@Theresa Robinson however that's just one silo what about our bombers submarines and other silos that didn't miss their key turn
@ryabow4 ай бұрын
@@isaacbarron5794 bombers wouldn't have gotten off the ground yet, and the submarines would need to get to launch depth and prep their birds/silos. as for the silos, it's not just one silo that decides to launch. a majority of the keys of the whole squadron have to select launch. that being said, that general wouldn't have been able to send an EAM message, but there would also be about a dozen other ways to confirm/disprove the Russian strike that this simulation wouldn't have control over.
@MerchantIvoryfilms2 ай бұрын
This actually did happen in Russia when a computer told a Russian Officer the Americans had launched a few nukes at Russia. Per their protocol he was supposed to do what we just watched, and alert command to launch their missiles (Which they would have done if this officer alerted them, no questions asked) But looking at his computer, he hesitated and didn't alert command. "Why would the Americans only launch a few missiles knowing full well it was an act of nuclear war?" He spent the next several minutes debugging the issue and discovered the a single computer chip was failing and spamming random numbers out being launched by the Americans. This stupid little chip almost had every human on earth obliterated or melted alive slowly and painfully...then again humans were stupid enough to not only invent but keep things things active b/c we are idiots.
@darrenberquist10002 ай бұрын
His name was Stanislav Petrov.
@londonplayer2 ай бұрын
He should have stuck to playing the piano @@darrenberquist1000
@MarkLKahnt2 ай бұрын
If you read the classic book Failsafe (hugely recommended), it was a resistor burning out on a console in the US control facility that triggered authorisation to one bomber group to attack Moscow.
@jadedbrad2 ай бұрын
There was also a case in the 70s, I think . I believe Sweden launched a satellite without informing the USSR. Hazy on the details.
@spvillano2 ай бұрын
Actually, even at that time, every human on earth wouldn't have been endangered. Indeed, most of the US wouldn't have been endangered, although much of Russia would've due to the much lower number of towns and cities. We'd have given a lethal to a nation pasting though, civilization would've been drastically altered and conditions would've been harsh for a few years. Harsh as in massive global famines, but not the old predictions of nuclear winter for centuries that previous poor modeling predicted. Today, it's much the same, albeit with a hell of a lot less deployable warheads. That all said, we would be a lot better off without these products of the insanity factory, save perhaps as asteroid contingency and no, not to hit an asteroid, to near miss and ablate off some of the surface to deflect it. Hollywood always gets that bit wrong.
@zjones98762 ай бұрын
something like this has happened several times in real life, but those keyboards are sweet, just the right resistance.
@delacaravanio2 ай бұрын
In Soviet Union, you resist keyboard.
@davidwest8905Ай бұрын
Those old missile silos occasionally go up for sale. Strong chance you could get a sweet keyboard with one.
@jjjacerАй бұрын
@@davidwest8905 might have some old Mechanical IBM Model M's
@AnakinmanakinАй бұрын
Actually keyboard resist you@@delacaravanio
@angiebrown6436Ай бұрын
;)
@Question26 ай бұрын
In reality, they would have been calling up the rest of NATO to see if they could confirm the launches.
@John-bi1lv3 ай бұрын
In reality they would be looking at the satellites to confirm among many ways. this was made up TV drama, not how it actually works.
@MrChaosOK2 ай бұрын
I realized. Especially any word from Norway and Iceland, or any millitary bases posted on Greenland since theyre some of the northern most territories of the alliance.
@sofiaflorina2 ай бұрын
You are right, that's the main function of military alliance like NATO
@chriscarter57202 ай бұрын
Except that 'the rest of NATO' doesn't have ballistic missile early warning capability. They said that the missile warning was confirmed by the sites at Thule and Fylingdales in the UK; that's as good as it gets and goodnight one and all. A scarily realistic sequence.
@MrChaosOK2 ай бұрын
@@chriscarter5720 I was told other than the US, France and the UK has less than 300 of them. As far as I'm aware, the UK had over 500 back in the cold war.
@tristanb.3470Ай бұрын
I can appreciate that the generals said "fife" instead of "five" when reading back the President's code. Just a little bit of radio etiquette on display
@jk48429 күн бұрын
Why not five?
@redplague28 күн бұрын
@@jk484 It's an aviation thing where they don't want it confused with 'fire' so they say 'fife' though I'm not sure they would do that in this scenario.
@flyingaxeman734327 күн бұрын
My flight instructor laughed when id say fife , he told me my "five" sounded fine.
@tristanb.347027 күн бұрын
@flyingaxeman7343 I've heard it both ways but the official terminology would be fife. Almost no one really says it though. Same thing with "three/tree"
@canyonblue737-826 күн бұрын
@@flyingaxeman7343 always love to it when the instructors laugh at someone doing something *correctly*. 😞I'm no perfect person and I totally understand that many if not most pilots choose to use five/three instead of fife/tree but I do hear people doing it correctly every single day and I never thought to think that means they are doing it wrong/funny (30 year airline pilot).
@nOtJack1886 Жыл бұрын
The unsettling truth is this scene has actually happened more than once. We've narrowly avoided nuclear Armageddon probably half a dozen or more times due to computer errors, simulations. Never mind inter-country nuclear disasters adverted, just the US or Russia have came dangerously close to Nuclear accidents on there own country too. A US plane accidentally dropped a bomb equivalent to 4,000,000Tonnes of TNT on a town in the US due to a crash. The only thing that stopped that massive bomb from going off was a single fuse after the other 2 fail safes failed
@HD-cx6ip7 ай бұрын
I never thought I'd ever hear fail-safe failed.
@AdamDaze2 ай бұрын
This is notably complete horse shit.
@nOtJack18862 ай бұрын
@@AdamDaze get Wikipediad Search 1962 goldboro crasg en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/1961_Goldsboro_B-52_crash#:~:text=The%201961%20Goldsboro%20B%2D52,nuclear%20payload%20in%20the%20process. Bb
@nOtJack18862 ай бұрын
@@HD-cx6ip To be fair nukes aren't supposed to be accidently dropped, or involved In a crash
@MrCauseEffect2 ай бұрын
Goldsboro NC back in the 60s
@NeoRipshaft2 ай бұрын
Of the bajillionty things that are wrong with this, oddly enough the missile launch procedure stood out to me most lol - they train to not know if it's a drill or not - so that they won't hesitate if/when the time comes. They will never know it's real when it's real until after the launch is underway.
