![]() ![]() It bounced off a support gantry at high velocity and ricocheted into the side of the missile, opening a hole in the fuel tank that immediately began to spray compressed gas into the silo. A pair of maintenance workers accidentally dropped an 8-pound socket into the shaft of the missile silo - essentially a larger version of the same type of socket a mechanic might use to remove engine bolts on your car. I don’t want to spoil the gripping and improbable details of Kenner’s film, but how the Damascus accident started is no big secret. How close did a simple maintenance mishap come to rendering at least one American state uninhabitable and killing an unknown number of people? And what does that tell us about the security and safety of the deadliest weapons ever built in human history? We don’t know the answer to the first question, and the second one raises extremely troubling issues. “He interrupted me before I could finish the question. “I started to ask him whether the warhead really could have gone off because of this accident,” Kenner told me. In the film, which opens in New York this week, Kenner interviews a former military contractor who designed the safety mechanisms on the Titan 2, the most powerful nuclear missile ever deployed by the United States. It wasn’t until I really started researching this accident that I was able to do interviews and obtain documents that showed conclusively that this warhead was at risk of detonating accidentally.” Schlosser added, “Most importantly, the Pentagon denied that there was any possibility that this warhead could have detonated and that was accepted by the media. We had hostages in Iran - that was a daily news story.” ![]() “Jimmy Carter was running against Ronald Reagan. “There was a presidential election going on,” Schlosser continued. “It was one of the first stories covered by the new network called CNN,” he said. As Schlosser explained, local and national news covered the Damascus accident for two or three days but without understanding quite how bad it was. ![]() Schlosser’s book is called “Command and Control,” and is also the basis for a thriller-style documentary of the same title from “Food, Inc.” director Robert Kenner, who joined Schlosser for our conversation. “Mondale said, ‘Goddamn it, I’m the vice president of the United States! You should be able to tell me if there’s a nuclear warhead on this missile or not. ![]() “In my book, I have a quote from someone who was in the room,” said author Eric Schlosser during a recent video interview in Salon’s New York office. In fact, when Mondale demanded to know whether the Damascus missile was armed with a nuclear warhead, the military initially refused to tell him. But Americans were not even remotely told the truth about how close we came to nuclear Armageddon in the heartland. It’s not entirely fair to say that the near-catastrophe of 1980 was covered up. So would have millions of other people in Arkansas and neighboring states, with a plume of deadly radioactive fallout extending from the mid-South to the East Coast, perhaps as far as Washington. If the Titan 2 intercontinental ballistic missile, or ICBM, that exploded inside its silo in Damascus, Arkansas, had detonated its nuclear warhead, both the Clintons and Vice President Walter Mondale (also attending the convention) would have been dead within minutes. Some people may regard that as a mixed blessing, even now - Bill Clinton and his wife, then the governor and first lady of that state, were less than 50 miles away in Little Rock, at the Arkansas Democratic Convention. On a September night 36 years ago, we nearly lost Arkansas. ![]()
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