Post-apocalypse: the best books in the genre. Doomsday machineRevelations of the developer of the nuclear war plan "Perimeter" - a parallel and alternative command system of the Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces, secretive, well-protected and trouble-free

On August 21, 1957, the Soviet R-7 missile covered 5,600 kilometers and carried a warhead to the Kura test site. The USSR officially announced that it had an intercontinental ballistic missile(IDB) - a year earlier than the US. The missiles flew farther and carried more and more nuclear warheads. Today the most powerful ICBM R-36M2 "Voevoda" capable of carrying 10 warheads with a capacity of 170 kilotons at a distance of up to 15 thousand kilometers.

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To date, the so-called. Russia's nuclear deterrence forces are submarines with nuclear weapons on board and are carriers of nuclear warheads.

Traditionally, the command to deliver a retaliatory nuclear strike in the event of external aggression is given by the top military-political leadership of the country. And what to do if this manual is destroyed or communication channels are damaged and there is no way to confirm the launch command ... then the “Perimeter” or “dead hand” system, as it was aptly dubbed in the West, comes into operation. Moreover, in NATO, the high stability of Russia's nuclear shield is considered defiantly immoral.

The American doctrine of the "decapitation strike" implies the simultaneous destruction of the enemy's leadership by delivering a preemptive nuclear strike on the command post, no matter where it is located and no matter how deeply it is buried. Soviet scientists of American colleagues counted on time, and therefore, in contrast to the militant doctrines, our designers opposed a system of guaranteed retaliatory strike, independent of external factors. Created during the Cold War, "Perimeter" (URV index of the Strategic Missile Forces - 15E601) took up combat duty in January 1985. This huge and most complex combat organism, dispersed throughout the country, constantly monitors the situation and thousands of nuclear warheads, and two hundred modern nuclear warheads are enough to destroy a country like the United States.

Command missile of the Perimeter system, index 15A11

"Perimeter" is a parallel and alternative command system of the Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces, secretive, well-protected and trouble-free.

Around the clock, seven days a week and in any weather, stationary and mobile control centers are on alert throughout the vast territory of our country. They constantly assess seismic activity, radiation levels, air pressure and temperature, monitor military frequencies, record the intensity of negotiations, monitor the data of the missile attack warning system. Point sources of powerful electromagnetic and ionizing radiation are monitored, coinciding with seismic disturbances (evidence of nuclear strikes). This and many other data are being analyzed continuously, on the basis of which the system can autonomously make a decision on a retaliatory nuclear strike. Combat mode in the event of an immediate threat of the use of nuclear weapons can be activated by the first persons of the state.


Station early warning system "Voronezh-DM" RIA Novosti / Igor Zarembo

So, the Perimeter system detects signs of a nuclear strike, and an “electronic” request is automatically sent to the General Staff. When a certain response is received, it returns to the situation analysis state. In the event of a negative development of events, when communication with the General Staff is not established, while a technical failure is completely ruled out, Perimeter immediately turns to the Kazbek strategic nuclear forces control system (“nuclear suitcase”). But without receiving an answer here either, the autonomous control and command system (software complex based on artificial intelligence) independently makes a decision on a retaliatory nuclear strike.


Subscriber complex "Cheget" of the automated control system of nuclear forces of the Russian Federation "Kazbek" / fishki.net

There is simply no way to neutralize, disable or destroy the Perimeter system. However, the enemy can damage the communication lines (or block them with the help of electronic countermeasure systems) ... in response to this, our system launches command ballistic missiles 15P011 with a special warhead 15B99, which will transmit the starting impulse directly to the RVSN mines, underwater boats and other complexes for a nuclear response without the participation of the highest military command.


ICBM UR-100 in the mine

"Perimeter" was repeatedly tested during command and staff exercises and modernized. To this day, it remains one of the main deterrents to World War III.

There is also evidence that earlier the Perimeter system, along with 15A11 missiles, included command missiles based on the Pioneer IRBM. Such a mobile complex was called the Horn. Complex index - 15P656, missiles - 15ZH56. It is known about at least one unit of the Strategic Missile Forces, which was armed with the Gorn complex - the 249th missile regiment, stationed in the city of Polotsk, Vitebsk region of the 32nd missile division (Postavy), from March-April From 1986 to 1988 he was on combat duty with a mobile complex of command missiles.