@no_aid_for_UKRAINE2 ай бұрын
Wouldn't they know it's real or not based on the silo doors?
@ccerrato1472 ай бұрын
Thought the same thing
@ArieVisker2 ай бұрын
yes you are 100% correct.
@Twister64242 ай бұрын
So...the missile crew would know if it's a drill or not. I think that's a Hollywoodism that "missile crews don't know if it's a drill or not" was from WarGames and is perpetuated by the mystique of what missile crews do...but I assure you, the crews would know...plus with social media and how connected the world is, crews would have a lot of indicators which would tell them that "stuff" is about to go down.
@no_aid_for_UKRAINEАй бұрын
@@NeoRipshaft they wouldn't open the silo door in a drill. They know.
@robertglennienz2 ай бұрын
We talk about the west having saved the world from nuclear attacks, but we ignore the brave Soviet officers who have done likewise as well - often at great personal cost. Vasili Arkhipov was one. In a Soviet submarine all three officers had to agree that they had grounds to launch their missiles. When his vessel was attacked in 1962 during the Cuban Missile Crisis, Arkhipov stopped his colleagues from launching. Stanislav Petrov was another. He saw on his computer in a missile monitoring bunker that a single missile was inbound from the United States one day in 1983. He knew that a first strike was likely to involve hundreds of missiles, and did not pass the warning on to his superiors. Given the U.S.S.R. was in a hair-trigger state of alert at the time, he very probably stopped massive retaliation happening.
@spvillano2 ай бұрын
Wasn't missiles during the Cuban missile crisis, it was a nuclear torpedo. Crazy time though! I was born a week after the Tzar Bomba test. I still literally have traces of the fallout from that era of atmospheric testing in my bones, as verified by a gamma camera. Thankfully, Tzar Bomba was the cleanest nuke ever detonated, because it was missing its final stage, which would've made it the dirtiest instead.
@thecommunistdoggo1008Ай бұрын
@@spvillano Tsar Bomba was a fricking joke, a meme weapon utterly worthless out side of propaganda
@spvillanoАй бұрын
@@thecommunistdoggo1008 as a deployable weapon, it was useless, just another my dick's bigger bullshit game, since it couldn't get even 300 miles from the aircraft launch strip. But from a practical implementation standpoint, it was beyond successful. It literally was the cleanest nuclear device ever detonated. A fair amount of what was implemented was carried forward to more practical devices, as little is to be gained from dirtier bombs. And it gave employment to whoever painted the aircraft with the special paint required to keep it from melting from the heat of being way too close to the ludicrous thing. And it was quite interesting for the pilot, as his aircraft was very nearly slapped out of the sky by the shockwave. A shockwave so powerful that it kept the fireball from reaching the ground. A lot of accomplishments, most likely not intended, just as part of an intimidation tactic, as Russia actually had nothing much with which to reach the US at that time. And it did accelerate our ICBM program. Which started another dick measuring program, the space program. Thankfully, that didn't extend to absurdity after Carl Sagan's first project assigned was to figure out how to make a big show of nuking the moon and his calculations proved it'd be an embarrassing fizzle to anyone watching from Earth. Nukes tiny, moon big as the US and well, at that distance, it'd be a tiny pinprick of flash and no bang. Helping an era of a nuke for everything and everything should get a nuke finally close. It was literally like a five year old playing with daddy's loaded gun for far too long!
@lurgee1706Ай бұрын
@@thecommunistdoggo1008 It wasn't a meme weapon though. It was tested back in those days when ICBMs were only starting to replace planes as a delivery system, and MIRVs were not a thing yet. Both sides relied heavily on airdropped nukes and were trying to maximize the damage, so it was natural to try to figure out just how much of a boom you can get from a single bomb.
@jamesrosewell9081Ай бұрын
This is loosely based on that. It's a show about the US government of course they're going to transplant it to the US
@kompisworld27 күн бұрын
In reality, the people who turn the keys do so many times not knowing if it is a real launch or not. If they hesitate they never work there again.
@phuttig19448 күн бұрын
Thats a complete fabrication. An actual launch order involves fueling the missiles which require very specific codes which are only sent out for actual launches. Missile crews know very well which launch orders are drills and would be fully aware if the order was real.
@kompisworld8 күн бұрын
@phuttig1944 kzbin.info/www/bejne/h4e5lmWoeK2nhJIsi=KoPBTfIrwXbIIKvw&t=1500 Former Launch officer explaining how it works in America.
@geauxtigersdjs6 күн бұрын
@@phuttig1944Minuteman III icbms have solid fuel, they are fueled at all times and no fueling needed. Titan II needed fueling first but they are long gone. Unsure of Trident but asume they use solid fueled too.
@phuttig19446 күн бұрын
@@kompisworld not the most reliable source I would say, looks like a CIA conspiracy video. In reality, there are "unlock codes" which fuel missiles and would be attached to any real launch order as well as a specific series of code activations which would put the missile on internal power and activate its self-guidance computer for actual flight. None of that is in a drill message and there are no "loyalty test" drills. (I have known about two dozen USAF missileers over the years and all of them confirm they would have known if it was a real launch).
@SpartanSniper32 ай бұрын
IRL, we'd be using one of a hundred satellites to confirm the launches (which would be impossible to miss or track from orbit), hitting up our allies to ask if they had missiles flying overhead or anything on their own satellites, and we'd still be calling the Russians to ask "U good, bro?" We have safeguards beyond safeguards and real people to confirm these things are happening before anyone turns the key. This episode is loosely based on one (arguably two) incidents where the US and the USSR had close calls with false positives in their detection systems. Still scary as hell, but we've come a long way since the days where this might actually go down.
