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by gshubert17
3969 days ago
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This article is about the warhead B61-12; the whole program is estimated to cost about $11 billion. This is scary, as the higher-precision guidance and adjustable lower yields make it more likely to be used; and sad, that President Obama and the various contractors and New Mexico politicians are pushing this. |
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Nuclear weapons with much, much smaller yields have been in the US arsenal for a long time (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W54 for an example of one with a yield of 10 tons of TNT, as compared to the 300 ton minimum claimed in the article for the B61-12) and we haven't used them in war, so I don't see how this one is any different in that respect.
Furthermore, the "high-precision" argument is also not convincing. You can make an argument -- dubious, but it can be made -- that existing precision conventional weapons are more likely to be used because it's possible to destroy an enemy target even if it's located right next door to noncombatants. But even at its lowest setting, the B61-12 would completely destroy dozens of square blocks and cause additional damage dozens farther out; there's no way that wouldn't lead to massive civilian casualties if it was used in a city.