Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/06/27
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]The existence of Electro-Magnetic Pulse effects from nuclear weaponry was classified in the US until the Reagan years, and portions of information about it are still unfortunately classified. EMP is simply a side effect of an atomic or nuclear bomb. A brief but titanic emission of hard radiation (alpha, beta, and gamma rays, the mix depending on the bomb employed) dramatically outstrips the effect of lightning (which, in the end, is almost totally a matter of surplus electrons). The only "nice" part about EMP is that it is often not permanent and wears off in a matter of hours or days from most equipment, while lightning damage is "termination with extreme prejudice" and is almost always permanent. The effect of EMP on military C3 (Command, Control, Communications) and on civilian administration would be devastating in the short run: after all, how do you call out the Fire Department when the telephones are dead? The use of shielded landlines helps but is generally neither practicable nor foolproof. The British military probably had the right idea, doing away with divisions and making the Brigade the basic formation, as a Brigade can be controlled by heliograph, wig-wag, smoke signals, hand gestures, and gallopers, while higher formations, when used, are provisional Brigade Groups and the like. But no other army followed this rather logical approach and I understand that even the Royal Corps of Signals no longer teaches heliography and the use of wig-wag flags (hint: once you know Morse Code, all is made clear by remembering "dot's right!"), though all navies still seem to glory in signal flags, blinkers, and hand flag signals. In the Cold War days, EMP would have meant that, with hours of the decimiation of the 6th ACR in the Fulda Gap, no one would have been able to talk to anyone outside of direct line-of-sight. This would have affected the Soviet forces less than thoser of NATO, as the Warsaw Pact was already unable to communicate effectively due to the hundreds of languages spoken by its soldiers. (NATO used to monitor Warsaw Pact field exercizes; whenever the umpires ruled that the officers and NCO's were killed, a normal part of such doings, the higher command might well be reduced to a single Mongolian radioman attempting to talk to a Hungarian battalion where the only survivors spoke Magyar. The transcripts are grand to read, as the confusion was immense.) (A minor historic footnote: the first use of a long shielded land-line was the original AUTOVON trunk between Atlanta and Boston, installed in 1938 to 1940 and intended as a protection against air attack. AUTOVON became increasingly unuseable over the years on this line as water leakage and the like destroyed the original copper lines; I believe that these have now been completely supplanted by optical cable but I have no direct knowledge of this and suspect that this information would be classified in any event.) <arc msmall@infionline.net FAX: +540/343-7315 Cha robh b?s fir gun ghr?s fir!