By: Chris J.
For those of us who grew up in the '80s and '90s, it's
difficult to fully understand just how close to annihilation we actually came
in the 20th century. With the two most powerful nations on Earth threatening to
detonate their entire nuclear arsenals at the slightest provocation, one would
assume that the respective governments would have treated the situation with
the care and respect it deserved (spoiler: they didn't).
#6. A 50-Cent Computer Chip Mistakenly Announces Nuclear War
At 2 a.m. on June 3, 1980, some poor Air Force staffer deep
within the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) was working the
late night shift when he noticed that the screen readout that usually read
"0 Incoming Missiles" suddenly read "2 Incoming Missiles."
This was bad enough, but then, perhaps with an innocuous beep, it announced
"220 Incoming Missiles."
"Sir, the 'F***ED' button is lighting up. I'm just going to take my last few minutes to tell you how much of a dick you are." |
Alarms sounded everywhere as the Air Force collectively
freaked out all across America.
Bombers carrying nuclear bombs began taking off throughout the country. Someone
woke up National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski and told him that the
shit was hitting the fan. Luckily, before anyone could actually fire a missile,
someone realized that the hundreds of warheads weren't showing up on the radar
screens. The alerts were canceled, bombers landed and everyone took a deep
breath and poured a strong Scotch.
It took three days to figure out what happened. It turned
out that a simple computer chip was malfunctioning inside the NORAD computers,
causing the display to sometimes show 2s when it should have shown 0s.
Allegedly, the chip that caused the crisis cost only 46 cents.
"I have the worst case of blue treads." |
#5. A Blown Fuse Nearly Triggers Armageddon
In the 1950s, the U.S. Air Force built a network of early
warning radar so they could detect a Soviet attack at some point before North America turned into a field of mushroom clouds.
These radar stations were linked by communications lines to the Strategic Air
Command headquarters in Nebraska, the Air Force bomber and missile bases and
the underground Batcave-style NORAD command center in Wyoming. So, understandably, quite a few pairs of underpants were
soiled on November 24, 1961, when communications between SAC headquarters and
the radar sites suddenly went dead. You know, as if they had been suddenly
wiped off the map by a surprise attack. SAC tried calling the backup lines.
When that didn't work, they tried calling NORAD on the regular civilian
telephone, but they couldn't even bring up a dial tone.
At this point, the only conclusion was that the Soviet Union had just nuked all the radar sites, as well
as NORAD, as the first wave of a massive, world-ending attack. All over the United States,
nuclear-armed B-52s lined up on runways and started their engines. For the next
12 minutes, the United States Air Force nervously awaited the order to commence
global annihilation. Luckily for future generations, a B-52 that was already in
the air happened to fly past one of the radar sites, noticed a distinct lack of
smoking ruins and reported it in time to convince everyone to calm their shit
down.
What actually happened? For some stupid reason, every single
telephone line connecting NORAD, SAC headquarters and all the early warning
radars, including the backup and civilian lines, ran through one single
telephone relay station in Colorado.
That night, a motor in the relay station had overheated, shutting down every
possible line of communication between the nuclear bombers and the people who
had to constantly tell them not to kill everyone.
Call us hippies, but we can't help thinking that "Kill everyone everywhere" should never be anyone's default. |
But hey, these were technical errors, right? The machines
were overruled by wise human operators. Level-headed, well-trained humans
couldn't make a mistake that stupid, could they?
#4. NORAD Mistakenly Informs America That the World Is Ending
The Emergency Broadcast System, that voice on the radio that
warns you about incoming tornadoes and stuff, was first created during the Cold
War to warn American citizens of a Soviet nuclear strike so that they could
take cover in their bomb shelters or dive under their school desks. Every
Saturday, NORAD would test the system by sending a teletype message to every
radio station in the United
States to make sure it was working. Tests
were routine, and no one paid much attention to them. Until 9:33 a.m. Eastern on February 20, 1971, when lowly
civilian teletype operator Wayland S. Eberhard grabbed the wrong tape and
stuffed it into the alert system machine.
Instead of the message saying "This is only a
test," NORAD sent out a chilling message to every radio station in America that
said an emergency alert direct from the president was forthcoming. To your average Cold War era American, there was only one
reason why the president would interrupt the Partridge Family's latest hit with
a nationwide emergency announcement, and it wasn't anything fun. According to
DJ Bob Sievers of Fort Wayne, Indiana, "This meant one thing to me: The
atomic bombs, the missiles, have left Russia, and they're on their way
here." Radio announcers around the country were compelled to
broadcast confused and jittery announcements about a mystery emergency while
deciding whether they should call home to say farewell to their loved ones.
Another DJ at Fort Hood, Texas, who was also a soldier, said that he
was stuck trying to decide whether to go back to base or "desert the
military and spend the remaining few moments of the end of the world with my
wife and 1-month-old daughter."
