Um, Calbeck, we're talking about a bunker-buster nuke, here. The device detonated 1900 feet above Hiroshima was 12.5 kilotons. It created a fireball more than 90 feet across, burned people to death out to 39,000 feet away, created a wind moving more than 1,400 feet/second, and killed people out to 1,640 feet away from radiation alone (not counting radiation exposure that was not immediately lethal and discounting fallout).Calbeck wrote:What genocide? We're not talking about attacking population centers.t.s.a.o wrote:Is the geography of Iran such that attacking the forts dosen't include genocide? Or are we saying genocide is the only option?
An estimated 140,000 people died.
At Nagasaki, the device was 20 kilotons, and had a total death count estimated at 70,000, having been detonated at 1500 feet over a smaller population center.
Now, a bunker-buster nuke has a yield of about 340 kilotons. To give a vague perspective, I'll simulate a detonation of this yield at Eastfield College, near my home. The detonation is on the college campus, but not in or on a college structure, simulated at:
http://www.meyerweb.com/eric/tools/gmap/hydesim.html
Out to 1.05 miles, we have overpressure of 15 psi on all structures. The college is flattened, along with my house, Zack Motley Elementary, and every other structure; even reinforced concrete has trouble surviving in this range. Likewise, I-30 just suffered a structural failure. Estimated 98% fatality at detonation.
Out to 1.96 miles (5 psi shockwave), and every grocery store in my neighborhood is gone with the wind. Highway 80's tattered, and there are two Wal-Marts gone, along with the North Branch of the Mesquite Public Library. Estimated 50% fatality at detonation.
Out to 3.43 miles (2 psi shockwave), and the school where I'm a crossing guard stands in a neighborhood of rubble, hundreds of residential houses reduced to heaps of shattered materials. The school itself survives with shattered windows and broken doors. Estimated 10-15% fatality at detonation.
Out to 5.06 miles, and we're tapering off. Most structures are still standing, and most people are just injured by the 1 psi shockwave. Walls are still blown out, but Mesquite City Hall is just fine, along with our Main Library.
Out to 12.98 miles radius, most of the damage is in the form of broken windows, with most of the injuries resulting from them. 0.25 psi is impressive, but not too destructive overall.
Add in fallout and thermal, Calbeck, and we're exterminating a city. Whether we hit Bushehr (SW of Isfahan and containing an airbase), Natanz (near the village of Deh-Zireh [no known streetcars, sorry]) or Arak (32 miles NW of the city that gives it its name), civilians are going to get nuked along with everyone else; Death plays no favorites.
It's a nuke, Calbeck. Even when you miss, you hit.
Yours truly,
The saddened,
Wanderer