Mobile combat railway missile system (BZHRK) with intercontinental combat missiles RT-23 UTTKh

The Americans also tried to do something similar.

24 hours a day, continuously for 30 years (from 1961 to June 24, 1990), the air command posts of the US Strategic Air Command based on eleven Boeing EC-135C aircraft (later - on sixteen E-6B "Mercury"). Each crew of 15 military personnel controlled the situation and duplicated the control system of the American strategic forces (ICBMs) in case the ground centers were destroyed.

Boeing E-6 Mercury (doomsday aircraft)

After the Cold War, the US abandoned this practice, dubbed "Operation Looking Glass", as it proved too costly and vulnerable.

It was not until October 8, 1993 that the New York Times published an article entitled "The Russian Doomsday Machine", which revealed some details about the control system of the Russian Strategic Missile Forces (one of the developers of the system moved to the United States). This was the day America learned about the fail-safe global strike system. Soon, under pressure from START-1, the Perimeter was removed from combat duty (in the summer of 1995).

Relations between our countries worsened every year, NATO grew to the East, anti-missile defense systems were deployed near the borders of Russia, the rhetoric became less and less peaceful. "Perimeter" was activated again - in December 2011, the commander of the Strategic Missile Forces, General Sergei Karakaev, said that the system was on alert.

The American magazine Wired recently wrote in fright: "Russia has the only weapon in the world that guarantees a retaliatory nuclear strike against the enemy, even in the terrible event that we no longer have anyone to decide on this strike."

post apocalypse- a genre of fantasy literature that models the life of mankind. In some cases, nuclear war becomes the cause of general devastation, in others, natural disasters, man-made disasters, or even disaster from outer space. Over the past decade, the popularity of this genre has grown markedly, at the moment, thousands of post-apocalyptic books have already been created. Some authors write within the framework of the post-nucleus, others - social, philosophical. It can even be an apocalyptic fantasy or a hit in the world after a nuclear war. From year to year, new items written in the post-apocalypse only prove how wide the scope of this direction is.

Features of books in the genre 2019

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– molten

Valery Yarynich looks nervously over his shoulder. Dressed in a brown leather jacket, a 72-year-old retired Soviet colonel hides in a dark corner of the Iron Gate restaurant in Washington. It's March 2009 — the Berlin Wall fell two decades ago — but Yarynich is still nervous as a KGB-escaped informant. He begins to whisper, but firmly.

"The Perimeter system is very, very good," he says. "We have relieved the politicians and the military of responsibility." He looks back again.

Yarynich talks about Russia's Doomsday Machine. That's right, the real doomsday device is a real-life and working version of the ultimate weapon that has always been thought to exist only in the fantasies of paranoid political hawks. As it turned out, Yarynich, a veteran of the Soviet strategic missile forces and an employee in the Soviet General Staff with 30 years of experience, participated in its creation.

The essence of such a system, he explains, is to guarantee an automatic Soviet response to an American nuclear strike. Even if the US surprise attack caught the USSR by surprise, the Soviets would still be able to respond. It doesn't matter if the US blows up the Kremlin, the Department of Defense, damages the communications system, and kills everyone with stars on their shoulder straps. Ground sensors will determine that a nuclear attack has taken place and a retaliatory strike will be launched.

The technical name of the system was "Perimeter", but some called it "Mertvaya Ruka". It was built 25 years ago and continues to be a closely guarded secret. With the collapse of the USSR, information about the system was leaked, but it seems that few people noticed it. In fact, although Yarynich and former US strategic officer Bruce Blair have been writing about the Perimeter since 1993, in various books and news articles, the existence of the system has not penetrated the public brain or the corridors of power. The Russians still don't want to talk about it, and Americans at the highest levels, including former high-ranking officials in the State Department and the White House, say they've never heard of her. When I recently told former FBI director James Woolsey about the USSR building the Doomsday Machine, he said, "I hoped the Russians were more reasonable about it." But they weren't.

The system is still so shrouded in mystery that Yarinich worries that his openness could cost him dearly. Perhaps he has reasons for this: one Soviet official who talked to the Americans about this system died under mysterious circumstances by falling down the stairs. But Yarynich understands the risk. He thinks the world should know about it. After all, the system continues to exist.