The folks at NORAD realized their mistake almost
immediately, but through their frantic scrambling to cancel the alert, they
couldn't locate the correct code they needed to authenticate the message. So
for about 45 minutes, the nation listened breathlessly for confirmation that
the end was upon them. Eventually, they sent out the correct cancel message and the
country breathed a sigh of relief, or, in the words of one Virginia broadcaster, "We're
considering billing NORAD for three sets of underwear." And you also have to realize that the United States and Soviet
Union were always obsessively monitoring each other for any sign
of a nuclear surprise attack. One sign they looked for was a sudden civilian
evacuation. If one country suddenly started putting its people in bomb shelters
with no incoming attack, the obvious conclusion would be that they were about
to launch an attack themselves and were getting their people to safety before
the retaliation strike came in. And of course, if one side thought they were
about to get nuked, the logical response would be to launch a pre-emptive
strike while they still had the chance. So, if the panic had played out much
longer, it would have looked to the Soviets like the USA was bracing itself for World
War III, and their only choice would have been to try to quickly strike first.
#3. A Fictional War Scenario Is Confused With Horrible
Reality
At 9 a.m. on November 9, 1979, a low-level Air Force officer
sat down at a computer and booted up a training program that would simulate
what would happen if the Soviets fired 1,000 nuclear missiles at America at the
same time. You know, for kicks. Unfortunately, what he didn't know was that his
computer was hooked up to the mainframe in the main NORAD control room. When he
began the simulation, computers from NORAD to the Pentagon started reporting
that every nuke in Russia
was on a collision course with the USA. You may recognize this as the
plot of WarGames. According to Senator Charles Percy, who was touring the
NORAD facility when it all went down, "All hell broke loose; they were
absolutely convinced there were missiles coming at us."
Warnings went out to every missile silo in the United States
informing the crews that the country was under nuclear attack and to prepare to
launch. Fighter planes started taking off to shoot down the Soviet bombers that
were probably headed their way. The president's airborne command center was
readied for takeoff, but no one could find Jimmy Carter to put him on board. So
his plane took off without him, presumably leaving the president to find a
suitable hole in the ground to hide in. Thankfully, the commander of NORAD decided it would be a
good idea to double check that the crisis was real before they went ahead and
destroyed the world. He called up radar stations to ask if they had seen
anything. They reported back that there was nothing on radar and everything
looked clear. Satellites that were designed to detect missile launches from
anywhere in the world also reported that everything was clear. So, good thing
the phones were working that day.
"That's probably enough brinkmanship for the day. Anyone else want to go out and do just all the drugs?" |
#2. Russia
Confuses a Science Experiment With World War III
On January 25, 1995, scientists in northern Norway launched
a completely benign research rocket designed to study the aurora borealis. But
even though the Cold War had been over for some years, Russians still
collectively soiled themselves when their radar picked up something that looked
almost identical to an American ballistic missile flying straight toward them.
According to Russian policy, if such an attack were to be
detected, President Boris Yeltsin had 10 minutes to decide whether to nuke the
shit out of the United
States. Like the U.S. president, Yeltsin carried a
briefcase with nuclear doomsday codes inside. This was the first time that it
had been opened.
In a sane world, it would have contained nothing but a scrap of paper with "F***ing No" scrawled across it. |
The Russian president, sweat reeking of vodka trailing down
his forehead, sat with his hands poised over the Big Red Button as the minutes
ticked by, his aides presumably screaming into telephones around him. Allegedly, Yeltsin had only a minute left to decide a course
of action when the radar announced that the rocket had fallen into the ocean
without killing anybody. It would be hours before they could figure out that
the object had been a scientific test and not just a really ineffective nuclear
missile.
If you're wondering how the Americans would be so silly as
to antagonize an already backed-into-the-corner nuclear power for the sake of
studying some flashy sky colors, in actual fact the Americans were every bit as
confused, considering that they had officially notified the Russians about the
launch weeks earlier. Apparently, someone along the Russian chain of command
forgot to tell the people who really, really needed to know about this stuff,
such as the guys with their eyes glued to their radar and a briefcase full of
launch codes.
#1. America
Messes Up Repeatedly During the Cuban Missile Crisis
The Cuban Missile Crisis would already have the dubious
honor of being the closest the world has ever been to nuclear annihilation even
without all the screw-ups. It was basically the scene at the end of Face/Off
where everyone is pointing guns at everyone else and screaming, except that the
guns were doomsday devices. The U.S.
military went to DEFCON 2 (the second highest nuclear threat level) for the
first time in its history. Things couldn't get any worse, right?
Well, there was the event that occurred on October 25, 1962,
when a guard at a U.S.
air base spotted a shadowy figure attempting to scale the fences. Concerned
that it might be a Soviet saboteur sent to mess up the American defenses, the
guard activated the intruder alarms, which alerted nearby military bases to the
potential threat. But at Volk Field in Wisconsin,
the wrong alarm went off - the one that signaled the beginning of World War
III.
They go off as individual notes to play the Imperial Death March. |
"As per the test's instructions, we sent a message to them saying that it isn't a test at all, but a very real nuclear attack." |
Holy shit. How are we still here?
Source : http://www.cracked.com
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