10 Catalysts for World War Three
So often during the 1980s we all felt on the brink of a third world
war – most likely nuclear in nature. With the nineties, the idea waned a
little but with all of the unrest happening in the Middle East over the
last year or so the possibility returns again more strongly to our
mind. This list looks at ten potential causes for a third world war.
Cause: China Attacks a United States Ally
All nations with democratic governments are U. S. allies, to one degree or another. When Communist North Vietnam invaded Democratic South Vietnam, the United States’ involvement in the Vietnam War escalated to full-scale land and air engagements versus the North Vietnamese Army and the Viet Cong. This was because the U. S. had pledged its support to any democratic nation under attack by different foreign governments, especially Communism.
China firmly supported North Vietnam and supplied them with men and material. This was the primary reason why the question, “Can’t we just nuke Hanoi?” was answered with an emphatic “No.” China was Communist and technically acquired the bomb in 1964, but the number of their nuclear weapons was very low throughout the Vietnam War, probably less than 10. Unfortunately, they were firmly supported by the Communist Soviet Union, which had over 10,000.
Today, China is much more friendly with the U. S. and is not supported by a Communist country to its north. But China’s government has never spoken much in favor of the 14th Dalai Lama. Ever since 1950 when the brand new People’s Republic of China wanted to annex Tibet as another Chinese province, the Dalai Lama has voiced his opposition to such a move, and as such, since 1959, he has lived in exile in India and attempts to run the Tibetan government from there.
China has demanded that no nation grant the Dalai Lama shelter, and that India extradite him to China for prosecution on a charge of insurrection. To date, India refuses. This is just one example of what could happen. There is no imminent threat of a Chinese invasion of India to capture the Dalai Lama, but if the U. S. economy were to become much worse than it is, and it owed even more money to China, China might someday deem the U. S. less able or less likely to retaliate in India’s defense. This would never be true, but if China makes the first move, India cannot be guaranteed to refrain from using nuclear weapons, which would certainly result in China’s use of theirs, and then the United States’ use of theirs.
Cause: Russia Nukes The United States of America
The ultimate Cold War fear always began with the Soviet Union launching multiple ICBMs (intercontinental ballistic missiles) armed with nuclear warheads at various military targets in the United States. The prime targets were Washington D. C.; NORAD near Colorado Springs; military bases like Fort Bragg, NC; Camp Pendleton, GA; Parris Island, SC; and various ICBM silos in the middle of nowhere all over the country. The Soviets claimed that they never considered major urban areas like New York City to be of any military value as targets, and would only have been targeted out of desperation in the event of mutual nuclear attacks. Once the first missiles were launched, the Soviet Union planned to invade East Germany, destroy the Berlin Wall, and conquer Western Europe.
The Soviets explored over 300 scenarios involving different missile targets, location, timing, and speed of land invasions, including options for the final conquest of the United States, and claimed after 1991 that their only non-diplomatic deterrent to nuclear war was their inability to eradicate the United States’ armed civilian population. Carpet nuking the entire continent would ruin its natural resources.
Today, Russia and the U. S. are on fairly friendly terms, but General Secretary of the United Russia, Vladimir Putin, is not universally trusted or even liked in the U. S., and although it is generally believed that he would never initiate nuclear war against the U. S., there is always a lingering fear throughout the world of another coup d’etat in Russia. They had many throughout history, and almost every time, the entire country’s economy collapses, leading to anarchy. Putin is despised by a large portion of Russia’s population, led famously by former World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov, who has been beaten and/or imprisoned on numerous occasions merely for demanding the right to free speech. Should another coup take place, Russia’s new leader may well turn his sights onto the United States.
Cause: A Rogue Nuke Blamed on Russia
Even scarier than Russia obviously attacking the U. S. is the more likely scenario of parties of another country, probably one of the former Soviet Republics, finding or stealing a nuclear bomb from Russia’s stockpile and sneaking it into the United States. The likelihood of a nuclear missile successfully breaching the U. S. air defenses, headquartered at NORAD, Colorado, is quite low. The U. S. does have defensive capabilities to thwart such attacks, but cannot, as evinced by 9/11, be guaranteed to anticipate or prevent attacks based on espionage or stealth insurgency.