The system that Jarynych helped create came into operation in 1985 after some of the most dangerous years of the Cold War. Throughout the 1970s, the USSR steadily approached the leadership of the United States in its nuclear power. At the same time, America, which survived the Vietnam War and was in recession, seemed weak and vulnerable. Then Reagan appeared, who said that the days of retreat were over. As he said, in America it is morning, while in the Soviet Union it is dusk.

Part of the president's new tough approach was to reassure the Russians that the US was not afraid of nuclear war. Many of his advisers have long championed the simulation and active planning of a nuclear battle. These were the followers of Herman Kahn, author of Thermonuclear Warfare and Reflections on the Unthinkable. They believed that having a superior arsenal and willingness to use it would be leverage in negotiations during crises.

Image caption: You either attack first or convince the enemy that you can retaliate even if you die.

The new administration began to expand the US nuclear arsenal and prepare bunkers. And supported open bragging. In 1981, during a Senate hearing, the head of arms control and disarmament, Eugene Rostow, made it clear that the US was crazy enough to use nuclear weapons, stating that after the use of nuclear weapons on Japan, "it not only survived, but prospered." ". Speaking about a possible US-Soviet nuclear exchange, he said, "Some estimates show that one side will have about 10 million victims, while the other will have over 100 million."

Meanwhile, the behavior of the United States in large and small in relation to the USSR became more rigid. Soviet Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin lost his reserved parking space at the State Department. American troops attacked tiny Grenada to defeat communism in Operation Immediate Fury. American military exercises were held ever closer to Soviet waters.

The strategy worked. Moscow soon believed that the new American leadership was ready to fight in a nuclear war. The Soviets also became convinced that the United States was ready to start a nuclear war. "The policy of the Reagan administration should be viewed as a gamble that served the goals of world domination," Soviet Marshal Nikolai Ogarkov said at a meeting of the Warsaw Pact Chiefs of Staff in September 1982. “In 1941, there were also many among us who warned against war, as well as those who did not believe that it was coming,” he said, referring to the German invasion of the USSR. "So the situation is not just very serious - it poses a great danger."

A few months later, Reagan made one of the most provocative moves of the Cold War. He announced that the United States intends to develop a laser space shield against nuclear weapons to protect against Soviet warheads. He called the initiative missile defense; critics derided it as "Star Wars".

For Moscow, this was confirmation that the US was planning an attack. The system would not be able to stop thousands of warheads flying at the same time, so missile defense only made sense when defending against an initial US nuclear strike. They will first fire thousands of their missiles at Soviet cities and underground mines. Some Soviet missiles will survive that strike to fire back, but the Reagan shield will be able to stop most of them. Thus, Star Wars will nullify the long-standing doctrine of mutual nuclear annihilation - the principle that neither side will start a war, since it is guaranteed to be destroyed by retaliation.

As we now know, Reagan did not plan the attack. According to the entries in his personal diary, he sincerely believed that his actions were leading to lasting peace. The system, he insisted, was purely defensive. But according to the logic of the Cold War, if you think that the other side is ready to attack, you must do two things: either get ahead and attack earlier, or convince the enemy that he will be destroyed even after you die.

"Perimeter" provided the possibility of a retaliatory strike, but it was not a "pistol with a cocked trigger." The system was designed to lie dormant until one of the high-ranking officers, during a crisis, put it on alert. Then she begins to monitor the network of seismic and radiation sensors, or air pressure sensors for signs of a nuclear explosion. Before launching a retaliatory strike, the system must check 4 positions: if it is enabled, it will try to determine if there was a nuclear explosion on Soviet soil. If it looks like it was, then she will check to see if any communication with the General Staff is still operational. If they remain, and for some time, probably 15 minutes to 1 hour, there are no other signs of a nuclear attack, the machine will conclude that the command capable of ordering a retaliatory strike is still alive, and will shut down. But if there is no connection with the General Staff, then the machine concludes that the apocalypse has come. She immediately transfers the power of retaliation to whoever is at that moment deep inside the protected bunker, bypassing the usual procedures of hierarchical command. At this point, the duty to destroy the world falls on whoever is on duty at that moment: perhaps it will be some high-ranking minister who will be put in this position during a crisis, or a 25-year-old junior officer who has just graduated from a military academy ...

