“EMP 101” A BASIC PRIMER & SUGGESTIONS
FOR PREPAREDNESS
By
William R. Forstchen Ph.D.
Author of “One Second
After”
WHAT IS AN EMP?
EMP is shorthand for Electro Magnetic Pulse.
It is a rather unusual and frightening by-product when a
nuclear bomb is detonated above the earth’s atmosphere.
We all know that our atmosphere and the magnetic field which
surrounds our planet is a thin layer which not only keeps us alive,
but also protects us from dangerous radiation from the sun.
On a fairly regular basis there are huge solar storms on the
sun’s surface which emit powerful jets of deadly radiation.
If not for the protective layer of our atmosphere and
magnetic field, those storms would fry us.
At times though, the storm is so power that enough disruptive energy
reaches the earth’s surface that it drowns out radio waves and even
shorts electrical power grids. . .this happened seve ral years back
in Canada.
View the detonation of a nuclear bomb, two hundred miles
straight up as the same thing, but infinitely more powerful since it
is so close by.
As the bomb explodes it emits a powerful wave of gamma rays.
As this energy release hits the upper atmosphere it creates a
electrical disturbance know as the Compton Effect.
The intensity is magnified. View it
as a small pebble rolling down a slope, hitting a larger one,
setting that in motion, until finally you have an avalanche.
At the speed of light this disturbance races to the earth
surface. It is not something you can see
or hear, in the same way you don’t feel the electrical disturbance
in the atmosphere during20a large solar storm.
For all electrical systems though, it is deadly.
WHAT HAPPENS WHEN
THIS “PULSE” HITS THE SURFACE?
Those who might remember ham radio operators, or even the old
CB radios of the 1970s can recall that if you ran out a wire as an
antenna you could send and receive a better signal.
The wire not only transmitted the very faint power of a few
watts of electricity from your radio, it could receive even fainted
signals in return. As the Pulse strikes the
earths surface, with a power that could range up to hundreds of amps
per square yard, it will not affect you directly, at most you’ll
feel a slight tingling, the s ame as when lightning is about to
strike close by, and nearly all the energy will just be absorbed
into the ground and dissipate. The bad news,
however, is wherever it strikes wires, metal surfaces, antennas,
power lines it will now travel along those metal surfaces (in the
same way a lightning bolt will always follow the metal of a
lightning rod, or the power line into your house.)
The longer the wire, the more energy is absorbed, a high
tension wire miles long will absorb tens of thousands of amps, and
here is where the destruction begins as it slams into any delicate
electronic circuits, meaning computer chips, relays, etc.
In that instant, they are overloaded by the massive energy
surge, short circuit, and fry. Your house
via electric, phone and cable wires is connected, like all the rest
of us into the power and communications grids.
This energy surge will destroy all delicate electronics in
your home, even as it destroys all the major components all the way
back to the power company’s generators and the phone company’s main
relays. In far less than a milli second the
entire power grid of the
WOULDN”T CIRCUIT
BREAKERS AND SURGE PROTECTORS STOP IT?
This is where the effect of EMP starts to get complex.
All electricity travels, of course, at the
speed of light. The circuit breakers that
are built into our electrical system or the ones you buy to plug
your own computer in to, are designed to “read’ the flow of current.
If it suddenly exceeds a certain level, the breaker snaps and
takes you off line, thus protecting everything beyond it.
More than a few of us have found out that when you buy a
cheap surge protector for ten or twenty bucks sure it will snap off,
but the surge has already passed through and fried your expensive
plasma television or new computer. Unlike a
lightning strike, or other power surge, an EMP surge is “front
loaded.” Meaning it doesn’t do a build up
for a couple of mirco-seconds, allowing enough time for the circuit
breaker to “read” that trouble is on the way and shut down.
It comes instead like a wall of energy, without any advance
wave building up as a warning. It therefore
slams through nearly all commercial and even military surge
protectors already in place, and is past the “safety barrier” and
into the delicate electronics before the system has time to react.
WHAT ABOUT CARS?