It would be very easy for one of Russia’s long lost warheads to fall into the wrong hands, by discovery or sale, and wind up in a major American metropolitan area. Even the smallest practical yield for a fission bomb, similar to the M388 Davy Crockett, would equal about 20 tons of TNT, and if placed inside the White House, would obliterate the White House, the Executive Office Building, and the U. S. Treasury, and every person inside them. This “backpack nuke” scenario was used for the plot of Tom Clancy’s “The Sum of All Fears,” though the backpack would be large enough to arouse suspicion. Hidden in a vending machine, it would probably be unnoticed until detonation. If this scenario were to happen, the U. S. would quickly learn the origin of the fissile material, blame Russia, and Russia would have a hard time convincing the U. S. otherwise.
Cause: Terrorists Bomb Vatican City
The Vatican is a prime target for anti-Christian or anti-Catholic extremists of all kinds. Its security is extremely tight. The Pope is, at all times, surrounded by over a dozen armed bodyguards, in addition to the Swiss Guard. But the backpack bomb scenario might succeed, if a terrorist bent on suicide were to enter St. Peter’s Square during any church service, especially Christmas or Easter Mass. At that time, the Square is crowded with as many as 125,000 people. When a new Pope is installed, the crowd can number 200,000, spilling out along the Via della Conciliazione, the main road up to St. Peter’s Basilica.
The Tomb of St. Peter himself lies beneath the floor of the center of St. Peter’s Basilica, which was designed by a number of immortal Renaissance men, including Michelangelo. The Sistine Chapel stands recessed between the Basilica and the Pope’s living and working complex.
The Pope lives in the Papal Apartments, on the third floor of the Apostolic Palace, on the north side of the Square, from one of the windows of which the Pope appears every Sunday morning to bless a crowd of rarely less than 15,000. But however tight the security of Vatican City is, the Square covers 6 acres, while the whole of the City covers 110 and is walled off from Rome, and it is designed to appear welcoming, for visitors to enter easily. It employs gates, guards, and security cameras that cover every spot of the Square, and anyone carrying a large backpack is certain to be stopped for inspection.
But there is a commercial bus line that transports tourists into the Square, and it would be frighteningly easy for a terrorist, especially one bent on suicide, to commandeer one of these buses somewhere in Rome, fill it with ammonium nitrate fertilizer, liquid nitromethane, and to vex, which is a mixture of ammonium and methyammonium nitrates, and head for the Vatican. These are the materials Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols amassed and used to bomb the Alfred P. Murrah building in Oklahoma City.
A bus carrying 7,000 lbs of this material could easily bash through the wrought iron gates into St. Peter’s Square, and be driven full speed into the Apostolic Palace. To assassinate the Pope is a public dream of many a terrorist around the world, and such a bomb would also destroy a huge amount of immortal art, architecture, and history. Italy would definitely retaliate after discovering the crime’s origin and masterminds. Then, once again, Christianity would be at open war with Islam, and any Islamic nations that support the crime would fight against most of the rest of the world.
Cause: Meteor Impact
The one eventuality for which no one can prepare, which no one can prevent. Scientists have theorized that had a meteor entered Earth’s atmosphere and traveled over any area of either the United States or the Soviet Union, or any ally, during the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962, at least one side would have mistaken it for a nuclear missile and launched its own in retaliation. Then both sides would have initiated a nuclear holocaust. We were never closer to our own idiotic annihilation than during the 13 days between October 15 and 27 of that year.