@sagesigman82692 ай бұрын
You have no idea what you're talking about... and you're not alone. Most of the world thinks this could never happened... but it HAS happened in '83 and multiple other times. We NEVER properly fixed the weaknesses in our satelite system and neither did the Russians and the simulation issues remain a problem. (Almost) All ICBM launches go over the North Pole not any NATO nation and there aren't enough space capable nations to do the double checking especially when the major nuclear powers have 5 MINUTES to order a launch or risk their silos being wiped out. Take it from somebody who has studied Cold War nuclear crises at an academic level and reviewed evidence from the U.S.S.R. and U.S.
@SpartanSniper32 ай бұрын
@@sagesigman8269 I'm not disagreeing about that. Please read my whole comment before replying
@teafx32 ай бұрын
@@SpartanSniper3 TL:DR
@SpartanSniper32 ай бұрын
@@teafx3 but it was apparently long enough to bother you enough to make a comment about it, so it's basically a success to me. 💪
@frazerguest28642 ай бұрын
@@teafx3: Frankly, only a childish moron would consider a few brief paragraphs about such a serious issue to be ‘TL:DR’. I know that you probably thought you were sounding funny, smart and quick witted, but to most adults you’ve just come across as immature and dumb.
@rodolfog2459Ай бұрын
“…Two-Fife-Eight…” from two different actors; that is one hell of a technical advisor.
@B61Mod1213 күн бұрын
Not really. It is just rare that Hollywood actually complies with any of the technical advice they receive.
@Festivejelly10 күн бұрын
Great technical advisor... what are you smoking? One nuclear silo.... no mention of the ballistic missiles in submarines... its bloody awful writing.
@shooter7aАй бұрын
Read about Able Archer in 1983. Fearful that the Able Archer 83 exercise was a cover for a NATO nuclear strike, the U.S.S.R. readied its own weapons for launch. We came close to WWIII.
@DeathcoreDad-wf5ws28 күн бұрын
@robdog1245 I was just going to say that..we came pretty close just days ago.. we might find out later on (if there is a later on) but I think we were at DefCon 2 very briefly two days ago.
@antediluvianatheist526221 күн бұрын
So, bad news, we are currently IN WW3. We have Nato people firing Nato missiles at a nuclear superpower using Nato intel, and Nato selected targets, including at nuclear targets. Literally the only reason you are still alive is that Vladimir Putin is a level headed dude.
@catbeardbeardcat19 күн бұрын
@@DeathcoreDad-wf5ws What happend 10 days ago? Saw nothing in the news ( Germany ).
@Nauda99919 күн бұрын
@@catbeardbeardcat21st November 2024 Russia launched the Oreshnik missile, while they directly contacted USA, even news were full with talk about ICBM
@DeathcoreDad-wf5ws19 күн бұрын
@@Nauda999 yes this exactly. When I posted this originally I didn't know they contacted us before launching that IRBM.
@janhellman9231 Жыл бұрын
Just watched this episode for the first time. Given the current state of the world this scared the crap out of me
@208flatheads3 Жыл бұрын
How about now 8 months later 😅😅😅
@smoketinytomАй бұрын
Hey, we’re still here!
@provetaminАй бұрын
pussy
@Sithvulcan76Ай бұрын
It's probably not happening. To be truthful, don't be scared of all the chaos. When they sign the peace deal, that's when you might want to be afraid! Remember my words.
@occamsrazor1285Ай бұрын
"Just watched this episode for the first time. Given the current state of the world this scared the crap out of me" Don't worry too much. Russia's ICBMs are all but useless now, and we have multiple layers of defense that can shoot ICBMs down before terminal phase
@bobbyricigliano27992 ай бұрын
Flashbacks to "TURN YOUR KEY SIR."
@paulwartenberg84792 ай бұрын
RIP Leo McGarry
@scootertooter68742 ай бұрын
Which I watched in the Summer of 1983....just before reporting to Vandenberg for Minuteman Initial Qualification Training. Heady days...
@KalendrianАй бұрын
Wargames lol
@Kaede-SasakiАй бұрын
@paulwartenberg8479 Why? Did he shoot him? I always thought he survived.
@scootertooter6874Ай бұрын
@@Kaede-Sasaki He did. It was a test.
@ElthenarАй бұрын
Imagine being some guy in a truck, driving down the road, and seeing that missile cover open.
@alicaljungberg374215 күн бұрын
That's when you act fast and drive over to jump inside and ride the bull!
@Cohen.the.Worrier12 күн бұрын
Look how they're all acting real professional reading codes back and forth to each other. And nobody bothered to pick up the red phone to the Kremlin.
@yaremer11 күн бұрын
They have no phone and they have no time to send them messages per wire (and translate it in the process)
@alexdisantАй бұрын
Interesting fact. It did happened once in real life. But a Russian officer denied to be responsable to start the WWIII. He had got all the confirmations of a real attack from US soil. He decided to wait the attack to see what would happen, even with restrict orders from the Kremlin to retaliate as soon as the enemy attack is confirmed. Because of him, we are now able to talk to each other on the KZbin. Thanks Mr Stanislav Yevgrafovich Petrov
@DamzFRАй бұрын
He does his job. There was no sign of nuke attack before (politics, military etc…). US won’t do a first strike without any reason. System was unrealiable and had few false alerte before this incident. The only difference was it was during the Able Archer exercice.
@lacosa24x25 күн бұрын
Now the Russians are in Ukraine wanting land when they have land they don’t even use
@LucidDreamer543212 ай бұрын
I was stationed at Loring AFB, Maine in the 1980s. It had the reputation as being the location in the US that would have gotten hit first if the Soviet Union launched ICBMs.
@cavscout6b2 ай бұрын
Loring AFB was one of the 3 bases called to confirm if the nuclear strikes in the 1983 movie "Wargames" were true. (Grand Forks and Elemdorf were the others.) What made that memorable, was the line from NORAD to Loring was answered by an excitable "Airman Doherty" because the Senior Controller had stepped out, presumably to use the restroom.
@Twister64242 ай бұрын
From one SAC warrior to another, it was a SAC base--so absolutely it would have been on the big list of targets along with the others on the northern tier of the US and Canada.
@LucidDreamer543212 ай бұрын
@Georgi_Slavov What old man? What tiny small numbers?
