Podme logo
KotiLöydäKategoriatEtsiOpiskelijoille
#43 Classic episode - Daniel Ellsberg on the institutional insanity that maintains nuclear doomsday machines

#43 Classic episode - Daniel Ellsberg on the institutional insanity that maintains nuclear doomsday machines

02:35:282022-01-18

Jaksokuvaus

Rebroadcast: this episode was originally released in September 2018.In Stanley Kubrick’s iconic film Dr. Strangelove, the American president is informed that the Soviet Union has created a secret deterrence system which will automatically wipe out humanity upon detection of a single nuclear explosion in Russia. With US bombs heading towards the USSR and unable to be recalled, Dr Strangelove points out that “the whole point of this Doomsday Machine is lost if you keep it a secret – why didn’t you tell the world, eh?” The Soviet ambassador replies that it was to be announced at the Party Congress the following Monday: “The Premier loves surprises”. Daniel Ellsberg - leaker of the Pentagon Papers which helped end the Vietnam War and Nixon presidency - claims in his book The Doomsday Machine: Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner that Dr. Strangelove might as well be a documentary. After attending the film in Washington DC in 1964, he and a colleague wondered how so many details of their nuclear planning had leaked. Links to learn more, summary and full transcript. The USSR did in fact develop a doomsday machine, Dead Hand, which probably remains active today. If the system can’t contact military leaders, it checks for signs of a nuclear strike, and if it detects them, automatically launches all remaining Soviet weapons at targets across the northern hemisphere. As in the film, the Soviet Union long kept Dead Hand completely secret, eliminating any strategic benefit, and rendering it a pointless menace to humanity. You might think the United States would have a more sensible nuclear launch policy. You’d be wrong. As Ellsberg explains, based on first-hand experience as a nuclear war planner in the 50s, that the notion that only the president is able to authorize the use of US nuclear weapons is a carefully cultivated myth. The authority to launch nuclear weapons is delegated alarmingly far down the chain of command – significantly raising the chance that a lone wolf or communication breakdown could trigger a nuclear catastrophe. The whole justification for this is to defend against a ‘decapitating attack’, where a first strike on Washington disables the ability of the US hierarchy to retaliate. In a moment of crisis, the Russians might view this as their best hope of survival. Ostensibly, this delegation removes Russia’s temptation to attempt a decapitating attack – the US can retaliate even if its leadership is destroyed. This strategy only works, though, if the tell the enemy you’ve done it. Instead, since the 50s this delegation has been one of the United States most closely guarded secrets, eliminating its strategic benefit, and rendering it another pointless menace to humanity. Strategically, the setup is stupid. Ethically, it is monstrous. So – how was such a system built? Why does it remain to this day? And how might we shrink our nuclear arsenals to the point they don’t risk the destruction of civilization? Daniel explores these questions eloquently and urgently in his book. Today we cover: • Why full disarmament today would be a mistake and the optimal number of nuclear weapons to hold • How well are secrets kept in the government? • What was the risk of the first atomic bomb test? • Do we have a reliable estimate of the magnitude of a ‘nuclear winter’? Get this episode by subscribing to our podcast on the world’s most pressing problems and how to solve them: type 80,000 Hours into your podcasting app. The 80,000 Hours Podcast is produced by Keiran Harris.

Uusimmat jaksot

80,000 Hours Podcast
80,000 Hours Podcast

#202 – Venki Ramakrishnan on the cutting edge of anti-ageing science

2024-09-192h 20min
80,000 Hours Podcast
80,000 Hours Podcast

#201 – Ken Goldberg on why your robot butler isn’t here yet

2024-09-132h 1min
80,000 Hours Podcast
80,000 Hours Podcast

#200 – Ezra Karger on what superforecasters and experts think about existential risks

2024-09-042h 49min
80,000 Hours Podcast
80,000 Hours Podcast

#199 – Nathan Calvin on California’s AI bill SB 1047 and its potential to shape US AI policy

2024-08-291h 12min
80,000 Hours Podcast
80,000 Hours Podcast

#198 – Meghan Barrett on challenging our assumptions about insects

2024-08-263h 48min
80,000 Hours Podcast
80,000 Hours Podcast

#197 – Nick Joseph on whether Anthropic's AI safety policy is up to the task

2024-08-222h 29min
80,000 Hours Podcast
80,000 Hours Podcast

#196 – Jonathan Birch on the edge cases of sentience and why they matter

2024-08-152h 1min
80,000 Hours Podcast
80,000 Hours Podcast

#195 – Sella Nevo on who's trying to steal frontier AI models, and what they could do with them

2024-08-012h 8min
80,000 Hours Podcast
80,000 Hours Podcast

#194 – Vitalik Buterin on defensive acceleration and how to regulate AI when you fear government

2024-07-263h 4min
80,000 Hours Podcast
80,000 Hours Podcast

#193 – Sihao Huang on the risk that US–China AI competition leads to war

2024-07-182h 23min
logo

PODME

TIEDOT

  • Evästekäytäntö
  • Käyttöehdot
  • Tietosuojakäytäntö
  • Medialle

LATAA SOVELLUKSEMME!

app storegoogle play store

ALUEELLA

flag
  • sweden_flag
  • norway_flag
  • finland_flag

© Podme AB 2024