You may be thankful that no meteor was tracked across the sky anywhere on Earth during that time. This is a relatively rare occurrence. Earth is struck each day by a rough estimate of 100 septillion meteors, asteroids and comets, most of them the size of grains of sand. Almost all of them burn to dust in the upper atmosphere. A meteor of about 16 inches strikes Earth about once a day and burns up long before reaching the ground; a meteor of about 12 to 15 feet every year, and one about the size of a house every century. This does not count only those meteors that strike the ground, but includes all objects that enter the atmosphere. Some skip back out of it; most burn up. But if a large meteor enters our atmosphere, it bursts into extremely hot, bright flames, and this fireball, called a bolide, could very easily be mistaken, even on radar screens, for a nuclear missile. Had one entered our atmosphere over a political hotspot in October 1962, it may have been all that was needed to push both nuclear powers over the brink.
The power of a meteor impact is far beyond our poor ability to create. The largest man-made explosion in history was Tsar Bomba, the Soviet attempt to terrify the world. It was a 50 megaton blast in northern Siberia that shattered windows in Finland. That is the approximate yield of a meteor made of nickel and/or iron, the size of the Great Pyramid of Giza. A building this size is thought to be huge, but a natural rock this large is nowhere the size of what we think of as a mountain. And yet for such a comparatively small object to yield 50 megatons of explosive force is astounding. The reason for such an astronomically high amount of energy, potential and kinetic, lies in the extremely hard composition, and in the extremely high velocity. Meteors average a speed of about 92,500 miles per hour, with some traveling as slow as 25,000, some as fast as 160,000. The fastest commercially available bullet is the .223 Winchester Super Short Magnum, which travels at 4,352 feet per second, or 2,967 mph. That 2.6 gram bullet strikes at up to 1,683 foot-pounds of force. Now imagine an iron boulder the size of a small neighborhood traveling 54 times faster when it strikes the ground.
Yet, regardless of whether it strikes, a meteor streaking across the sky can easily be misinterpreted as a nuclear missile attack. It may already have been, on 22 September 1979, when, in the South Atlantic, a satellite detected a double flash of light consistent with a nuclear explosion. No government has ever claimed responsibility for any such test, and while one consensus centers on a joint effort by Israel and South Africa, another consensus is that it was a meteorite briefly entering the atmosphere.
10. China
Cause: China Attacks a United States Ally
All nations with democratic governments are U. S. allies, to one degree or another. When Communist North Vietnam invaded Democratic South Vietnam, the United States’ involvement in the Vietnam War escalated to full-scale land and air engagements versus the North Vietnamese Army and the Viet Cong. This was because the U. S. had pledged its support to any democratic nation under attack by different foreign governments, especially Communism.
China firmly supported North Vietnam and supplied them with men and material. This was the primary reason why the question, “Can’t we just nuke Hanoi?” was answered with an emphatic “No.” China was Communist and technically acquired the bomb in 1964, but the number of their nuclear weapons was very low throughout the Vietnam War, probably less than 10. Unfortunately, they were firmly supported by the Communist Soviet Union, which had over 10,000.
Today, China is much more friendly with the U. S. and is not supported by a Communist country to its north. But China’s government has never spoken much in favor of the 14th Dalai Lama. Ever since 1950 when the brand new People’s Republic of China wanted to annex Tibet as another Chinese province, the Dalai Lama has voiced his opposition to such a move, and as such, since 1959, he has lived in exile in India and attempts to run the Tibetan government from there.
China has demanded that no nation grant the Dalai Lama shelter, and that India extradite him to China for prosecution on a charge of insurrection. To date, India refuses. This is just one example of what could happen. There is no imminent threat of a Chinese invasion of India to capture the Dalai Lama, but if the U. S. economy were to become much worse than it is, and it owed even more money to China, China might someday deem the U. S. less able or less likely to retaliate in India’s defense. This would never be true, but if China makes the first move, India cannot be guaranteed to refrain from using nuclear weapons, which would certainly result in China’s use of theirs, and then the United States’ use of theirs.