Once initiated, the counterattack will be controlled by the so-called. command missiles. Sheltered in protected bunkers designed to survive the blast and EM pulse of a nuclear strike, these missiles would be fired first, and would begin transmitting coded radio signals to all Soviet nuclear weapons that managed to survive the first strike. At that moment, the machine will start the war. Flying over the radioactive and scorched earth of the fatherland with communications destroyed everywhere, these command missiles will destroy the United States.

The United States has also developed its own versions of such technologies, deploying command missiles as part of the so-called. Emergency Missile Communications System. They also developed seismic and radiation sensors to monitor nuclear tests or nuclear explosions around the world. But they never combined these technologies into a zombie retribution system. They feared that one slip of the tongue could end the world.

Instead, during the Cold War, American aircrews were constantly in the air with the capability and authority to launch retaliatory strikes. Such a system was similar to the Perimeter, but relied more on people and less on machines.

And in accordance with the principles of Cold War game theory, the US told the Soviets about it.

The first reference to the Doomsday Machine, according to Apocalypse Man author P.D. Smith, was on an NBC radio broadcast in January 1950, when nuclear scientist Leo Gilard described a hypothetical hydrogen bomb system that could cover the entire planet in radioactive dust and kill all life. . “Who wants to kill every living thing on the planet?” he asked rhetorically. Someone who wants to keep an enemy about to attack. If, for example, Moscow is on the verge of a military defeat, it can stop the invasion by saying: "We will detonate our hydrogen bombs."

A decade and a half later, Kubrick's satirical masterpiece Dr. Strangelove introduced the idea into the public consciousness. In the film, an insane American general sends out his bombers for a preemptive strike against the USSR. Then the Soviet ambassador announces that his country has just adopted a system of automatic response to a nuclear attack.

"The whole idea of ​​the Doomsday Machine is lost if you keep it a secret," Dr. Strangelove yelled. Why not tell the world about her? After all, such a device only works if the enemy is aware of its existence.

So why don't the Soviets tell the world about it, or at least the White House? There is no evidence that the Reagan administration knew about the Soviet doomsday plans. Reagan Secretary of State George Shultz told me he had never heard of such a system.

In fact, the Soviet military did not even inform their civilian negotiating diplomats about it. “I was never told about Perimeter,” says Yuli Kvitsinsky, a leading Soviet negotiator at the time the system was created. And the generals do not want to talk about it even today. In addition to Yarynich, several other people confirmed the existence of such a system to me - former space department official Alexander Zheleznyakov and defense adviser Vitaly Tsygichko, but most of the questions they simply frowned, or cut off, saying nyet. In an interview in Moscow this February with another former representative of the Strategic Missile Forces, Vladimir Dvorkin, I was escorted out of the office as soon as I brought up this topic.

So why were the Americans not told about the Perimeter system? Kremlinologists have long noted the Soviet military's extreme proclivity for secrecy, but this is unlikely to fully explain a strategic error of this magnitude.

The silence may be partly due to the fear that, having learned about the system, the US might find a way to make it unworkable. But the underlying reason is more complex and unexpected. According to both Yarynich and Zheleznyakov, Perimeter was never intended to be a traditional Doomsday Machine. In reality, the Soviets built a system to keep themselves in check.

By providing assurances that Moscow could respond, the system was in effect designed to deter military or civilian leaders from the first strike in times of crisis. The goal, according to Zheleznyakov, was to “cool some too hot heads. Whatever happens, there will be an answer. The enemy will be punished."

The Perimeter also gave the Soviets time. After installing the deadly Pershing II at bases in Germany in December 1983, Soviet military planners concluded that they would have 10-15 minutes from the moment the launch was detected by radars. Given the paranoia that reigned in those days, it is not an exaggeration to suggest that a faulty radar, a flock of geese, or misunderstood American teachings could have led to disaster. And indeed, such incidents happened from time to time.

"Perimeter" solved this problem. If the Soviet radar was transmitting an alarming but ambiguous signal, the leaders could turn on the Perimeter and wait. If it was any geese, they could relax and turn off the system. Confirmation of a nuclear explosion on Soviet soil was much easier to obtain than confirmation of a remote launch. “That's why we need this system,” says Yarinich. "To avoid a tragic mistake."

The mistake that Yarinich and his US colleague Bruce Blair would like to avoid now is silence. The system may no longer be the central element of the defense, but it still continues to function.

