
484
1208160
3000
20:11
So you're feeling the wind --
485
1211160
2000
20:13
and there's tremendous wind now
486
1213160
2000
20:15
that you're going to be feeling -- and you want to go
487
1215160
2000
20:17
perpendicular to the wind
488
1217160
2000
20:19
[not upwind or downwind].
489
1219160
2000
20:21
if you are in fact able to see where the blast was in front of you.
490
1221160
3000
20:24
You've got to get out of there.
491
1224160
2000
20:26
If you don't get out of there, you're going to be exposed
492
1226160
2000
20:28
to lethal radiation in very short order.
493
1228160
2000
20:30
If you can't get out of there,
494
1230160
2000
20:32
we want you to go into a shelter and stay there.
495
1232160
3000
20:35
Now, in a shelter in an urban area means
496
1235160
3000
20:38
you have to be either in a basement as deep as possible,
497
1238160
3000
20:41
or you have to be on a floor -- on a high floor --
498
1241160
3000
20:44
if it's a ground burst explosion, which it would be,
499
1244160
3000
20:47
higher than the ninth floor. So you have to be tenth floor or higher,
500
1247160
2000
20:49
or in the basement.
501
1249160
2000
20:52
But basically, you've got to get out of town as quickly as possible.
502
1252160
3000
20:55
And if you do that,
503
1255160
2000
20:57
you actually can survive a nuclear blast.
504
1257160
4000
21:01
Over the next few days to a week,
505
1261160
2000
21:03
there will be a radiation cloud,
506
1263160
2000
21:05
again, going with the wind, and settling down
507
1265160
2000
21:07
for another 15 or 20 miles out --
508
1267160
2000
21:09
in this case, over Long Island.
509
1269160
2000
21:11
And if you're in the direct fallout zone here,
510
1271160
3000
21:14
you really have to either be sheltered or you have to get out of there,
511
1274160
2000
21:16
and that's clear. But if you are sheltered,
512
1276160
3000
21:19
you can actually survive.
513
1279160
2000
21:21
The difference between knowing information
514
1281160
2000
21:23
of what you're going to do personally,
515
1283160
2000
21:25
and not knowing information, can save your life,
516
1285160
2000
21:27
and it could mean the difference between
517
1287160
2000
21:29
150,000 to 200,000 fatalities
518
1289160
2000
21:31
from something like this
519
1291160
3000
21:34
and half a million to 700,000 fatalities.
520
1294160
3000
21:37
So, response planning in the twenty-first century
521
1297160
3000
21:40
is both possible and is essential.
522
1300160
2000
21:42
But in 2008, there isn't one single American city
523
1302160
4000
21:46
that has done effective plans
524
1306160
2000
21:48
to deal with a nuclear detonation disaster.
525
1308160
3000
21:51
Part of the problem is that
526
1311160
2000
21:53
the emergency planners themselves, personally,
527
1313160
2000
21:55
are overwhelmed psychologically by the thought
528
1315160
2000
21:57
of nuclear catastrophe.
529
1317160
2000
21:59
They are paralyzed.
530
1319160
2000
22:01
You say "nuclear" to them, and they're thinking,
531
1321160
2000
22:03
"Oh my God, we're all gone. What's the point? It's futile."
532
1323160
3000
22:06
And we're trying to tell them, "It's not futile.
533
1326160
2000
22:08
We can change the survival rates
534
1328160
2000
22:10
by doing some commonsensical things."
535
1330160
3000
22:13
So the goal here is to minimize fatalities.
536
1333160
3000
22:16
And I just want to leave you with the personal points
537
1336160
2000
22:18
that I think you might be interested in.
538
1338160
2000
22:20
The key to surviving a nuclear blast
539
1340160
2000
22:22
is getting out,
540
1342160
2000
22:24
and not going into harm's way.
541
1344160
3000
22:27
That's basically all we're going to be talking about here.
542
1347160
2000
22:29
And the farther you are away in distance,
543
1349160
3000
22:32
the longer it is in time
544
1352160
2000
22:34
from the initial blast;
545
1354160
2000
22:36
and the more separation between you
546
1356160
2000
22:38
and the outside atmosphere, the better.
547
1358160
2000
22:40
So separation -- hopefully with dirt or concrete,
548
1360160
3000
22:43
or being in a basement --
549
1363160
2000
22:45
distance and time is what will save you.
550
1365160
2000
22:47
So here's what you do. First of all,
551
1367160
2000
22:49
as I said, don't stare at the light flash,
552
1369160
2000
22:51
if you can. I don't know you could possibly resist doing that.
553
1371160
2000
22:53
But let's assume, theoretically, you want to do that.