Here is more bad news regarding EMP. =2 0If
you own a 1965 Volkswagen bug or Mustang you’re ok. . .there are no
solid state electronics under the hood, it still has an old fashion
carburetor, the radio still might even have tubes rather than
transistors. However, even that is in
question. In 1962 both we and the Soviets
detonated nuclear weapons in space (saber rattling during the Cuban
Missile Crisis) and it is reported that a number of cars. . .their
ignition systems a thousand miles away from the detonation were
fried because of EMP. (Check out a few of the
more “tech head” links on this site for detailed explanations).
From about 1980 on, cars increasingly went solid state and by
the 1990s were getting ever more complex computers installed.
Consider a visit to the mechanic today.
He runs a wire in under the hood, plugs it into his computer
and within seconds has a full diagnostic, types in what his computer
is suppose to do, the problem is solved and you are handed a rather
large bill. Great modern conveniences from
airbag sensors, to fuel injectors and all of it more and more
dependent on computers. At the instant the
“Pulse” strikes, the body of your car and the radio antenna will
feed the overload into your vehicle’s computer and short it out.
Some police departments are
even now experimenting with using a specially designed bumper on
their car for high speed chases. If they can
brush up against the car they are pursuing the officer just hits a
button, and through his bumper a high energy surge will be released,
flooding into the car being pursued and shorting out its computer
system. Result. . .whether you are being
chased by the police with this new device, or an EMP burst has been
fired off. . .your car will essentially be a useless hunk of metal
that will slowly roll to a stop. In that
instant, most of
AND PLANES?
This is a terrifying aspect of an attack that no government report
has publicly discussed along with the potential casualty rate in the
first seconds after an attack. Commercial
airliners today are all computer driven. In
fact, from lift off to landing, a pilot no longer even needs to be
in the cockpit, a computer can do all of it if need be.
When the pilot pulls back on the “stick” it is no longer
connect by wires stretching all the way back to the tail and the
elevator assembly. Instead, his motion is
read by a computer which sends a signal to an electrical servo-motor
in the tail, which then moves the tail. In
short, the entire plane is computer driven.
It is estimated that at any given moment during regular
business hours, somewhere between three to four thousand commercial
airliners are crisscrossing the skies. (There
is a fascinating site you can find via Goggle that shows typical air
traffic around the world during a twenty four hour period.
From dawn til way after dusk, the entire
Somewhere between 250,000 to 500,000 people will die in the first
few minutes. . .more than all our battle casualties across four
years of World War II
AREN”T WE
PREPARING? ISN’T
The
frightening answer is no. This author has spent
over four years researching this topic, interviewing scores of
personnel from Congressmen and Generals, to your local police chief
and sheriff. At your local level, since
9/11, first responders have received hundreds of hours of training
and briefings on all sorts of terrorist scenarios.
Only a few have told me that they even discussed the topic
for more than a few minutes at an official level.
As to emergency stockpiles of supplies and crucial
replacement parts, there is nothing in place.
WHY NOT?
EMP,
has managed to “stealth” its way on to the highly dangerous list and
few, except for a small number of personnel in the Pentagon, various
research labs, and men like Congressman Bartlett (R., MD) who heads
the Congressional Investigative Committee on EMP, are aware of it.
For one it has a certain “sci-fi” sound to it, which makes
many dismiss the potential before the discussion has even started.
Second, the only way to truly evaluate the threat and
demonstrate it is to detonate a nuclear weapon, something we have
not done since the full test ban went into effect decades ago.
It is therefore not “visible” to us, the way another airliner
smashing into a skyscraper is now forever imprinted on our national
psyche, feared, and prepared for. Next,
with all the competing issues and threats in the world, EMP simply
does not have a “constituency” of influence.