@LucidDreamer543212 ай бұрын
@Georgi_Slavov How is that related to my comment?
@LucidDreamer543212 ай бұрын
@Georgi_Slavov I asked a reasonable question. You should answer it.
@spatrompete26012 жыл бұрын
Coast to coast top to bottom 😅 lol you know there is a lot when say that
@davidyates12994 ай бұрын
Flyingdales over the horizon radar would not simultaneously confirm launches - the initial warnings come from heat signatures detected via satellite, with radar tracks coming shortly after.
@MadPuppy922 ай бұрын
Even if we were to wait for radar tracking. Fylingdales while part of the US space surveillance network, it is done through intelligence sharing, it is not operated by the USSF, it remains under exclusive RAF control. So simulation or not, this base would not have been affected, and would be telling a different story.
@JaneGalvin2 ай бұрын
Flyingdales it’s Fylingdales 😂😂😂😂
@mhermit24 күн бұрын
@@JaneGalvinI remember being a little disappointed as a kid when my dad told me that.
@hunterscott30002 ай бұрын
Man, that's one hell of a story he'll never get to mention a word of for his entire life 😂
@erikmutthersbough6508Ай бұрын
Other minute man launch control centers would also have to turn their keys to verify the launch order. This is the final check to make sure there are no rouge or bad actors that try and launch the weapons.
@Mishima505Ай бұрын
I was expecting a War Games style “PUT YOUR HAND ON THE KEY SIR!!!” conclusion
@brentaughe753914 күн бұрын
This is what happens when teenagers break into your defense computer to play video games….Joshua
@ultralaggerREV12 жыл бұрын
Anyone know the soundtrack name in this scene?
@Jor-El-Earth12 ай бұрын
I agree with most commenting to this video. So many things wrong but one I've not seen yet is the fact that the launch order would go to several hundred silos. So one guy being slow would not stop over 400 launches. Sorry to pile onto the gang that is dumping on this scene.
@mrtrek64Ай бұрын
I believe the largest percentage of our deterrent is at sea. So our Ohio class boomers would have been ordered to launch first. But the truth is, NO ONE here knows with any certainty how such a scenario would play out. Let's just hope it never happens.
@wildgurgs361429 күн бұрын
Hot take - apology not necessary; comment genuinely contributes to discussion
@alexalbrecht57682 ай бұрын
SBIRS would have immediately detected this was a false alarm
@Twister64242 ай бұрын
A whole lot of things would have confirmed that this was a false alarm. This is Hollywood's interpretation based on stuff from the 80s.
@SUBENIАй бұрын
Agreed so much more advanced. This is more likely to happen on the Russian considering how inferior their detection capabilities are.
@ShmillardАй бұрын
Yeah this scenario suggests that nobody thought to check with Thule or Fylingdales to see if their PAVE PAWS arrays were really lighting up in the first place. It’s pretty stupid.
@gl_tonightАй бұрын
THE WHALE NUKES HAVE BEEN LAUNCHED SIR My god.... deploy the laser dolphins
@GamesCooky27 күн бұрын
Love how it starts with those two talking about how good the new keyboard is. "Just the right resistance."
@joemajarucon9090Ай бұрын
On September 26, 1983, the sun, satellite, and American missile fields aligned in a way that maximized sunlight reflected from high-altitude clouds. Thus, the Soviet early-warning system thought it detected five incoming missiles and sounded the alarm. Crazy- huh?
@MuzzaHukkaАй бұрын
Why have I never felt or seen a reflection of the sun against a satellite here on earth but the Soviets used that to determine incoming nukes?
@michaelwthalmanАй бұрын
They saw the "anomaly" on what was their equivalent to our DMSP satellites. Luckily, human intervention saved the day. The NATO Able Archer exercise did not help with tensions.@@MuzzaHukka
@RandolphFranklin-fc6ynАй бұрын
Very true. They failed in programming the sun into the system
@alexandernater6284Ай бұрын
@@michaelwthalmanHuman intervention didn't save anything. These systems don't launch nukes automatically. False alarms of space based early warning systems were a well known issue. Nobody relied solely on them to take decisions.
@pilotmanpaul29 күн бұрын
KZbin has some sick sense of humor after the ICBM attack on Dnipro's rocket factory.
@TransoceanicOutreach26 күн бұрын
Attempted attack, they missed completely.
@CIippy25 күн бұрын
@TransoceanicOutreach it wont matter if they arm it with a nuke
@real_andrii25 күн бұрын
you mean attack on the boiler building and rehabilitation center?
@heartpaid676723 күн бұрын
@@CIippy they wont arm it with a nuke because putler and the rest of his oligarchs have children in the west.
@ГаврилоПринцип-х1л22 күн бұрын
@@TransoceanicOutreach didnt miss, 36 warheads in pairs of 5 hit the general surroundings of the factory, these warheads of course, non nuclear low explosive. if they had been nuclear, the entirety of dnipro would have turned into a big crater because of the 36 consecutive nuclear explosions, spaced out by only a few kilometers. precision isnt the point of an ICBM, a few kilometers offset will stay deliver the same amount of damage, its a nuke ffs it doesnt really matter if it goes off in your head or 5km away, you will still turn into dust.
@SuperAirplanemasterАй бұрын
And that’s why we do not need AI integrated into our military systems or are strategic military systems
@ferdinand1239014 күн бұрын
"here we present our new AI defenses system that inclused our nuclear arsenal, we call it, Skynet" like we have warnings, just don´t be arrogant ffs
@kannankanha.2769Ай бұрын
That constant beeping at the launch is what sent chill down my spine. How close we've been to a nuclear catastrophe is just mind boggling.
@ered2032 ай бұрын
After careful consideration, I have come to the conclusion that your computer system sucks.
@Highland_MooАй бұрын
😂
@kevmorris300028 күн бұрын
This was the best episode of the Madame Secretary TV show, by far.
@datemasamune2904Ай бұрын
Imagine Russians suddenly appear on screen going "It's not us! Stop!"
@scottianson51335 сағат бұрын
That was good. Made me nervous. I remember the 80s where in the back of our heads there was that threat of nuclear war.