9. Russia
Cause: Russia Nukes The United States of America
The ultimate Cold War fear always began with the Soviet Union launching multiple ICBMs (intercontinental ballistic missiles) armed with nuclear warheads at various military targets in the United States. The prime targets were Washington D. C.; NORAD near Colorado Springs; military bases like Fort Bragg, NC; Camp Pendleton, GA; Parris Island, SC; and various ICBM silos in the middle of nowhere all over the country. The Soviets claimed that they never considered major urban areas like New York City to be of any military value as targets, and would only have been targeted out of desperation in the event of mutual nuclear attacks. Once the first missiles were launched, the Soviet Union planned to invade East Germany, destroy the Berlin Wall, and conquer Western Europe.
The Soviets explored over 300 scenarios involving different missile targets, location, timing, and speed of land invasions, including options for the final conquest of the United States, and claimed after 1991 that their only non-diplomatic deterrent to nuclear war was their inability to eradicate the United States’ armed civilian population. Carpet nuking the entire continent would ruin its natural resources.
Today, Russia and the U. S. are on fairly friendly terms, but General Secretary of the United Russia, Vladimir Putin, is not universally trusted or even liked in the U. S., and although it is generally believed that he would never initiate nuclear war against the U. S., there is always a lingering fear throughout the world of another coup d’etat in Russia. They had many throughout history, and almost every time, the entire country’s economy collapses, leading to anarchy. Putin is despised by a large portion of Russia’s population, led famously by former World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov, who has been beaten and/or imprisoned on numerous occasions merely for demanding the right to free speech. Should another coup take place, Russia’s new leader may well turn his sights onto the United States.
8. Rogue Nuke
Cause: A Rogue Nuke Blamed on Russia
Even scarier than Russia obviously attacking the U. S. is the more likely scenario of parties of another country, probably one of the former Soviet Republics, finding or stealing a nuclear bomb from Russia’s stockpile and sneaking it into the United States. The likelihood of a nuclear missile successfully breaching the U. S. air defenses, headquartered at NORAD, Colorado, is quite low. The U. S. does have defensive capabilities to thwart such attacks, but cannot, as evinced by 9/11, be guaranteed to anticipate or prevent attacks based on espionage or stealth insurgency.
It would be very easy for one of Russia’s long lost warheads to fall into the wrong hands, by discovery or sale, and wind up in a major American metropolitan area. Even the smallest practical yield for a fission bomb, similar to the M388 Davy Crockett, would equal about 20 tons of TNT, and if placed inside the White House, would obliterate the White House, the Executive Office Building, and the U. S. Treasury, and every person inside them. This “backpack nuke” scenario was used for the plot of Tom Clancy’s “The Sum of All Fears,” though the backpack would be large enough to arouse suspicion. Hidden in a vending machine, it would probably be unnoticed until detonation. If this scenario were to happen, the U. S. would quickly learn the origin of the fissile material, blame Russia, and Russia would have a hard time convincing the U. S. otherwise.
7. Vatican City
Cause: Terrorists Bomb Vatican City
The Vatican is a prime target for anti-Christian or anti-Catholic extremists of all kinds. Its security is extremely tight. The Pope is, at all times, surrounded by over a dozen armed bodyguards, in addition to the Swiss Guard. But the backpack bomb scenario might succeed, if a terrorist bent on suicide were to enter St. Peter’s Square during any church service, especially Christmas or Easter Mass. At that time, the Square is crowded with as many as 125,000 people. When a new Pope is installed, the crowd can number 200,000, spilling out along the Via della Conciliazione, the main road up to St. Peter’s Basilica.
The Tomb of St. Peter himself lies beneath the floor of the center of St. Peter’s Basilica, which was designed by a number of immortal Renaissance men, including Michelangelo. The Sistine Chapel stands recessed between the Basilica and the Pope’s living and working complex.