Only a few members of Congress, our military and scientific
community are issuing the warnings. There
are no
And finally, the impact is so
overwhelming=2 0that it triggers a psychological sense of
helplessness, and therefore why bother, since if it happens we are
finished. It is the same response that
happened between the 1950s-60s. When first
confronted with the threat of a nuclear attack, tens of billions was
spent to prepare, in fact our
Something happened though by
the mid-1960s. The threat was no longer
fifty to a hundred small atomic bombs dropped from bombers, it was
now a rain of thousands of hydrogen bombs, delivered within minutes
by ballistic missiles. In this atmosphere
of overkill, attempting to prepare seemed ridiculous, futile.
The standard phrase became “the living
will envy the dead,” so why bother? Civil
defense finally became an object of derision, the realm of a few
survivalist nut cases.
That threat is still there,
and to this day our nuclear forces stand ready to respond, which has
indeed been the only defense left. . .”if you nuke us, we’ll nuke
you,” a policy known as “mutual assured
destruction,” a zero win game.
EMP is different, it is not a
rain of thousands of bombs, needing a vast and powerful military to
deliver it, which means Russia and China are the only real threats
in that realm. . .but unless seized by madness, their leaders know
such an attack, within minutes would be met with thousands of bombs
annihilating their country as well. It is a
balance of terror that has now endured for nearly sixty years.
An EMP attack is different since it only requires but one
nuclear weapon, detonated 300 miles above the middle of the
An analogy. Aircraft carriers
existed in 1941 but few saw them as a true strategic threat.
Most in the military and their civilian leaders saw the role
of carriers as platforms for launching scout planes, spotting
targets, and acting always in support of the trusted and proven
battleship. No one seriously considered the
potential of putting half a dozen such carriers into one group and
launching a full out attack in the opening minutes of a war.
We all know what changed that belief forever, but by then, it
was too late for the nearly 3,000 Americans who were killed on that
Day of Infamy. The next Day of Infamy will be
infinitely worst.
WHO WOULD DO THIS
AND WHY?
Given the hatred and fanaticism of some of our enemies today,
if they can obtain but one nuclear bomb, the temptation will be
there. It does not even have to be a nation
such as
WHAT WOULD HAPPEN
AFTER THE ATTACK?
Unless you are in a jet liner, plummeting to earth, or caught
in a massive traffic jam of stalled vehicles on the interstate, you
might not even know anything has changed.
Sure the power is off, but we’ve all been through that dozens of
times. You call the power company.
But the phone doesn’t work and that might be slightly more
unnerving. You might go to your car to drive
around and see what happened and then it becomes more unnerving when
the car does not even turn over, nor any other car in your
neighborhood.
Twelve hours later the food in your freezer starts to thaw,
if it is winter and you don’t have a wood stove the frost will start
to penetrate in to your house, if summer and you live in
Law enforcement will be powerless without radios, cell
phones, and squad cars, unable to know where there is a crisis and
how to react. The real horror show within
hours will be in hospitals and nursing homes.
They’re required by law to have back up generators, but those
generators are “hot wired” into the building so power can instantly
kick in if the main system shuts down. That
“hot wiring” means the Electro Magnetic Pulse will take out the
generators and their circuitry as well.
If you are familiar with what happened in
As to medical supplies, not just in hospitals but across the
nation to every local pharmacy, they are all dependent on something
called Fed Ex. As we have perfected a
remarkable system of instant delivery, guided by computers, local
inventories have dropped to be more cost efficient and even for
reasons of security with controlled substances, which to ordinary
citizens means pain killers. Supplies will
run out in a matter of days. Those of us
dependent on medications to control asthma, heart disease, diabetes,
and a host of other aliments which a hundred years ago would have
killed us shortly after the onset. . .will now face death within
days or weeks, unless the national power grid comes back on line
quickly and order is restored.
HOW LONG WOULD IT
TAKE?
Here is the bottom line of the entire issue and why the
threat of a single EMP weapon is so dangerous.
There is the serious potential that we might never be able to
restore the system. One might ask why?
It just means replacing some circuit breakers, pulling out
fried chips in our cars and replacing them with new ones etc.
It is not that simple. The
infrastructure
A few examples to illustrate what might seem an extreme
statement.