@Irishhawk8Ай бұрын
*The amount of time it took everyone to get ready we’d be all dead😂*
@friedrichdergrosse7439Ай бұрын
Your aware a nuclear war is a mutually assured destruction right?
@MuzzaHukkaАй бұрын
The Americans here began reacting as soon as they had received information that nuclear rockets were being placed in position to be launched but even if they had already taken off, it would still take 5 to 10 minutes for the first rockets to start hitting the US, so it is highly likely that the response would have been launched in the time that it takes for you to start and finish this video and that the US rockets would be in the lower atmosphere by the time the first Russian rockets hit American soil, meaning that the place that the rockets were launched from (US launch sites) might well be destroyed but the rockets that just came out of that hole in the ground would be too far away from the launch pad for the shock blast to throw them off their trajectory
@over9000andbackАй бұрын
@@MuzzaHukka actually 27 minutes buy yeah
@RaguTvАй бұрын
On gawd lol
@jackashmore29 күн бұрын
What a fun thing to pop up in my feed KZbin
@thomasturbato2370Ай бұрын
I can’t belevie Lundy was the Nuclear Missile Butcher
@SgtMiller27 күн бұрын
Funny how this shows up on my recommended selection right now in 2024.
@mikjon672 ай бұрын
Maybe next time ask Stanislav Petrov some advice...
@warc8usАй бұрын
I like how the prez threw a "niner" in there but said all the other numbers normally.
@DamienMcGuinnessKiwiАй бұрын
Wouldn't that be correct for anyone with US military training (or training from any NATO force)? Don't they say niner so and not to be confused with the German "nein" ("no").
@RobertNielsen1970Ай бұрын
@@DamienMcGuinnessKiwi I believe that is correct.
@SLMxLegend15 күн бұрын
@@DamienMcGuinnessKiwinegative won two tree fower fife six seven ait niner just rough spellings may be incorrect but is the phonetic way of saying them
@FreightFoxАй бұрын
"I agree" lol he had a lot to memorize this movie lol
@jamesbyersmusic16 күн бұрын
I agree!
@Sam-p5v1wАй бұрын
This is one time the Ghostbusters could not salvage any part of it. Turn your key !!😮
@anthonystark3959Ай бұрын
Skynet be like : Damn, can't fool the humans
@skll1822Ай бұрын
Я уверен, что при любых взаимоотношениях наши президенты установили ряд лиц, которые всегда в контакте друг с другом, имеющие очень высокое доверие, дабы предотвратить конец мира. Нет и не будет такой причины, чтобы не дать будущего нашим детям. Мир вам и пожелание всего хорошего из России.
@Ror55555Ай бұрын
Спасибо из Америки
@MuzzaHukkaАй бұрын
😂 Хыхы, насмешил... Такого же рода лиц которые сначала всему миру рассказывали что не будут вторгаться в Украину а потом начали "СВО"? Я больше верю в то что инопланетяне, со своими НЛО которые уже не раз то активировали то дезактивированные ядерные ракеты и часто пролетали над АЭС, смогут предотвратить ядерную войну чем в то что есть совестные люди которые друг друга дадут знать если захотят начать играть в ядерный футбол
@skll1822Ай бұрын
@@MuzzaHukka мы с Вами на ты? В истории много примеров работы дипломатии в самых сложных ситуациях. Трамп победил на выборах , война заканчивается
@unelectedleader64942 ай бұрын
Neither Russia nor the US have 2000 warheads deployed on strategic platforms. Both met the terms of New START ahead of schedule and even went beyond it. Though its technically expired, theres no indication that Russia or the US have substantively changed deployments.
@spvillano2 ай бұрын
And what little remains launch capable isn't enough to destroy an entire population, but would be enough to end any meaningful importance on the global stage and likely cause some global famines for a few years. Basically, two idiots would be effectively self-removed from the global table, the world would have a moderate population hit, then everyone else would gradually return to normal with global power balances massively changed. As neither idiot side are actually idiots, that's beyond unlikely, as the status quo is what both desire.
@LMPRАй бұрын
2:53 This series went real for that ICBM Centre. It is exactly a real one. That one in Wargames movie was old or fake.
@myrsky79Ай бұрын
The one in Wargames was fake, but it roughly matches the capsule layout at the time, before the digital ("REACT") consoles were installed in the '90s. That's the layout you'll see in the museums at deactivated Peacekeeper/Minuteman sites (Q-01 in WY, D-01 in SD, O-00 in ND). The one depicted in this video is an impressive recreation of the modern-day REACT setup (they even got some of the details on the Voice Control Panel right!) but it's still not a real capsule. (Extra file cabinet, other file cabinet's in the wrong place, no bathroom next to the entrance, the ceiling isn't a hodgepodge of Velcro panels...))
@seanbumstead12502 ай бұрын
I live 165 miles north in Canada to Minot Airforce Base USA. I am assuming nuclear fallout would be east- south east of me
@spvillano2 ай бұрын
I loved just outside of Barksdale AFB, now in Pennsylvania in an area literally ringed with military depots, pretty much live on ground zero.
@matthaslett2878 Жыл бұрын
Edge of your seat stuff right there
@joshgeorge2 ай бұрын
I have never seen this show but if this is what it’s like all the time I need to start. I don’t think I was breathing that whole time
@cliffsteel012 ай бұрын
Madame Secretary was a very good show, but this was an atypically apocalyptic moment.
@markrowe882414 күн бұрын
is this whole video in slow motion, the action of the silo door opening at 4:07 in particular.
@Admin-52 ай бұрын
A little in accuracy the sole doesn’t slowly open it blows open in case of debris or damage.
@LucidDreamer543212 ай бұрын
What about a little out accuracy?
@LucidDreamer543212 ай бұрын
What sole? The sole of your shoe?
@kramchancel1266Ай бұрын
that is not even true. Maybe for ships. These missiles are slow to move no point in blowing it open for debris. Besides there are no debris that is as wide as the hole
@myrsky79Ай бұрын
It definitely does blow open. We were told that in a real launch, it would likely go off the end of the rails and through the fence.
@RynOstate25 күн бұрын
"Mr. McKittrick, after very careful consideration, sir, I've come to the conclusion that your new defense system sucks."
@Synaps42 ай бұрын
Minutes in and no SLBMs landing from enemy subs you have to question what youre missing
@theschmedaparadox10182 ай бұрын
SLBM'S come later
@iplaygames8090Ай бұрын
@@theschmedaparadox1018 SLBMS come first in a hail mary move to take out your missiles on the ground
@vangarusАй бұрын
Plus hypersonic missiles from subs...much faster
@officer_steofficer578319 күн бұрын
Imagine being the dude behind the launch keys. Very nerve-racking.
@reyvajuret92692 ай бұрын
There is a real story like this, but in reality, it happened on the Soviet side. It is known as "1983 Soviet nuclear false alarm incident" and Stanislav Petrov was the greatest world hero in history.
@Twister64242 ай бұрын
Able Archer also made the Soviets freak out as did Reagan's off hand joke while testing a microphone.
@TransoceanicOutreach26 күн бұрын
4:22 Jake Broe was too slow turning his key.
@nike5428Ай бұрын
@3:23 When they strap on their seat belts it's like they will also fly along with those mighty rockets. LOL.
@myrsky79Ай бұрын
So, that's actually a thing the crews would do in real life. If an incoming warhead is off-target enough that the capsule survives, it's getting bounced around - "strap in and lock [chairs to the floor rails]" keeps them from getting slammed into something.
@jamesmawdsley7306Ай бұрын
That's true to life you sausage.
@mantirig4139Ай бұрын
well you ain't constipated no more!
@noggogo69322 жыл бұрын
This is honest depiction and unbiased analysis.
@Twister6424 Жыл бұрын
I disagree. This was more possible in the 80s...but not as likely anymore, especially with that thing called social media.
@spvillano2 ай бұрын
@@Twister6424 internet feeds get chopped on launch alert. Just as we chop the feeds if there has been a death on a base, so that the families can be informed properly, rather than via antisocial media. I know that firsthand, as I was the one cutting those links from my desk.
@Twister64242 ай бұрын
@@spvillano Again, if it were a "bolt from the blue", like the way we feared the USSR would attack in the 80s, then sure I could see that. But if there's something leading up to hostilities even days in advance, we'll see it happening on social media well before crews go down to pull alert. I'm curious, what internet feeds would be chopped from a death on base?
@CFox.728 күн бұрын
The real true double plus mega reality max is this HAPPENED in 2002 and we all died and am now living in ANOTHER simulation
@efesarac169121 күн бұрын
Lundy for POTUS
@Carter_C73724 күн бұрын
0:37 I THOUGHT THAT WAS THE FUCKING EMERGENCY ALERT I CANT 😭😭😭💀💀💀
@bradnov892 ай бұрын
This may be a stupid question but why do they put on seatbelts before they launch the nuke?
@jediranger18162 ай бұрын
Was wondering that too. Only thing I could think of is that either A: gets really bumpy when launching, or B: to prevent anyone from pulling them out of their seats.
@30K_ACTUAL2 ай бұрын
The Silos themselves are the primary targets of the Russian Nukes. As is the Silos the Russians have. The idea is to knock out the adversaries capability to launch the Strategic Nukes. So if hit by a Nuke they will get shaken quite a bit, if it’s not too close they may even survive for a bit longer
@Twister64242 ай бұрын
Not a stupid question at all. Yes, they do put on seatbelts. It's to survive the retaliatory strike by helping the crew members stay in their seats during the shock waves from the attack. That said, the probability of survival even with seat belts was still expected to be crazy low.
@randywarren710119 күн бұрын
That's the kind of "OOPSIE" that no country on the planet wants to see, something similar to the movie " Wargames"!
@smoketinytomАй бұрын
Wait, why are the silos strapping in like pilots? They’re underground…
@JSolar590Ай бұрын
The vibrations from the launching ICBM engines would significantly shake the silo command center. Would cause injury if they aren't strapped in.
@bigz0725Ай бұрын
It's also expected that the silos would be targets of the incoming missiles. They're far enough underground that they probably wouldn't get vaporized but the blasts would cause earthquake-like shaking.
@myrsky79Ай бұрын
What the other guy said about incoming warheads. Minuteman silos are not located near the launch control, they're dispersed miles away from each other.
@fuzzybeard20168 күн бұрын
Every time that I watch this, it feels like a ball of liquid helium materializes in my stomach, because I have no doubt this has happened in RL more times than we know.
@user-cz7wp4jz6n2 ай бұрын
There were a number of times when the URSS or the USA had detection errors and began to prepare for a nuclear attack. All our nuclear detection and launch systems are incredible fragile and complex.
@speedbirdconcorde001Ай бұрын
Reminds me of that scene in WarGames where one guy refused to turn his key and the other pointed a revolver at him
@QuarrellaDeVil2 ай бұрын
Did anybody have to answer to the Coca-Cola Company?
@Twister64242 ай бұрын
Hey, if Group Captain Mandrake was willing to answer to the Coca-Cola Company...then it must have been a dire situation!
@spvillano2 ай бұрын
@@Twister6424 but nobody wanted to answer to the Bell company!
@jimwalshonline9346Ай бұрын
That's positively guano...
@Twister6424Ай бұрын
@@jimwalshonline9346 Yes it was...
@arynrowland8622 ай бұрын
The scariest thing is that once those missiles are launched, that’s it, game over. There is no disarming them, or calling them back. Once the decision has been made, it’s final.
@jeffreysoreff9588Ай бұрын
It has to be that way. If there was a way to disarm them in flight, it might get leaked to the opponent nation and make the deterrent useless.
@johnroux7528Ай бұрын
Yup, no more computer screens or fancy leather chairs or paper files. Because no more factories, banks or workers. So what they had in their hands and on their bodies was.the last factory made stuff to be produced for long while. Scary as hell. Like teenagers worry about climate stuff now, I remember worrying about nuclear war. My city was a key port to be targeted. Sort of like a shadow in your mind.
@laurasunday185427 күн бұрын
Can someone explain to me why the guys strapped themselves in when arming the nukes?
