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Berkeley COMPSCI 39K - Background Data: Nuclear Weapons, Missiles, and the Cuban Crisis

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Background Data:Nuclear Weapons, Missiles, andthe Cuban CrisisRandy H. KatzCS Division, EECS Dept.University of California, BerkeleySpring 2008The Atomic Bomb• “The A-bomb ended thewar, but radar won it.”• Aug. 1945: Single bombdestroys an entire city– Little Boy• Uranium bomb dropped onHiroshima• 8900 lbs, 16 Ktons TNT– Fat Man• Plutonium bomb dropped onNagasaki• 10300 lbs, 21 Ktons TNTOffensive and DefensiveResponses• Longer Range, Faster, Higher Flying Bombersto deliver the bombs– March 1946: Strategic Air Command formed– B-52 first flies in 1954• Bigger Hydrogen (Fusion vs. Fission) Bomb– Aug. 1949: First Soviet Atomic Bomb– Nov. 1952: First US H-bomb test (10 Mtons)– Nov. 1955: Soviet Union explodes their firstH-Bomb• O-T-H Radars and Defensive Lines– 1957-9: DEW (Distant Early Warning) Line• Anti-Aircraft Missiles to intercept bombers– 1944: Design of Nike Ajax systemBallistic Missiles:Germany’s V-2 Rocket• Over 1000 firedat London towardsend of WW 2• Could destroy acity block—butvery inaccurate• 2700 killed, 6500injured• Psychologicaleffect: Essentiallyno warning and nodefense, otherthan to destroythe launching sites• What if you marrya nuclear warheadto a rocket?Ballistic Missiles:How to Intercept?• Most vulnerable during boost phase• Hard to intercept during terminalphase: “bullet hitting a bullet”!• Also consider effects of nuclear airburst caused by interception—mustbe 20 mi up or moreBoost Phase200 mi up15000 mph300 sMidcoursePhase800 mi up20 minutesTerminal Phase5 minutesWeird Logic of NuclearDeterence• Massive Retaliation: Invade a little country, and we will destroyyou—only works as a deterrent if the other guy has no nuclearweapons• Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD): “Whoever shoots first,dies second”– Sufficient counterforce that no matter what the aggressordoes—even if he destroys a considerable number of thedefender’s missiles on the ground—missiles will likely survive tostill threaten his cities with utter destruction– U.S.: No first use policy• Strategic Triad/Flexible Response– Ground-based Missiles (ICBMs): arrive in 20-30 minutes– Strategic Bombers: time on target 12 hours– Nuclear Submarines (SLBMs): can lay in wait for days or evenmonths—assuming subs remain invisible and know that their homecountry has been destroyedCuban Missile Crisis• Cold War: Great power politics in Asia, Middle East, Africa,Latin America– Communist insurgencies and Soviet-leaning governments in N.Korea, N. Vietnam, Cuba– E.g., U.S. response: CIA-supported Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba(1961)• Soviet fears of U.S. “Massive Retaliation” — How to reachparity with the Americans when USSR is so technologicallyfar behind?– Soviet missiles of the time could only reach European citiesfrom their launching sites– U.S. deploys medium range missiles in Turkey in a highlyprovocative move (April 1962)—Soviets now fear a first strike!• Soviet response: deploy own missiles into Cuba (September1962)Soviet-Cuban FriendshipCastro declareshis country “Communist”after the Bay of PigsSeeks protectionfrom U.S. aggressionthrough supportof Soviet UnionCuban Missile Crisis• Medium rangemissiles could reachDallas or DC in 5minutes• Longer rangemissiles could reachvirtually any majorU.S. city• Soviets: restoresthe MAD equation• U.S.: what if theirmissiles could“decapitate” ourability to strikeback? MitigatesMADCuban Missile CrisisU-2 Reconnaissance PlaneReconnaissance PhotoThirteen DaysThe Missile


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Berkeley COMPSCI 39K - Background Data: Nuclear Weapons, Missiles, and the Cuban Crisis

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