Posted on 05/06/2017 5:46:36 AM PDT by Kaslin
Dr. Peter Pry is the Executive Director of the Task Force on National Homeland Security, Chief of Staff of the Congressional EMP (Electric Magnetic Pulse) Commission, and is considered one of the countrys most knowledgeable experts on nuclear weapons technology. He is the undisputed preeminent authority on the existential threat presented by the proliferation of EMP weapons and gained national prominence in various testimonies before Congress, where he has categorically stated that the detonation of a single EMP weapon by a rogue state such as North Korea or Iran could destroy the US.
In September of 2014, Peter and I collaborated on a Blaze Magazine article, Blackout, where he outlined how a single EMP nuclear weapon, detonated at apogee (between 50 to 200 miles above the US), would destroy the countrys entire electrical grid. Airplanes would fall out of the sky, our cars would not start, banking, nearly all non-barter related commerce would cease, and nine out of ten Americans would eventually die due to total societal collapse.
I recently caught up with Peter to ask him what he thought about the new North Korean nuclear missile crisis.
Kelley: If Trumps negotiations with President Xi Jinping and the Chinese government fail to bring about regime change in North Korea, can the US successfully take out their nuclear sites? And do we know where they all are?
Pry: We dont know where they all are. We do, however, have the ability, I believe, to do a successful preemptive strike. Which doesnt mean we get a hundred percent of everything. But we would be able to effectively disarm them, certainly of their ICBMs (intercontinental ballistic missiles). They dont have that many of them, maybe only a dozen. So, we have this window of opportunity when it comes to their ICBMs.
Kelley: How should the strike be conducted?
Pry: It should include everything in our arsenal, our own EMP, cyber, conventional forces (ours and Koreas). We can get most of their stuff in a first strike but theres no guarantee we get all of it, even all of those small number of ICBMs. But if any of those survive, our missile defense forces should be able to handle them.
Kelley: But what about all those vast numbers of short-range missiles we read are pointed at South Korea? Can all of those be taken out in a surprise attack?
Pry: Its problematic when youre talking about medium-range missiles, the no-dongs. Most are not nuclear-armed. But I think we are grossly underestimating the number of nuclear warheads they have. They could have 100 nuclear weapons, most of them mounted on the no-dongs. So there is no doubt, our allies would be more at risk from some of these surviving missiles. They hide them in tunnels and under bridges. But what are we going to do? Wait until they have enough (nuclear weaponized missiles) to make preemption impossible?
Kelley: Is North Korea reaching critical mass in terms of its nuclear weapons capability?
Pry: Not yet. Through our offensive and defensive systems we still have a reasonable chance to get all of their weapons and systems. But some of the short range missiles, the no-dongs, could get through and hit some cities.
Kelley: Cities where?
Pry: South Korea or US military bases in Japan. They could even get off an EMP attack which would be utterly bad news. We now have a rapidly vanishing window of opportunity. If they were to hit our allies with an EMP, we could help them recover. But if they deploy many more nuclear-armed short and long-range missiles, the problem becomes unmanageable. The key is to stop them before they get more ICBMs, when they can hold the US mainland at risk. No American president is going to take out North Korea, at the risk of Los Angeles or Chicago, for the security purposes of Japan and South Korea.
Kelley: But havent weve lived for some time with other bad actors getting nuclear weapons such as Russia?
Pry: Its not as if (Kim Jung UN of)North Korea is an acceptable rational actor. Sooner or later he will use those nuclear missiles. Its better to get it over now while we can win. In fact, its still possible we could do a preemptive strike so that he wont be able to get a glove on us. But I cant guarantee we can now get all the medium range missiles because there are so many of them.
Kelley: In my view, most Americans dont believe North Korea has anything like 100 nuclear-armed short range missiles.
Pry: The no-dongs were the first thing they armed. They can carry a (nuclear) one-ton payload. The no-dongs are nuclear armed! The CIA has attested to this since 08. But the mainstream view is that they have only about 20 nuclear weapons. But I think this is a total fantasy. That assumes we have perfect knowledge of their program when we know they have a vast nuclear development complexes underground.
Kelley: Ive heard some national defense experts estimate that, if the US were to attempt a preemptive strike on the North, as many as 250 thousand South Koreans would die. It sounds to me that you dont agree.
Pry: I wont issue an estimate. I agree this thing could escalate into another Korean War. But thats the risk we have to run, because if we allow the North to fully nuclearize, we could be facing hundreds of millions of Americans dead in an EMP attack; in other words, an existential threat to the US.
(Part 2 will be published Sunday, May 7.)
I don’t believe it. They said the oceans would be dried up by now too.
Let us not forget that Democrats creayed this mess by giving NK a nuke power plant
No mention of that nork satellite.
We should have acted a dozen years ago. Better for us, and better for the North Korean people, too.
But everyone kicked the can down the road. Now we’re almost at the end of that road.
Easiest way out —regime change in NK.
They sure did. (William Jefferson Clinton)
Later
A look at history shows we LOST the Cuban Missile Crisis.
Good ole slick Willy still haunting us with his decisions. And that’s a prelude to what Bush and Obama administrations did which will haunt us. Bush identified the axis of evil but didn’t attack the two most evil spokes first. He had to payback saddam for his daddy first. Mistakes.
Bill Clinton at DMZ peering through binoculars with lens caps still on
We also had a major standoff in 1983 called Able Archer. The threat was worse then since the Soviets had ICBMs capable of hitting anywhere on Earth from a launch inside Soviet continental territory, as well as mobile launch platforms. They almost pulled the trigger.
The Problem is not missiles and warheads, the problem is Kim.
Kim is or seems to be irrational with delusions of grandeur. Kim, the man must be eliminated. A dead Kim will yield lots of change in north Korea. Kim must die
An ICBM wouldn’t be needed. A missile launched from a freighter or submarine off the coast could deliver a nuke at the right altitude.
So could a jet airliner or a cargo plane on a one way trip to 50-60,000 feet.
I still suspect EMP damage potential is exaggerated. Maybe one day we will find out though.
agreed - these chuck hawks are always wrong
Wasn’t that in reaction to one of our training exercises?
If they do successfully hit anything, well.. there won’t be much of Nork territory left to look at after that. I bet Trump would press the red button.
Yes we are all DOOMED DOOMED I tell you! Oh why didn’t we listen and elect the felon? What will we ever do now?
“A dead Kim will yield lots of change in north Korea. Kim must die”.....
Trump told us he would create jobs so there you go, who would like to submit an application? We’re hiring!
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