@TransoceanicOutreach26 күн бұрын
They are inside the missile, it's manually flown.
@jmr512524 күн бұрын
It *is* part of the protocol (there are KZbin training videos where they do, indeed, put on a 5 point safety harness as part of the launch procedure). Why I have no idea. The two options seem to be "The missile launches might cause enough seismic activity to injure the crews," but... The missiles are launched and there isn't anything left for the crews to do. The other option is "Enemy counterforce weapons might detonate and cause seismic activity that could injure the crew," but... It's hard to imagine a detonation that would injure the crew that wouldn't *also* damage the missile beyond all hope of use. The launch crew can be placed much further underground than a silo, plus missiles are very fragile. I suspect this is something that was put in place when the primary threat was bombers and low accuracy missiles and was never changed when the threat environment changed.
@To1988ny2 ай бұрын
Fylingdales is near whitby uk
@32937isready26 күн бұрын
THE MISSILE OPERATIONS OFFICERS would have turned those keys in half that time.
@Twag-yh8xc2 ай бұрын
Look up Vasili Alexandrovich Arkhipov and Stanislav Yevgrafovich Petrov
@YaretziaGarcia24 күн бұрын
KZbin real shady for recommending this video
@coldplayfan6070 Жыл бұрын
I wonder what would happen if this is to happen for REAL??
@isaacbarron5794 Жыл бұрын
There would have been no turning back because MAD would have been carried out as only one silo didn't launch however our submarines other silos and bombers would have and that would be it.
@riku3716 Жыл бұрын
It has happened for real, maybe not quite that close with keyturn but there have been false alarms including one like this with simulation in the computer they referenced in this scene/episode after the abort. Then there was that time soviet satellite saw sun reflecting from clouds and thought it was missile launch and one officer keeping his cool stop him from sending word down the chain towards counter launch he might not have been able to stop after finding out the truth. I believe either usa or ussr brought online an over the horizon radar once that gave out an alert after detecting the moon. Then there are the cases where they / at least usa have dropped live bombs on their own territory in bomber accidents.
@riku3716 Жыл бұрын
@@isaacbarron5794submarines would be slower to respons getting to launch debth etc. so if abort message reached someone in time it would be subs and planes ICBMs are the fastest to go as far as I know so if you stop those in time you most likely did stop all in time assuming no communications failures.
@JonAuclair9 ай бұрын
This very same thing nearly happened, in 1979!
@philipnairn89293 ай бұрын
@@isaacbarron5794no, what would have happened is they would have confirmed the launch tracking with other NATO tracking stations and seen it wasn’t real. So nothing Weill have happened
@russellsmith505610 күн бұрын
That silo door comes rocketing off. It's not some slow leisurely event
@mikemesser43262 ай бұрын
The unrealistic part of this scene is the Russian ICBM having a successful launch...
@vitopannucci20012 ай бұрын
Only thing inbound is a couple hundred bot comments...
@arthurmead53412 ай бұрын
The war notwithstanding, Russia has rocketry down pretty good though from the space race to present. Hell, the US still relies on them today.
@FirstLastOne2 ай бұрын
And the backwards USA flag on the left shoulder. Usually that appears on the right side with the canton leading and NOT trailing.
@shaun4692 ай бұрын
Want to find out?
@ljubomirculibrk40972 ай бұрын
Realy, they haw beter track record than US, UK esp...
@AMD702726 күн бұрын
One of things that always bothered me in this scene is that the window shades are up on Air Force 1. They would be pulled down as they have no idea how close a missile could be and the light from a blast could blind most of them in an instant. Nope, protocol would mandate that one of the stewards (who would have not much else to do) would be detailed to pull down all the blinds.
@CalvinGeorgeSisyphus2 ай бұрын
The Space Force have satellites in orbit looking for ICBM/cruise missile launches, in reality they would not have fired with visual confirmation from space assets.
@mikejohnson21738 күн бұрын
"I'd piss on a spark plug if I thought it would help." Here hold my Tab drink. I'm off to watch the original (1983) Wargames
@dawuid14912 ай бұрын
Funny how in these shows and movies, Russia always launches the nukes first.
@MinionNumber32 ай бұрын
funny how in these shows and movies, Russia always has missiles that work.
@dawuid14912 ай бұрын
@@MinionNumber3 Funny how despite believeing that most of Russia's missiles doesn't work, the government have convinced everyone that a huge chunk of their tax dollor should go into building a nuclear arsenal that is superior than that of the Russia's.
@Михаил-ы2м2ц2 ай бұрын
@@MinionNumber3 Just like real, wow.
@cliffsteel012 ай бұрын
Just before this clip began, the guy who was scheduled to run the morning shift was relieved of duty for gambling or some other misconduct. The general who comes running in at the end had ordered that guy to run a full attack simulation drill, but not tell anyone about it to really test readiness. So, it was unexpected, unprovoked attack because that was the training exercise it was supposed to be.
@russellmiles28612 ай бұрын
The Russian strategic circumstances allows them not to have to engage in a first strike ... They are a continent surrounded by land. Whereas USAF has always had a launch on warning doctrine - attacking after the enemy has already destroyed it kinda lame. Oh in Russian movies it is always the USA that attacks first ... Funny that
@bonum0901Ай бұрын
Блин, я напрягся))))) Посмотрел серию.....сильно, реально сильно
@isaacbeeby25282 ай бұрын
This was a fantastic episode, but in reality, wouldn't every single person's cellphone be lighting up with emergency warning telling them to either evacuate or seek shelter? Wouldn't the United States government or even the President contact other ally countries to confirm whether the Russian launch was real or not?
@morganzachlfich43092 ай бұрын
to be honest, if enough nukes were being launched at the US to the extent of being "coast to coast top to bottom", and considering the missiles take less than an hour to reach their mark (along with all the time spent on confirming the launches are legitimate), there isnt enough time to evacuate or seek shelter. Theres nowhere to hide - available bunkers are either going to be insufficient, or too far away.
@Twister64242 ай бұрын
@@morganzachlfich4309 Also consider, even if you knew of an attack like this was on its way...would it be worth it to survive to wake up in a hell worse than the imagination?
