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#15
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On Wed, 25 Feb 2004 09:00:42 -0500, "Kevin Brooks"
wrote: "Peter Skelton" wrote in message .. . On 24 Feb 2004 21:50:10 -0800, (WaltBJ) wrote: 2) I should think doctrine on the possible use of nuclear weapons took a serious hit when a real sober look was taken of the two nuclear accidents the USSR experienced - Chelyabinsk and Chernobyl. The USSR never ever achieved the capability to feed all its people from its own resources and what fallout from numerous nuclear weapons would do to the arable lands of the Ukraine really doesn't bear thinking about. The doctrine was gone by 1975. What we saw after that was think-tank blather about the possibility of nuclear war without escallation. Examples: on our side the potential use of battlefield weapons in Europe (we'd had them earlier and withdrawn all except tactical nukes on figfhter-bombers, IIRC) Actually, in 1975 we had a rather complete tactical nuclear arsenal in place beyond those carried on the aircraft. Included were nuclear rounds for both 155mm and 8 inch artillery, Lance and Pershing I SSM's, and the atomic demolitions muntions (SADM and MADM). I wouldn't have thought of Pershing as battlefield, but it was defintiely there as were the others. The drawdown of these Army controlled nuclear warheads did not take place until beginning in the mid eighties (SADM and MADM) through the later eighties and into the very early nineties (when the arty and missile warheads were returned to the US and removed from the active stockpile). Was this still in Europe? Its imminent absence was part of the justification for nuclear armament of our F104's. What you're saying is that the battlefield weapons stayed in Europe past the fall of the Wall. Additionaly, in 1975 I believe we also hstill had some dual control warhead still in Europe (i.e., for older Honest John SSM's still in use by allied nations, and possibly a few warheads for the Nike Hercules batteries that remained in both US and allied service at that time). Honest Johns lasted into the nineties. on theirs taking out naval assets (they went for really big ASMs instead or after). Peter Skelton Peter Skelton |
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