The Growing Concern About The Terrorist Electro Magnetic Pulse Threat

August 8th, 2008 Posted By drillanwr.

1

(WSJ)

Imagine you’re a terrorist with a single nuclear weapon. You could wipe out the U.S. city of your choice, or you could decide to destroy the infrastructure of the entire U.S. economy and leave millions of Americans to die of starvation or want of medical care.

The latter scenario is the one envisioned by a long-running commission to assess the threat from electromagnetic pulse, or EMP. The subject of its latest, and little discussed, report to Congress is the effect an EMP attack could have on civilian infrastructure. If you’re prone to nightmares, don’t read it before bedtime.

An EMP attack occurs when a nuclear bomb explodes high in the Earth’s atmosphere. The electromagnetic pulse generated by the blast destroys all the electronics in its line of sight. For a bomb detonated over the Midwest, that includes most of the continental U.S. Few, if any, people die in the blast. It’s what comes next that has the potential to be catastrophic. Since an EMP surge wipes out electronics, virtually every aspect of modern American life would come to a standstill.

The commission’s list of horribles is 181 pages long. The chapter on food, for instance, catalogs the disruptions up and down the production chain as food spoils or has no way to get to market. Many families have food supplies of several days or more. But after that, and without refrigeration, what? The U.S. also has 75,000 dams and reservoirs, 168,000 drinking water-treatment facilities, and 19,000 wastewater treatment centers — all with pumps, valves and filters run by electricity.

Getting everything up and running again is not merely a matter of flipping a switch, and the commission estimates that many systems could be out of service for months or a year or more — far longer than emergency stockpiles or batteries could cover. The large transformers used in electrical transmission are no longer built in the U.S. and delivery time is typically three years. “Lack of high voltage equipment manufacturing capacity represents a glaring weakness in our survival and recovery,” the commission notes.

Many industries rely on automated control systems maintained by small work forces. In emergencies — say, during a blackout — companies often have arrangements in place to borrow workers from outside the affected area to augment the locals and help with manual repairs. After an EMP attack, those workers would be busy in their home regions — or foraging for food and water for their families.

The commission offers extensive recommendations for how industry and government can protect against the effects of an EMP attack and ensure a quicker recovery. They include “hardening” more equipment to withstand an electromagnetic pulse; making sure replacement equipment is on hand; training recovery personnel; increasing federal food stockpiles; and many others.

If not, our vulnerability “can both invite and reward attack,” the commission’s chairman, William Graham, told Congress last month. Iran’s military writings “explicitly discuss a nuclear EMP attack that would gravely harm the United States,” he said. James Shinn, an assistant secretary of defense, has said that China is developing EMP weapons. The commission calls an EMP attack “one of a small number of threats that can hold our society at risk of catastrophic consequences.” The threat is real. It’s past time to address it.


10 Responses

  1. Paslode

    Why is the arrow point to my vicinity?

  2. SLD

    I was thinking the same thing, Kansas City, reminds me of the movie THE DAY AFTER, in the early 80s..

  3. DC

    Be careful about taking this information at face value. This article has been passed around and re-branded more times than Paris Hilton at a coke party.

    All I’m saying here is do some more research before making any judgements on the issue of EMPs and their effects on electrical and electronics equipment, and why our military and government consider it only a terciary threat at worst.

    Thre are dangers of EMP from nuclear weapons detonated high above the target, but the size of the bombs equivalent yield to produce high enough induced electrical energies to be effective at immobilizing the country, would have to be in the thousands of megatons.

  4. Rob

    Well there’s some good in it. If this happens the liberals will starve because they’re so against using guns, and they’ll never DREAM of hurting another animal, even for survival. :lol:

  5. Rob

    as for me, I’m buying a shotgun and ammo. I’m thinking BBQ Libs :shock: It’s not cannibalism if they’re not people :wink: lol

  6. Paslode

    Jericho, The Day After….they all love Kansas! I gotta move:lol:

  7. Marc

    Hey at least I’ll get some use out of my Y2K bunker I stockpiled after all, all the while clutching my guns and bible! :lol:

  8. jimmy(the bullet)

    remington 700,2 ak 47,glock model 30,s&w .357 and almost 10,000 rds of ammo.
    i’ll find something to eat :twisted:

  9. jimmy(the bullet)

    oh yeah,i forgot my old trusty .12 gauge winchester defender :gun: :gun:

  10. The Growing Concern About The Terrorist Electro Magnetic Pulse Threat « Thoughts Of A Conservative Christian

    […] Concern About The Terrorist Electro Magnetic Pulse Threat August 9, 2008 — budsimmons http://patdollard.com/2008/08/a-growing-concern-of-the-terrorist-emp-threat/ Posted in Barack Hussein Obama, Barack Obama, Islam sympathizers, Islamic Imperialism, Islamic […]

Respond now.

alert Be respectful of others and their opinions. Inflammatory remarks and inane leftist drivel will be deleted. It ain’t about free speech, remember you’re in a private domain. My website, my prerogative.

alert If you can't handle using your real email address, don't bother posting a comment.

:mrgreen: :neutral: :twisted: :arrow: :shock: :smile: :???: :cool: :evil: :grin: :idea: :oops: :razz: :roll: :wink: :cry: :eek: :lol: :mad: :sad: :!: :?: :beer: :beer: