USA TODAY US Edition

Nuclear reality

Launching a nuclear war is more complex than merely pushing a button.

- Jim Michaels

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and President Trump boasted this week that they have the ability to launch nuclear weapons with the push of a button.

Trump — who said his is “bigger” — has no such button, and it is unlikely that Kim has one either, nuclear experts said. The reality of launching a nuclear war is more complex.

Even so, a U.S. president could launch nuclear weapons almost as quickly as if he had a button to press in the Oval Office.

“Right now, we could launch within 15 minutes around 800 nuclear warheads,” said Bruce Blair of the Program on Science and Global Security at Princeton University.

The system is designed with checks and balances to avoid inadverten­t launches or improper orders.

U.S. military officials regularly train and review procedures for a nuclear strike because of the enormous ramificati­ons of such a decision.

“We think about these things a lot,” said Air Force Gen. John Hyten, who heads U.S. Strategic Command, which oversees the nuclear arsenal. “When you have this responsibi­lity, how do you not think about it?”

Hyten said his job is to advise the president, helping him ensure the response is in line with internatio­nal law. “We’ll come up with options of a mix of capabiliti­es to respond to whatever the situation is,” he said.

The system is streamline­d, so nuclear missiles can be launched quickly once a decision is made.

If a strike were contemplat­ed, the president would meet with advisers in the emergency operations center, a secure bunker under the White House, or he would convene a conference call if not in Washington.

The meeting would include about 15 people, including the Defense secretary and the national security adviser. The person briefing the president would be the head of Strategic Command, Blair said.

The nuclear “football,” a satchel carried by a military aide who is always near the president, contains documents that describe various nuclear options.

“We think about these things a lot. When you have this responsibi­lity, how do you not think about it?” Air Force Gen. John Hyten Head of the U.S. Strategic Command

 ?? AHN YOUNG-JOON/AP ?? North Korea’s Kim Jong Un, photograph­ed on screen as he makes a New Year’s speech, has boasted that his missiles could strike the U.S.
AHN YOUNG-JOON/AP North Korea’s Kim Jong Un, photograph­ed on screen as he makes a New Year’s speech, has boasted that his missiles could strike the U.S.

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