Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Broken Arrows: When Nuclear Weapons Go Wrong
Episode Date: October 4, 2022Nuclear weapons are the most devastating things humans have ever created. They are so powerful and terrible that nations that have them strictly control how they are used and handled. That being sai...d, over the 75-year history that nuclear weapons have existed, accidents have happened. While not common, they have happened enough that the US military has a code word for such events. Learn more about broken arrows and what happens when there are problems with nuclear weapons on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Darcy Adams Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/EverythingEverywhere Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ Everything Everywhere is an Airwave Media podcast. Please contact sales@advertisecast.com to advertise on Everything Everywhere. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Nuclear weapons are the most devastating things that humans have ever created.
They're so powerful and terrible that nations that have them strictly control how they are used and handled.
That being said, over the 75-year history that nuclear weapons have existed, accidents have happened.
While not common, they have happened enough that the U.S. military has a code word for such events.
Learn more about broken arrows and what happens when there are accidents with nuclear weapons on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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Nuclear weapons are very serious things.
The only thing worse than using them would be that they would be used by apps.
accident, or even worse, that one might be stolen and used by a nefarious third party.
To that end, today, nuclear weapons have the tightest controls. Even back in the late Cold War,
command and control systems were in place to ensure that nuclear weapons would never be used
when they weren't intended. If you ever want to see what the systems were like to control
nuclear missiles, I highly recommend visiting the Minuteman National Historic Site in western
South Dakota. They have an actual Minuteman nuclear launch site and you can visit the underground
bunker where the missileers, that was their title, would be on duty for days at a time in an
underground bunker behind blast-proof doors. That being said, these protocols surrounding nuclear
weapons took time to develop, and they were created due to several rather embarrassing and
dangerous accidents. While an accident surrounding nuclear weapons is to be avoided at all costs,
there are protocols in place if such a thing were to happen.
Such an event is known as a broken arrow.
A broken arrow could be any number of things,
including an unintended nuclear explosion,
which thankfully has never happened,
a lost weapon, an accident with a weapon,
or radioactive contamination.
While such events don't get much publicity,
they have happened,
and they have happened far more often than you might have realized.
The United States Department of Defense
has admitted to 32 broken arrow incidents from 1950 to 1980,
and the Defense Threat Reduction Agency,
which is a part of the Department of Defense,
has unofficially confirmed that there were hundreds more.
Some of these incidents are quite shocking,
and hard to believe that they were even allowed to happen.
The first recorded Broken Arrow incident occurred on February 14, 1950.
A Convair B-36B bomber flew from Ileson Air Force Base near Fairbanks, Alaska,
to Carswell Air Force Base outside of Fort Worth, Texas.
The flight was an exercise where they would fly for 24 hours over the North Pacific
and then do a simulated bombing run before heading to Texas.
The bomber was carrying a Mark 4 nuclear weapon.
Nuclear weapons were still rather new in 1950,
and the Mark 4 was a newer version of the same type of bomb that was dropped on Nagasaki.
When the bomber took off, the temperature in Fairbanks was minus 40,
which is the same in Fahrenheit and Celsius.
The extreme cold weather caused problems with the engines of the plane.
During the flight, three of the six engines failed, and the remaining three couldn't complete the mission.
The crew made the decision to abandon the bomber over the waters of British Columbia.
As part of abandoning the plane, they ejected the bomb and detonated it with conventional explosives.
The bomb was not activated with its plutonium core, so there was never a threat of a nuclear explosion,
but there was still a lot of enriched uranium inside.
The bomb's detonation was kept a secret for a year, so no one would have known to look for it.
But the kicker is that the bomb and the uranium were never recovered.
In 2016, a diver supposedly was in the area where he claimed to have found an object that looked like part of a bomb,
but there was no corroborating evidence.
There were three other plane crashes during 1950 alone, where nuclear bombs or the material four bombs were involved in the crash,
but all the materials were recovered.
This is one of the first broken arrow incidents, but it was nowhere close to being the last.
In 1946, a B-47 crashed off the coast of Morocco, killing all three crew members.
On board were materials for two nuclear weapons, but not the actual weapons themselves.
A search was conducted, and no evidence of the plane or the bomb material was ever found.
1958 was a bad year for nuclear weapon accidents and the state of South Carolina.
On February 5th, a B-47 on a training exercise out of Homestead Air Force Base in Florida
had a mid-air collision with an F-86 fighter near Tybee Island, South Carolina.
A Mark 15 nuclear bomb was on board, which was jettisoned to protect the crew.
Usually, conventional explosives are detonated around the bomb rendering it useless.
