Meh. Moving a million or more folks to a remote location is just going to cause a new city to grow up in that new remote location.
FDR thought moving the Pacific Fleet to Hawaii would send a message of “we really really mean it” to Japan. They took the threat seriously. So much so, in fact… well, the rest is history.
No one knew. No one. No body, no how.
If they (FDR or Kimmel) knew, the battleships would have been pulled out, too, to safety.
I counter point with the fact that this is a first strike/sneak attack wih the option for America to give up or suffer it’s entire civilian population.
I personally would not give up till the last missile had been delivered, but I don’t have to make that decision like the top Commander in Charge would have to make.
Salt III comes after Salt II right?
Don’t they make air burst weapons that just take out electronics without fallout?
Now how do you get everyone to agree … it won’t be easy?
No one knows the day or the hour … as a friend of mine says, “don’t be afraid/be ready”
I was under the impression that Edward Teller invented the Hydrogen bomb and also proposed 100 weather satellites be launched to detect a missile being launched anywhere in the world.
Eh. The idea is unfeasible, but the country would not be harmed by more thought being given to our basing strategy and nonproliferation issues.
Well, my take on that is that a non-state actor might pop off a terror nuke, but no state with even a shred of self-preservation is going to choose to nuke the US, by surprise or not.
And the problem with a non-state actor is there’s no physical land target to counterstrike. (Which is the only reason it might be tried.)
And the problem with a terror nuke is it will not be targeted at the Navy, but at a fat civilian target to cause maximum emotional value. So moving the base won’t help against this.
Not without fallout, just less, since high-level airbursts are, by nature, less dirty in that way than lower-level or ground bursts.
But it’s still a nuclear weapon, and would be responded to as such.
It’s like seeing that the other guy has a pistol in his hand and saying, “Gosh, if he fires it next to my ear, I might be deafened.” Yeah…but, really, that’s the last thing you really need to worry about if a bad guy is holding a pistol.
Just to play devil’s advocate, I wouldn’t be terribly surprised if a facility was to be opened in Anchorage- closer to oil supplies and a quicker trip to Korea should the need arise. But it would be crazy to shut down San Diego’s base.
You need to read more. Try The Firecracker Boys, by Dan O’Neill. Teller was brilliant, but he was obsessed with the notion of using nuclear bombs for geo-engineering. He lied about test results and claimed that radiation was overrated as a danger to humans. He relentlessly pushed his agenda for creating a harbor in Alaska by detonating several nuclear devices, without regard for the consequences. The result of his plan was the very first environmental impact study, the result of which quashed Teller’s harebrained scheme.
There used to be Naval facilities at both Kodiak Island and Adak Island in the Aleutians. Additionally, there is an Air Force facility (radar and refueling) on Shemya Island, way out at the end of the chain. Adak did not have fleet capability (other than tugboats), but did have a Naval Air contingent of P-3 Orion aircraft. There was also a facility there called AUW, which was highly classified at the time. It had something to do with underground nuclear storage, probably in support of all the atomic testing that was going on in the Aleutians at the time.
Anchorage, of course, has Elmendorf AFB, home to an F-22 squadron, and the Fort Richardson Army base. Port of Anchorage really couldn’t handle a Navy fleet; it’s the shipping hub for all of Alaska, so berth space is at a premium.
Mr Quatro, may I ask respectfully and sincerely if you are concerned about nuclear war because of a Revelations / Armageddon / apocalypse / Rise of the Beast scenario? If so, we’ve had many discussions about that topic on this message board.
Anyway, we’re overlooking the most strategic option: move San Diego right smack dab to the middle of Beijing. Your move, China!
No I didn’t know that Chefguy thank you for pointing it out … I had thought he was an honest and truthful person snitching on his boss Mr Oppenheimer and of course the starwars theory and the 100 weather satellites to detect launches from anywhere in the world, but I didn’t know about the lying or the disregard for Alaska.
I will have to read more to try and understand (no jokes please)
too bad Mr Teller’s plan to make a port in Alaska wasn’t a good one … would a floating port be too expenisve?
My father served in Kodiak, Alaska in WWII as a personal man
I have been to Adak back a long time ago and there was only one pier to tie up to and no one to great us … just a NAS like you said, but with a little immagination it could become a better lay over.
This was November and colder in San Francisco when we finally got there, but I know what force 9 is and it is no fun.
I guess Alaska is not a good place to move the fleet from San Diego to after all … with all of the Airforce there already it would just make a bigger target though.
Alaska already knows their chances of survival are not that great … what is the blast area now days anyway 100 miles for say three 10 megaton warheads?
I don’t know how to answer this … yes I am a christian, but I am not one of those were out of here kind of rapture people.
Russia is not for the most part a christian country and they have been arming themselves for as far back as I can remember.
I am more interested in surviving WWIII for an entire population in my part of the country … I’m too old to care about myself … just my brothers and sister’s all around me on this beautiful day in June 2013
I feel silly for taking the time to point out something the OP got wrong… cause, you know, everything, right?.. Anyway, Marine Corps Air Station El Toro has not been turned into a regional airport. It is slowly being turned into housing, other land development and (slowly but surely) the Orange County Great Park. They have a giant orange balloon and everything!
I can’t speak for the Navy, but I was planning on moving San Diego to Alaska this summer. Thanks OP for spoilering what would have been the most EPIC summer camp prank EVAR! \
Now I will have to settle for putting the hands of the entire population of San Diego into warm water while they are asleep…
Kodiak was closed in the 60s, except for the Coast Guard station. Adak was closed and now houses some of the Aleuts who have reclaimed it as their own. They got a pretty sweet deal, with two runways, housing, power plant, recreational facilities, etc. The reason I say that it was a sweet deal is because they were not forcibly relocated from the island in WWII like many Aleuts were. They had left Adak long before to follow the fur trade with Russia. I think the Navy and the government just figured it was easier to turn the place over to somebody else than to try to dismantle everything and clean the place up after 60 years of dumping all manner of pollutants there.