The incredibly complex system that creates electricity,
starting from a hydro-electric dam, a glowing nuclear reactor, or
coal fired plant, leaps through hundreds of circuit breakers,
perhaps thousands of miles of wiring, across high tension lines to
sub stations, and finally to the outlet your computer is plug into.
This single line will now have hundreds of
breaks in it, each one having to be replaced.
Any of us who have lived through a major disaster such as a
hurricane, ice storm, or tornado, and then gone several days without
power know the sequence, h ow much longer the wait seems to be, and
then finally the welcome sight of a power company repair truck
turning on to your block. . .and that truck might be from a power
company five hundred miles away. All our
disasters have ultimately been local in nature, Andrew in
Consider though if the entire nation is “down.”
Quite simply there are not enough replacement parts in the
entire nation to even remotely begin the retro-fitting and
replacement of all components. Every
community will be on its own, struggling to rebuild. . .on their
own.
Example two. A member of your
family has type one diabetes and if you do have that in your family
you know that failure to properly monitor and treat can result in
death within a matter of weeks at most.
Start with the testing kit. If it is one of
the new electronic digital models, changes are a small hand held
unit, not plugged into the grid will in fact survive.
If it is an older kit that still uses testing stripes and you
are running short of those stripes of paper, you already have a
problem.
Where does insulin come from? In an
earlier age it was literally made from the ground up pancreas of
sheep and horses. Today it is manufactured
via genetically altered bacteria and cells.
There are several such factories across the nation which do this,
producing millions of vials a day.
We are not even going to get into the complexity of where do
the vials, the rubber seals and such come from.
But with the shut down of power the factory goes dark and the
complex environmental controls to insure the proper safety of the
bacteria “batches” is now off line. Within
days it will cease to function for that reason alone.
But it will most likely already be off line.
What of the workers? Will t he next
shift show up when cars no longer run?
Unlikely. And those on the job?
No matter how dedicated most must leave within a day to see
to their own families and chances are not return.
Of the hundreds of thousands of vials waiting in refrigerated
containers for shipping, what happens to the coolant?
And where are the trucks to move it?
If the insulin is, in fact, already in the “pipeline” so to speak,
if aboard a Fed Ex plane we already know that tragic fate.
If on a highway it will be stalled. . .and so on to your
local pharmacy where the few vials in the current inventory will be
snatched up by panicked customers within hours and then hoarded
away, regardless of the need of others. And
even then, how will you keep the insulin temperature stabilized and
when that fails, how swiftly does the potency drop?
But one other factor, the syringes to inject the medicine.
Any of us over 45 or so can recall the dull terrible needles
in our doctor’s offices. (As a child I recall
my grandmother boiling my diabetic grandfather’s needles.)
After use they were stuck back into an autoclave (powered by
electricity) and carefully sterilized. . .and then came the
disposable syringe. Where does that needle
come from. Again a long back track to an oil
field, to a cracking plant, to a factory that, in sterile conditions
turns the plastic into the barrel of syringe, to a mine where ore is
turned into steel which is milled at remarkable tolerances into a
needle point. . .and again shipped and shipped again and finally to
your house.
The point of these few examples is that in an age not so long
ago, nearly all that we needed for our lives was produced locally,
and then came railroads, which could link a farmer’s wif e in
Nebraska, via a catalog and telegraph to the Sears office in Chicago
for that new set of dishes or a replacement part for a threshing
machine. . .to our complex web of today.
Few of us ever realized that with each advance in convenience and
the latest new gadget or necessity we took another step towards
dependence which in a global market today means that the chip needed
to repair an important computer might be made in Japan, and ordered
via a sales rep at a desk in India, and yet we expect it to arrive
within two days and see nothing remarkable about that.
Globalization with all its benefits and woes for some workers
here, has made us infinitely more dependent on a global network of
communications and transportation. . .that fragile spider’s web.
There is the true nightmare of EMP.
Once the entire system collapses, how and where does anyone build it
back when that one crucial part you need is in a warehouse in
YOU MENTION IN
YOUR BOOK THAT 90% of AMERICANS MIGHT DIE WITHIN A YEAR.