In this case, the conventional explosive didn't explode the device and it slipped into the water.
One of the big unknowns about the Tybee Island bomb was if the plutonium core had been installed.
If the plutonium core was in the bomb, it was a functional working nuclear weapon.
The Air Force initially claimed that a lead corps was installed for training purposes.
However, in 1966, the Assistant Secretary of Defense testified before Congress that it was, in fact,
a fully functioning nuclear weapon with a plutonium core.
The bomb was never found.
There was a major effort to find it, but they came up empty-handed.
The bomb is believed to be buried between 15 feet or 5 meters of sediment at the bottom of the ocean.
Another broken arrow incident in South Carolina occurred just one month later on March 11, 1958,
and this incident also involved a B-47.
In this accident, the bomber took off from Hunter Air Force Base in South Carolina.
of Carolina en route to the United Kingdom. The bomber was carrying a Mark 6 nuclear weapon.
This incident wasn't a case of a collision or a crash. In this case, the bomb was accidentally
dropped by the captain who was trying to fix a problem. The bomb fell directly onto a playhouse of two
young sisters, Helen and Francis Gregg, who were six and nine years old. The girls were standing
about 200 meters away when the bomb hit their playhouse and the conventional explosives in the bomb
detonated.
It left a 21-meter-wide, 11-meter-deep crater where the girls' playhouse used to be.
In 1961, one incident came the closest to an actual nuclear explosion.
On January 23, 1961, a B-52 flew out of Seymour Johnson Air Force Base outside of Golsboro, North Carolina.
On board were two Mark 39 nuclear bombs, and each had a yield of 3.8 megatons.
The plane suffered a fuel leak and exploded in mid-air.
One of the two bombs deployed its parachute and landed safely on Earth. It was found almost
immediately as the parachute was caught in a tree. The parachute on the other bomb, however,
didn't deploy. It hit a muddy field at a speed of 700 miles per hour, or 310 meters per second,
and disintegrated. The Air Force initially indicated that there was no chance of an explosion,
but in a 2013 Freedom of Information Act request, it was discovered that three of the four safety mechanisms
didn't deploy. There was a great deal of difficulty excavating the bomb, given how far into the
soft ground it was embedded, and groundwater kept seeping in to the excavation site. The plutonium
core was recovered, but the rest of the uranium was never found. The most egregious case of an
actual, armed, fully functional nuclear weapon being lost occurred in 1965. The aircraft carrier
USS Taekonaroga was in the Philippine Sea off the coast of Japan.
They were moving a Douglas A4E Skyhawk from a hangar to an elevator to take it up to the flight deck
when it rolled over the side of the ship.
On the plane was a B-43 nuclear bomb with a variable yield from 79 kilotons to one megaton.
The bomb was fully functional with an active plutonium core.
The plane and the bomb were never found, and it is believed to be sitting at the bottom of the ocean
16,000 feet or 4,900 meters below the surface.
I'll end with what is perhaps the most famous broken arrow incident in history, just because it occurred with so many witnesses.
On January 17, 1966, a B-52 bomber collided in the air with a KC-135 tanker while refueling off the coast of Palomare, Spain.
Seven crew members were killed between the two aircraft.
Hundreds of people witnessed the crash, and the incident wound up in the front page of the New York Times.
The B-52 had four hydrogen bombs on board.
Two of the bombs had their conventional explosives detonate, which spread plutonium over a one-square-mile area outside of Palomarese.
One bomb fell into soft ground in a riverbed, and the final bomb landed in the Mediterranean Sea.
The bomb which fell into the sea was found by several fishermen, and under maritime law, the fishermen were able to claim salvage rights to the bomb.
They went to court to claim 1% of the value of the weapon, which had a value of $2 billion.
The fishermen and the United States government settled out of court.
These are not even close to being the only broken arrow incidents.
There are dozens more of minor degrees which have occurred, and those are just the only ones we know about from the United States.
There are probably many more incidents that occurred in the Soviet Union that we just never heard of.
The Soviets alone had several nuclear submarines which sunk, which has never happened to an American nuclear sub.
Also, the number of broken arrow incidents has decreased dramatically.
Almost all of the worst incidents occurred in the 50s and 60s when strategic bombers were the primary delivery vehicle for nuclear weapons,
and safety systems were still being worked out.
A broken arrow incident is incredibly scary.
In some ways, we're lucky that nothing worse has ever happened.
While such incidents have become exceedingly rare, the risk,
can never be eliminated entirely.
Everything Everywhere Daily is an Airwave Media podcast.
The executive producer is Darcy Adams.
The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett.
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