554
1373160
2000
22:55
You want to keep your mouth open, so your eardrums
555
1375160
2000
22:57
don't burst from the pressures.
556
1377160
3000
23:00
If you're very close to what happened, you actually do have to duck and cover,
557
1380160
3000
23:03
like Bert told you, Bert the Turtle.
558
1383160
2000
23:05
And you want to get under something so that you're not injured
559
1385160
3000
23:08
or killed by objects, if that's at all possible.
560
1388160
2000
23:10
You want to get away from the initial fallout mushroom cloud,
561
1390160
2000
23:12
I said, in just a few minutes.
562
1392160
2000
23:14
And shelter and place. You want to move [only]
563
1394160
3000
23:17
crosswind for 1.2 miles.
564
1397160
2000
23:19
You know, if you're out there and you see buildings horribly destroyed
565
1399160
3000
23:22
and down in that direction,
566
1402160
2000
23:24
less destroyed here,
567
1404160
2000
23:26
then you know that it was over there, the blast, and you're going this way,
568
1406160
2000
23:28
as long as you're going crosswise to the wind.
569
1408160
4000
23:32
Once you're out and evacuating,
570
1412160
2000
23:34
you want to keep as much of your skin,
571
1414160
1000
23:36
your mouth and nose covered, as long as that covering
572
1416160
2000
23:38
doesn't impede you moving and getting out of there.
573
1418160
3000
23:41
And finally, you want to get decontaminated as soon as possible.
574
1421160
3000
23:44
And if you're wearing clothing, you've taken off your clothing,
575
1424160
2000
23:46
you're going to get showered down some place
576
1426160
2000
23:48
and remove the radiation that would be --
577
1428160
2000
23:50
the radioactive material that might be on you.
578
1430160
3000
23:53
And then you want to stay in shelter for 48 to 72 hours minimum,
579
1433160
4000
23:57
but you're going to wait hopefully -- you'll have your little wind-up,
580
1437160
2000
23:59
battery-less radio,
581
1439160
2000
24:01
and you'll be waiting for people to tell you
582
1441160
2000
24:03
when it's safe to go outside. That's what you need to do.
583
1443160
2000
24:05
In conclusion,
584
1445160
2000
24:07
nuclear war is less likely than before,
585
1447160
2000
24:09
but by no means out of the question, and it's not survivable.
586
1449160
3000
24:12
Nuclear terrorism is possible -- it may be probable --
587
1452160
3000
24:15
but is survivable.
588
1455160
2000
24:17
And this is Jack Geiger, who's one of the heroes
589
1457160
2000
24:19
of the U.S. public health community.
590
1459160
3000
24:22
And Jack said the only way to deal
591
1462160
2000
24:24
with nuclear anything,
592
1464160
2000
24:26
whether it's war or terrorism,
593
1466160
2000
24:28
is abolition of nuclear weapons.
594
1468160
2000
24:30
And you want something to work on once you've fixed global warming,
595
1470160
3000
24:33
I urge you to think about the fact that
596
1473160
2000
24:35
we have to do something about this
597
1475160
2000
24:37
unacceptable, inhumane
598
1477160
2000
24:39
reality of nuclear weapons
599
1479160
2000
24:41
in our world.
600
1481160
2000
24:43
Now, this is my favorite civil defense slide, and I --
601
1483160
2000
24:45
(Laughter)
602
1485160
2000
24:47
-- I don't want to be indelicate, but
603
1487160
2000
24:49
this --
604
1489160
2000
24:51
he's no longer in office. We don't really care, OK.
605
1491160
3000
24:54
This was sent to me by somebody
606
1494160
2000
24:56
who is an aficionado of civil defense procedures,
607
1496160
3000
24:59
but the fact of the matter is that
608
1499160
2000
25:01
America's gone through a very hard time.
609
1501160
2000
25:03
We've not been focused, we've not done what we had to do,
610
1503160
3000
25:06
and now we're facing the potential of
611
1506160
3000
25:09
bad, hell on Earth.
612
1509160
2000
25:11
Thank you.
613
1511160
2000
Bu web sitesi hakkında

Bu site size İngilizce öğrenmek için yararlı olan YouTube videolarını tanıtacaktır. Dünyanın dört bir yanından birinci sınıf öğretmenler tarafından verilen İngilizce derslerini göreceksiniz. Videoyu oradan oynatmak için her video sayfasında görüntülenen İngilizce altyazılara çift tıklayın. Altyazılar video oynatımı ile senkronize olarak kayar. Herhangi bir yorumunuz veya isteğiniz varsa, lütfen bu iletişim formunu kullanarak bizimle iletişime geçin.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7