ISN’T THAT FEAR MONGORING?
When such numbers were discussed during the height of the
Cold War, the numbers were indeed real, as they are now with the use
of but one weapon to create an EMP burst.
The tragic thing is how we can discuss such numbers now in a
society where the entire nation went into stunned mourning after
nearly 4,000 died on 9/11.
The death of an individual is a tragedy.
The death of a million a statistic.
The first few million deaths are tragically obvious.
Those aboard commercial flights, and even most private
flights, those in nursing homes, hospices, and hospitals.
The next few million are obvious as well.
Those with severe aliments requiring careful daily medication
or treatment, such as those awaiting transplants, people undergoing
dialysis, those with severe heart ailments both known and not yet
realized. We are use to emergency response
within minutes when we snap open a cell phone and call 911.
The stress, fear, even the unaccustomed physical exertion of
someone having to walk ten miles to get home will trigger heart
attacks, strokes, etc.
We are a “hot house bred”
generation, in fact several generations now.
Our water supply is carefully controlled and delivered
instantly and on demand, hundreds of gallons of it a day.
Our food, wrapped in sanitary packages has expiration dates
stamped on it. Where will you get drinkable
water in a city after but several days?
Frankly when was the last time any of us had to live without a flush
toilet and anti-bacterial hand wash by the sink?
Food that starts to thaw, which we were always cautioned to
throw out, food in a refrigerator that is now at room temperature. .
. do you throw it out or risk eating it? If
your house is fully electric how do you cook it properly?
These few questions alone lead to a clear path straight to an
entire nation heading into gastro-intestinal aliments within a week
to ten days at most. Any of us who have
traveled overseas, especially to third world countries have
weathered them an d survived. . .thanks in part to modern
medications once back safe home in the
Compound this with the fact that by the end of the week
millions of Americans will be on the road. . .walking.
The tragic lawlessness we often see in the wake of a large
disaster will most certainly explode given that police are near
powerless to react in an organized manner and national guard units
will not even be mobilized since how do they mobilize if no vehicles
run and all communications is still down.
Millions, many of them the most vulnerable will make the
choice of abandoning the cities rather than try and fight to find a
gallon jug of water or a few cans of soup.
Beyond this fear, summer or winter many urban dwellings will be
unlivable. The multi million dollar condo on
the 40th floor is now a nightmare 400 foot hike straight
up, lugging whatever water or food you might get.
They will be unheated, or roasting ovens, designed of course
with perfection climate control. . .that no longer works.
Many will be driven, as well by the false hope that relatives
out in the suburbs or better yet “out in the country” will of course
have plenty of food and be willing to share.
Our interstate highways will become nightmare paths of exile
as our largely urban population tries to fan out to find food that
once was shipped in.
Millions could and will die on that road. Where
do they get safe water? The nearby stream or
river is now a dump for raw sewage since purification plants are off
line. Once stricken on the road by the
results after drinking this water, where does one get help, basic
medication, more water to keep you hydrated.
Within a month the next level of die off will be in full
development. Those who survive the initial
onset of illnesses from polluted water and
food, and survive, will nevertheless be weakened, knock down a
level. Even if they do get lucky and have
food stockpiled, or find a source, chances are it will not be
balanced at all and the first onset of nutritional imbalance will
lower the immulogical system even further.
Now is the time that more serious diseases will appear.
Pneumonia, especia lly in the winter due to exposure.
More exotic and dangerous types of food poisoning such as
salmonella due to a complete collapse of sanitation.
Various forms of hepatitis, even diseases not heard of in a
generation or more. . .measles, scarlet fever, and tuberculosis.
In addition, the number of injuries will have soared.
Few of us today are truly use to the back breaking kind of
manual labor of the 19th century.
Even most laborers today use modern equipment to do 99% of the
actual work. Unfamiliar with axes, shovels
and saws, people will break bones, cut themselves, or just suddenly
die from strain. And waiting now are the
infectious diseases where an ordinary cut, once treated with a few
stitches instead becomes an avenue for gangrene, a rusty nail is
again a threat of tetanus.
