Read Command and Control Online

Authors: Eric Schlosser

Command and Control

A
LSO
BY
E
RIC
S
CHLOSSER

Fast Food Nation

Reefer Madness

THE PENGUIN PRESS

Published by the Penguin Group

Penguin Group (USA), 375 Hudson Street,

New York, New York 10014

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penguin.com

A Penguin Random House Company

First published by The Penguin Press, a member of Penguin Group (USA) LLC, 2013

Copyright © 2013 by Eric Schlosser

Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

Grateful acknowledgment is made for permission to reprint an excerpt from “Anthem” from
Stranger Music: Selected Poems and Songs
by Leonard Cohen. Copyright © 1993 Leonard Cohen. Reprinted by permission of McClelland & Stewart.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Schlosser, Eric.

Command and control : nuclear weapons, the Damascus Accident, and the illusion of safety / Eric Schlosser.

pages cm

Includes bibliographical references and index.

ISBN 978-1-101-63866-8

1. Nuclear weapons—Accidents—United States—History. 2. Nuclear weapons—Accidents—Arkansas—History. 3. Titan (Missile)—History. 4. United States. Air Force. Strategic Air Command. Strategic Missile Wing, 308th. 5. Nuclear weapons—United States—Safety measures. 6. Nuclear weapons—Government policy—United States. I. Title. II. Title: Nuclear weapons, the Damascus Accident, and the illusion of safety.

U264.3.S45 2013

363.17'990976774—dc23

2013017151

ENDPAPER ART BY GIDEON KENDALL

For my father

 

Ring the bells that still can ring

Forget your perfect offering

There is a crack, a crack in everything

That's how the light gets in.

Leonard Cohen

AUTHOR'S NOTE

T
his is a book about the effort to control nuclear weapons—to ensure that one doesn't go off by accident, by mistake, or by any other unauthorized means. The emphasis in these pages isn't on the high-level diplomacy behind arms control treaties. It's on the operating systems and the mind-set that have guided the management of America's nuclear arsenal for almost seventy years. The history of similar efforts in the Soviet Union is largely absent here. Although no less important, such a history requires a knowledge of Russian archives and sources that I lack.
Command and Control
explores the precarious balance between the need for nuclear weapon safety and the need to defend the United States from attack. It looks at the attempts by American scientists, policy makers, and military officers to reconcile those two demands, from the dawn of the nuclear age until the end of the Cold War. And through the story of a long-forgotten accident, it aims to shed light on a larger theme: the mixture of human fallibility and technological complexity that can lead to disaster.

Although most of the events in this book occurred a long time ago, they remain unfortunately relevant. Thousands of nuclear warheads still sit atop missiles belonging to the United States and Russia, ready to be launched at
a moment's notice. Hundreds more are possessed by India, China, Pakistan, Israel, North Korea, Great Britain, and France. As of this writing, a nuclear weapon has not destroyed a city since August 1945. But there is no guarantee that such good luck will last.

The fall of the Berlin Wall now feels like ancient history. An entire generation has been raised without experiencing the dread and anxiety of the Cold War, a conflict that lasted almost half a century and threatened to annihilate mankind. This book assumes that most of its readers know little about nuclear weapons, their inner workings, or the strategic thinking that justifies their use. I hope readers who are familiar with these subjects will nevertheless learn a new thing or two here. My own ignorance, I now realize, was profound. No great monument has been built to honor those who served during the Cold War, who risked their lives and sometimes lost them in the name of freedom. It was ordinary men and women, not just diplomats and statesmen, who helped to avert a nuclear holocaust. Their courage and their sacrifices should be remembered.

SELECTED CAST OF CHARACTERS
T
HE
T
ITAN
II M
ISSILE
C
OMBAT
C
REW

Captain Michael T. Mazzaro,
the commander, a young officer from Massachusetts with a pregnant wife

Lieutenant Allan D. Childers,
the deputy commander, raised in Okinawa, a former DJ in his late twenties

Staff Sergeant Rodney L. Holder,
the ballistic missile systems analyst technician, son of a Navy officer, responsible for keeping the Titan II ready to launch

Staff Sergeant Ronald O. Fuller,
the missile facilities technician, responsible for the equipment at the launch complex

Lieutenant Miguel Serrano,
a trainee studying to become a deputy commander

P
ROPELLANT
T
RANSFER
S
YSTEM
T
EAM
A

Senior Airman Charles T. Heineman,
the team chief

Senior Airman David Powell
, an experienced Titan II repairman, twenty-one and raised in Kentucky

Airman Jeffrey L. Plumb
, nineteen and from Detroit, a novice receiving on-the-job training

P
ROPELLANT
T
RANSFER
S
YSTEM
T
EAM
B

Sergeant Jeff Kennedy
, a quality control evaluator for the 308th Strategic Missile Wing, perhaps the best missile mechanic at Little Rock Air Force Base, a former deckhand from Maine in his midtwenties