While Yarynich proudly talks about the system, I ask myself questions that are traditional for such systems: what if a failure occurs? If something goes wrong? What if a computer virus, an earthquake, the destruction of a nuclear reactor, or a power outage all line up to convince the system that a war has begun?

Sipping his beer, Yarinich dismisses my concerns. Even with the incredible alignment of all accidents in one chain, there will be at least one human hand that will keep the system from destroying the world. Prior to 1985, the Soviets developed several automatic systems that could launch a counterattack without human intervention at all. But all of them were rejected by the high command. The Perimeter, he says, has never been a truly autonomous Doomsday Machine. “If there is an explosion and all communications are damaged, then people can, I emphasize, they can organize a retaliatory strike.”

Yes, I agree, in the end a person may decide not to press the cherished button. But this man is a soldier, isolated in an underground bunker, surrounded by evidence that the enemy has just destroyed his homeland and everyone he knows. There are instructions, and they are trained to follow them.

Will the officer not respond with a nuclear strike? I asked Yarinich what he would do if he was alone in the bunker. He shook his head. "Can't tell if I would have pressed the button."

It doesn't have to be a button, he goes on to explain. Now it could be something like a key or some other secure form of launch. He's not sure what it is now. After all, he says, the Dead Hand continues to modernize.

The West is concerned about the possibility of destroying the United States with the help of the Russian "doomsday machine" - the Poseidon unmanned nuclear submarine, which has already begun to be tested in a closed water area in Russia. This was told by the former senior adviser to the US State Department Christian Wheaton.

“Russia is developing a destructive doomsday machine that can destroy major US cities. The explosion of a Russian nuclear drone could trigger a 300-foot radioactive tsunami aimed at the US coastline,” the diplomat said.

He also drew attention to the fact that the drone moves silently and has camouflage, so it can reach the US coast unnoticed, FAN reports.

Four days ago, Russia began testing the unmanned nuclear submarine "Status-6" (ocean multi-purpose weapon system; according to NATO codification - "Kanyon", according to the codification of the RF Armed Forces - "Poseidon"), NSN reports.

According to a source in the military-industrial complex, the tests are taking place in the sea area, reliably protected from any reconnaissance means of a potential enemy. During the tests, underwater testing of the Poseidon nuclear power plant is underway.

One of the nuclear submarines of the Russian Navy is used as a drone carrier. Work on the device is included in the state armament program for the next nine years - up to 2027.

According to some reports, Poseidon should be transferred to the Russian fleet before the end of this program.

A day later, Military Industrial Courier published an article titled "A Tsunami with an Eye on Washington," describing the possibility of turning the Gulf Stream to flood the United States.

“The resulting landslide will create a pressure of water in the basin of the Irminger Sea to the Labrador Shelf, where the depth at the edge is 300 meters, in the canyon - more than two kilometers. Thus, we will get a long wave in the southwest direction,” the author of the article pointed out.

It was noted that the range of wave propagation along the Miramishi-Washington axis depends on the pressure. In addition, the author admitted the possibility of using the Poseidon nuclear drone to aggravate the consequences of the tsunami with radioactive water.

The article was a response to the publication of the President of the Academy of Geopolitical Problems, Doctor of Military Sciences Konstantin Sivkov. He stated that the United States could be "guaranteed to be destroyed" if nuclear missiles were struck at dangerous geophysical zones on the territory of the country. He also expressed his opinion in an article for the Military Industrial Courier.

According to Konstantin Sivkov, Russia should not compete with the United States in terms of the number of nuclear weapons. Instead, according to the expert,

The Russian military should create nuclear charges with a caliber of more than a hundred megatons of TNT.

The publication acknowledged that the warhead is large enough to destroy the entire fleet of American aircraft carriers, but there is the question of how the Poseidon will be able to identify and find a moving enemy group. The nuclear-powered unmanned submarine is designed to cross entire oceans before launching a warhead detonation off the coast of adversaries, the article said.

Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke about the unmanned submarine in his address to the Federal Assembly on March 1 this year.

“Unmanned underwater vehicles have been developed in Russia that are capable of moving at great depths and over intercontinental ranges at a speed that is a multiple of the speed of submarines, the most modern torpedoes and all types of surface ships,” the Russian leader explained.

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