And finally, violence against ourselves.
At what point do we begin to kill each other for food, water,
shelter? At what point does a small town
mobilize, barricade itself in and make clear that any who enter will
be shot because there is not enough food to share, and any new
stranger might be a carrier of yet another disease.
By sixty days true starvation will be killing off millions
and by 120 days mass starvation will be the norm.
Those lucky enough to be in rich farm producing areas, with
the knowledge of how to gather food by hand, and then preserve it,
will have a temporary surplus, but even then, if they do not ration
it out wisely, as did our colonial forefathers, they too will starve
before the next crop is in the ground come spring.
Months later, yes help from old allies might be flooding in,
but how to move it, distribute it and at the same time provide
medical aid and also rebuild the electrical grid, step by step will
still be overwhelming tasks.
As said before, “the death of a
million is a statistic.” Our statistic
could very well be that in a year’s time, nine out of ten Americans
will be dead. Dead from but one weapon, our
global position shattered forever as we revert back into a third
rate power, if we even still survive as a united system of states.
IS THERE ANYTHING
THAT CAN BE DONE BEFORE IT HAPPENS?
Not a wide eyed sci fi
novel or something sensationalistic, or even something set long
after the event, like the book “The Road.”
But instead it was my goal to write a novel like the classic “Alas
Babylon,” or the more well known “On the Beach.”
To do something that might trigger a response, any kind of
response. It was my good fortune, while
researching for the book that I met Captain Bill Sanders of the
Navy, one of our country’s leading experts on EMP and Congressman
Bartlett who heads the Congressional committee that issued a little
known report on the threat of EMP. Both of
them provided me with valuable information, which I must always
emphasize was not classified, and encouraged me to get the story
“out there.”
I therefore wrote the novel from the perspective of a single
dad with two daughters, li ving in small town in
My greatest frustration and something I hope my novel will
stir is the realization that only a minimal effort, to start, could
radically cut the number of casualties after such an attack, perhaps
by a full magnitude from over 250 million dead to less then 25
million dead. . .which is still a horrific number.
An off the shelf purchase of hand held two way radi os by
every local police, fire, sheriff, and emergency response department
in the country would mean, that if then properly stored along with a
large stock pile of batteries that within minutes after an attack, a
nation wide network of communications would be back up and running.
This can not be emphasized enough, that proper communications
and what the military calls “command and control,” will go a long
step towards maintaining public order.
Another inexpensive step is just simple training.
We are a nation that sadly has become entirely dependent on
someone “up the ladder” passing orders as to what to do.
Very few of us today are conditioned to think and act
independently. This has to be reversed in
the event of an EMP strike. Every first
responder should be trained to be able to recognize an EMP hit, and
in coordination with their local departments, have a plan in place
as to what to do first, and then next, and then after that.
This author would recommend a first step being the seizing of
supplies at every veterinarian’s office in the country.
That might sound strange, but vets are most likely the only
ones in your community that have a full array of surgical equipment,
anesthesia and pain killers. Armed with this
equipment, medications seized from pharmacies, dentist offices and
doctor’s offices, and then set up at a local school, staffed by
local doctors and nurses, would mean that each community has made a
major step towards tending its injured, ill and elderly.
Other training would be oriented towards how to organize a
community, locating vehicles that still run, and retro fitting those
vehicles, that had minimal electronics in them, so that law
enforcement, medical, and fire control have transportation.
A next step would be public education for all citizens,
similar to the programs in place during the 1950s.
How to recognize an EMP strike and then what do you do?
After Katrina we have learned to now start educating our
citizens that they must rely upon themselves and their own good
judgment, and not expect government to come instantly to the rescue.