Colonel James L. Morris,
the head of maintenance at the 308th Strategic Missile Wing

Senior Airman James R. Sandaker
, a young missile technician from Evansville, Minnesota

Technical Sergeant Michael A. Hanson,
the team chief

Senior Airman Greg Devlin,
a junior middleweight Golden Gloves boxer

Senior Airman David L. Livingston,
a twenty-two-year-old missile repairman from Ohio with a fondness for motorcycles

C
IVILIANS
I
N
AND
A
ROUND
D
AMASCUS

Sid King,
the twenty-seven-year-old manager of a local radio station

Gus Anglin
, the sheriff of Van Buren County

Sam Hutto,
a dairy farmer with land across the road from the missile site

T
HE
D
ISASTER
R
ESPONSE
F
ORCE

Colonel William A. Jones,
the head of the force as well as the base commander

Captain Donald P. Mueller
, a flight surgeon manning the force's ambulance

Richard L. English,
head of the Disaster Preparedness Unit, a civilian in his late fifties, still fit and athletic, nicknamed “Colonel,” who'd served in the Air Force for many years

Technical Sergeant David G. Rossborough
, an experienced first responder

S
ECURITY
P
OLICE
O
FFICERS

Technical Sergeant Thomas A. Brocksmith
, the on-scene police supervisor at the accident site

Technical Sergeant Donald V. Green,
a noncommissioned officer in his early thirties who volunteered to escort a flatbed truck to Launch Complex 374-7

Technical Sergeant Jimmy E. Roberts,
a friend of Green's who accompanied him on the drive to Damascus

A
T
THE
L
ITTLE
R
OCK
C
OMMAND
P
OST

Colonel John T. Moser,
commander of the 308th Strategic Missile Wing

A
T
THE
SAC C
OMMAND
P
OST
IN
O
MAHA

General Lloyd R. Leavitt,
Jr.,
the vice commander in chief of the Strategic Air Command

A
T
B
ARKSDALE
A
IR
F
ORCE
B
ASE
IN
L
OUSIANA

Colonel Ben G. Scallorn,
a Titan II expert at the Eighth Air Force who'd worked with the missiles since the first silos were built

T
HE
M
ANHATTAN
P
ROJECT

General Leslie R. Groves,
director of the project, who led the effort to build an atomic bomb

J. Robert Oppenheimer,
a theoretical physicist, later known as “the father of the atomic bomb,” who served as the first director of the Los Alamos Laboratory

Edward Teller,
a physicist later known as “the father of the hydrogen bomb,” often at odds with the other Los Alamos scientists

George B. Kistiakowsky
, a chemist and perhaps the nation's leading explosives expert, later the science adviser to President Dwight D. Eisenhower

S
CIENTISTS
AND
E
NGINEERS
AT
THE
W
EAPONS
L
ABS

Bob Peurifoy
, an engineer from Texas who joined Sandia in 1952 and subsequently became its leading advocate for nuclear weapon safety

Harold Agnew
, a physicist from Colorado who helped create the first manmade nuclear chain reaction, filmed the destruction of Hiroshima from an observer plane, and played an important role in nuclear weapon safety efforts at the Los Alamos Laboratory

Carl Carlson
, a young physicist at Sandia who in the late 1950s recognized the vulnerability of a nuclear weapon's electrical system during an accident

Bill Stevens
, an engineer who became the first head of Sandia's nuclear safety department and worked closely with Bob Peurifoy

Stan Spray
, a Sandia engineer who burned, crushed, and routinely tortured nuclear weapon components to discover their flaws

M
ILITARY
L
EADERS

General Curtis E. LeMay,
an engineer who revolutionized American bombing techniques during the Second World War and turned the Strategic Air Command into the most powerful military organization in history

General Thomas S. Power
, an Air Force officer who led the firebombing of Tokyo during the Second World War, followed LeMay to the Strategic Air Command, and gained the reputation of being a mean son of a bitch

General Maxwell D. Taylor,
an Army officer who championed the nuclear strategy of limited war and served as influential adviser to President John F. Kennedy

O
FFICIALS
IN
W
ASHINGTON
, D.C.

David E. Lilienthal
, the first chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission and a strong believer in civilian control of nuclear weapons

Fred Charles Iklé
, a RAND analyst who studied the potential consequences of an accidental nuclear detonation and later served as an undersecretary of defense in the Reagan administration

Donald A. Quarles,
an engineer whose work at Sandia, the Department of the Air Force, and the Department of Defense helped to promote nuclear weapon safety

Robert S. McNamara
, a former automobile executive who, as secretary of defense during the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, struggled to formulate a rational nuclear strategy

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