Would Russia’s undersea “doomsday drone” carry a cobalt bomb?
ABSTRACT
Following
the November 2015 “leak” of a classified slide purporting to show a
Russian nuclear-armed and nuclear-powered drone intended to create
long-lasting “zones of extensive radiological contamination,” both
Russian and Western observers have suggested that Moscow may be
developing a cobalt bomb. This conjectural device, which served as the
basis of the “doomsday machine” in the classic 1964 film Dr. Strangelove,
would employ radioactive cobalt to create unusually intense long-lived
fallout. This article reviews the history and science of the cobalt bomb
to assess the likelihood that Russia is developing such a weapon. It
argues that while the lethality of the cobalt bomb compares unfavorably
to that of “conventional” thermonuclear weapons, it might actually be a
preferred means of creating long-lasting radioactive contamination
because it could force an adversary to abandon territory while
minimizing the number of immediate fatalities. But exploiting this
principle in practice would be forbiddingly difficult because of the
difficulty of predicting the ultimate distribution of the radioactive
contamination, particularly for an underwater detonation like that
envisioned for the “Status-6” drone seen in the Russian slide. While the
underwater detonation of a massive cobalt or “conventional” nuclear
weapon might create zones of long-lasting contamination, Russian
decision makers would have little confidence that these areas would be
in the intended locations, undermining the strategic case for such
attacks. These findings suggest that the Kremlin is not pursuing
radiological “doomsday bombs,” even though the nuclear-powered drone on
the slide seems to be a real research project.
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00963402.2016.1195199
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