The Pope lives in the Papal Apartments, on the third floor of the Apostolic Palace, on the north side of the Square, from one of the windows of which the Pope appears every Sunday morning to bless a crowd of rarely less than 15,000. But however tight the security of Vatican City is, the Square covers 6 acres, while the whole of the City covers 110 and is walled off from Rome, and it is designed to appear welcoming, for visitors to enter easily. It employs gates, guards, and security cameras that cover every spot of the Square, and anyone carrying a large backpack is certain to be stopped for inspection.
But there is a commercial bus line that transports tourists into the Square, and it would be frighteningly easy for a terrorist, especially one bent on suicide, to commandeer one of these buses somewhere in Rome, fill it with ammonium nitrate fertilizer, liquid nitromethane, and to vex, which is a mixture of ammonium and methyammonium nitrates, and head for the Vatican. These are the materials Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols amassed and used to bomb the Alfred P. Murrah building in Oklahoma City.
A bus carrying 7,000 lbs of this material could easily bash through the wrought iron gates into St. Peter’s Square, and be driven full speed into the Apostolic Palace. To assassinate the Pope is a public dream of many a terrorist around the world, and such a bomb would also destroy a huge amount of immortal art, architecture, and history. Italy would definitely retaliate after discovering the crime’s origin and masterminds. Then, once again, Christianity would be at open war with Islam, and any Islamic nations that support the crime would fight against most of the rest of the world.
6. Meteor
Cause: Meteor Impact
The one eventuality for which no one can prepare, which no one can prevent. Scientists have theorized that had a meteor entered Earth’s atmosphere and traveled over any area of either the United States or the Soviet Union, or any ally, during the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962, at least one side would have mistaken it for a nuclear missile and launched its own in retaliation. Then both sides would have initiated a nuclear holocaust. We were never closer to our own idiotic annihilation than during the 13 days between October 15 and 27 of that year.
You may be thankful that no meteor was tracked across the sky anywhere on Earth during that time. This is a relatively rare occurrence. Earth is struck each day by a rough estimate of 100 septillion meteors, asteroids and comets, most of them the size of grains of sand. Almost all of them burn to dust in the upper atmosphere. A meteor of about 16 inches strikes Earth about once a day and burns up long before reaching the ground; a meteor of about 12 to 15 feet every year, and one about the size of a house every century. This does not count only those meteors that strike the ground, but includes all objects that enter the atmosphere. Some skip back out of it; most burn up. But if a large meteor enters our atmosphere, it bursts into extremely hot, bright flames, and this fireball, called a bolide, could very easily be mistaken, even on radar screens, for a nuclear missile. Had one entered our atmosphere over a political hotspot in October 1962, it may have been all that was needed to push both nuclear powers over the brink.
The power of a meteor impact is far beyond our poor ability to create. The largest man-made explosion in history was Tsar Bomba, the Soviet attempt to terrify the world. It was a 50 megaton blast in northern Siberia that shattered windows in Finland. That is the approximate yield of a meteor made of nickel and/or iron, the size of the Great Pyramid of Giza. A building this size is thought to be huge, but a natural rock this large is nowhere the size of what we think of as a mountain. And yet for such a comparatively small object to yield 50 megatons of explosive force is astounding. The reason for such an astronomically high amount of energy, potential and kinetic, lies in the extremely hard composition, and in the extremely high velocity. Meteors average a speed of about 92,500 miles per hour, with some traveling as slow as 25,000, some as fast as 160,000. The fastest commercially available bullet is the .223 Winchester Super Short Magnum, which travels at 4,352 feet per second, or 2,967 mph. That 2.6 gram bullet strikes at up to 1,683 foot-pounds of force. Now imagine an iron boulder the size of a small neighborhood traveling 54 times faster when it strikes the ground.
Yet, regardless of whether it strikes, a meteor streaking across the sky can easily be misinterpreted as a nuclear missile attack. It may already have been, on 22 September 1979, when, in the South Atlantic, a satellite detected a double flash of light consistent with a nuclear explosion. No government has ever claimed responsibility for any such test, and while one consensus centers on a joint effort by Israel and South Africa, another consensus is that it was a meteorite briefly entering the atmosphere.
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