@oliverz6581Ай бұрын
Only unrealistic part is the people in stratcom casually doing their job while the alarms are blaring that the world about to end.
@owendodgson-jones10428 күн бұрын
Coming soon
@KevinInPhoenix26 күн бұрын
I guess someone should have asked: "Is this an exercise?"
@RoyShouriMustango Жыл бұрын
I agree
@SUBENIАй бұрын
I think it works that if one LCC does not launch be it dereliction of duty or technical causes of failure. One or both of the other LCC can launch once codes are validated
@adriankoh4859Ай бұрын
Brought to u by Biden / Harris.
@Apaximatic_PlayАй бұрын
пока Земля разделена государствами, человечество и сама жизнь будет находится на волоске от самоуничтожения
@staythecourse00227 күн бұрын
Thanks to Biden, we are now once step closer....
@TransoceanicOutreach26 күн бұрын
You mean thanks to Putin we are 1,000 steps closer.
@staythecourse00226 күн бұрын
@@TransoceanicOutreach When they tried to put missiles in Cuba, the Americans stopped them, the ruskies are only doing the same thing the Americans did a few years ago. Biden escalated it, but the more I think about it, perhaps it's to send a message to the Chinese in case they think of invading Taiwan... but who knows...
@sovietslug869925 күн бұрын
Putins knows all he has to do is wait 2 months and he won't have to worry about it anymore. Nothing is going to happen.
@killnotic24 күн бұрын
@staythecourse002 Right? With Trump as president, we know he'll be too busy on his hands and knees in front of Putin to order a nuclear strike. The payload he's gonna worry about is the one Vlad's gonna squirt down his throat.
@andreac206429 күн бұрын
Curious how this got recommended not long after Putin changed their nuclear doctrine...the algorithm knows
@cowsagainstcapitalism347 Жыл бұрын
The more I think about it, the even less sense a retaliatory strike makes. Like maybe give life on earth a chance?
@isaacbarron5794 Жыл бұрын
Mutually assured destruction MAD is the only thing keeping nuclear war from happening.
@cowsagainstcapitalism347 Жыл бұрын
@@isaacbarron5794 MAD keeps us afraid enough to not do it. However, should nukes fly, using your last minutes to ensure their destruction is petty and pointless. If nukes are headed your way, your best hope is to hope the survivors of the opposing side are so horrified by the holocaust they incurred they build a new society free of such weapons and policy. Once your destruction is assured, there is nothing to be gained by destroying them as well. May as well let them live and learn.
@isaacbarron5794 Жыл бұрын
@Cows Against Capitalism that's not reality if it was we wouldn't have nukes now after what we did to the Japanese our nukes now makes those two look like little bugs and they destroyed a hole city. In reality we would die and the country that is left which would be China or Russia would become the most powerful country on earth. Which is why we have the nuclear triad of MAD and it is because the United States, Russia and China has such policy WW3 hasn't happened yet. However it is because of such policies that I know if WW3 happens WW4 will be fought with sticks and stones.
@Rnankn Жыл бұрын
New Prime Ministers in the UK have to hand write four ‘letters of last resort’ for their nuclear submarine captains. The letter contains instructions on what to do if the government is eliminated in a nuclear first strike, or the country is gone. The contents are secret and personal, apparently they follow no set procedure. They write things like: retaliate with nuclear weapons, use your judgement, do nothing, place your submarine under the command of an ally. It is all very random and apocalyptic.
@kay12296 ай бұрын
@@cowsagainstcapitalism347 I've always thought of it as a selfishness thing, Like we need to destroy the enemy so that we even out this score or get a last laugh and that's why we have Instructions for Retaliatory Strikes, so countries even out the score, lfie simply doesnt matter
@NortheastEnterprise-c8u28 күн бұрын
Situation in USA in 2025 according to Baba vanga and Nostradamus😂😂
@BryanDelMonte2 жыл бұрын
MAJOR ATTACK OPTION ONE! :D LOL! Might as well call it "Massive ass kicking!" What a joke... I mean very dramatic... totally not how it works.
@cowsagainstcapitalism3472 жыл бұрын
That is what is it called. It's well documented.
@battlec43 Жыл бұрын
That is LITERALLY how it works. Three categories of options are given: Major Attack Options, Selected Attack Options, and Limited Attack Options. You then pick options in those categories to execute. You should educate yourself.
@yeboiepiktrix524 Жыл бұрын
Can confirm that is what it is called. It's part of the Single Integrated Operational Plan (SIOP) that gives the president of the United states many options to use nuclear weapons
@Bluee953 ай бұрын
You need to educate yourself. That is how it works. The president is given 3 attack options and he/she can then choose.
@Twister64242 ай бұрын
Ummm...yeah...so this is based on events of the past. That's all I'll say about it. But there is SOME truth to this Hollywood depiction.
@guystuart3196Ай бұрын
You guys all get it's a tv show right? I mean reality is one thing but when did we all become experts and critics about everything? Oh wait when the Internet went online.... Gotcha... 😂
@tarcilaguzman15832 жыл бұрын
Until this guys finishing crossing passwords... 😆All the Russian hipersonic nuclear warheads hit american soil in less than 18 minutes. Not counting the 2nd Strike.😆
@krishpatel31562 жыл бұрын
The entire process depicted here takes place theoretically in 2 to 5 minutes.
@spatrompete26012 жыл бұрын
I read somewhere Clinton leak the information from the time of order it should take approx 4-5 min so taken into account checking codes et I would say about 8-10 max for icbms and bombers to be lunched. But if the attack comes via submarines than it highly likely only the ones in the middle of the USA would be able to fire
@ireallylikerobloxrally1451 Жыл бұрын
Russian Hipersonic Missles are on planes only for now
@BSE1320 Жыл бұрын
Not to mention the ballistic submarines and B-2 spirit bombers.
@radosawrudolf4931 Жыл бұрын
@@ireallylikerobloxrally1451 Not to mention their lack of ability to disperse multiple warheads and actually being easier to intercept with modern systems than conventional ICBMs. Russians are a threat, but that's simply down to the number of their missiles, not how resilient each one is individually.