Contrast the chaos in the days before Katrina to the orderly
evacuations when Gustav hit
But a week’s worth of emergency food stockpile and water,
just recycling used milk and soda bottles, filling them with sterile
water and storing them away could buy a precious week’s worth of
time, nation wide. A few simple medical
supplies such a sterile bandages and just a basic family first aid
manual. Simple things even our
grandparents, still living on farms knew, about how to insure water
is safe, where to put a privy pit, and properly store any food that
might last long term. If a family member has
a serious il lness or condition keep a full
level of medicine on hand and not wait until the bottle is empty
before refilling. This alone could be a life
saver for millions, buying extra weeks or a month or two.
Above all else educate to a post EMP survival.
To turn to community organization, to help and rely on
neighbors and not some distant agency, to have a plan in place to
help local nursing homes with the elderly, to have an entire
community, be it a neighborhood in a city, or a small town in the
Midwest, ready to take care of itself and insure public safety and
law while the nation gradually stitches itself back together.
Ironically these were plans already put into place across
The next step, which will cost more, will be crucial as well.
The analogy is simple. We all know
that
In this post industrial age power is no longer steel plants,
mills, factories and yet more factories. It
is now precision electronics, communications, computers. . . and the
heart blood of all that is electrical power.
Congress has estimated that a
full retro fit to our power grid to withstand a large scale EMP
strike could cost up to half a trillion dollars. . .and the chances
of that bill ever passing is remote to say the least.
And yet, there is another path at a fraction of the cost.
Stockpiling of key components overseas.
Any major component being manufactured today for our
electrical grid, that could be destroyed by an EMP strike, we should
make but one more of each and then store those components at
military bases overseas. Within hours of a
hit on the continental
Of late, our nation’s railroads have launched an advertising
campaign which is actually true, that in terms of tons per mile, our
railroads are still the most effective means of moving goods.
For an investment not much more than the cost of a couple of
B-2 bombers, or a squadron of F-22s, several hundred diesel electric
locomotives could be pulled off line, their components harden to
withstand an EMP strike, then parked inside silos and bunkers at
military bases across the country. Within
hours after an EMP strike these powerful machines could already be
at work. It will be laborious at first, for
every other train in the country will have stalled on the lines.
They have to be shunted off the main lines, switches reset by
hand. . .but once cleared, a single train
could move ten thousand tons of food to a stricken city and on the
return run, evacuate thousands to where the food is out in the
countryside, or back to military bases.
Within weeks a nationwide transportation grid could be up and
running again. . .yet another factor that will reduce fatalities
even more.
A further step would indeed be a logical stockpiling of
crucial medical equipment and supplies, especially medications with
long shelf lives or can be frozen while in storage overseas or in
underground facilities.
The final step in training and preparation. . .our own
military. The power generation capacity
aboard a modern aircraft carrier can supply a medium size city, a
destroyer or frigate a large town.
Attention should be focused on training our military, especially our
Navy whose overseas forces and ships would be unaffected by a strike
on the continental
It is a war. It is a war in which we
will take casualties undreamed of in our worst nightmares. . .but it
can be survivable if we act and prepare now.
IS THIS MERELY A
SCI FI STORY OR IS IT REAL?
An editor of Aviation Week and Space Technology, after
reading this author’s novel declared. “It
is not a question of if it will happen. . .it is merely a question
of when.”
Across six thousand years of recorded history mankind has
known war. Across six thousand years
humanity has tended to focus its best minds on the technology of
war, to speak bluntly how to better kill our neighbors.
Never has a weapon been invented that it has not ultimately
been used. And ironically so many “new”
weapons, when first revealed are declared to be so horrible as to
render war unthinkable. And all have
ultimately been used.
Given the fanaticisms of some of our enemies today, some of
whom believe that the creation of the Apocalypse will be their own
fulfillment of a religious destiny, it would be madness not to think
that such an attack within the next two decades is not just possible
but in fact likely.
It is time to think about what to do, and how to prepare
before it happens. Reacting the day after the next “Day of
Infamy,”or “One Second After,” it will be too late.
William R.
Forstchen
Author of “One
Second After”
Copyright William
R. Forstchen, 2008.
Originally published at: http://www.onesecondafter.com/pb/wp_d10e87d9/wp_d10e87d9.html |
|