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The Real EMP Threat
The New York Times ignores the facts to take down Newt.

By Frank J. Gaffney Jr.


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On the front page, Monday’s New York Times provides a slanted and insidious “news” item on Newt Gingrich’s warnings about the danger of electromagnetic pulse (EMP) weapons. The author of the piece, William Broad, clearly sought to convey the impression that the former House Speaker is scaremongering about a nonexistent, or at least much exaggerated, threat. This piece is seriously ill-informed, misleading, and dangerous insofar as it serves to perpetuate what is already a serious vulnerability to EMP attacks.

Among the remarkable defects in Broad’s reporting are the following:

The Times failed to mention the fact that a blue-ribbon, congressionally mandated EMP Threat Commission produced a number of studies confirming the reality of a scenario in which ballistic-missile-delivered high-altitude electromagnetic pulse attacks could occur, with “catastrophic” effects on the United States.

The Times reports that some of those who dismiss the EMP threat claim that missile defense is the answer. One cannot help but observe an irony: Sources such as Philip Coyle and the Union of Concerned Scientists — and, for that matter, William Broad and his newspaper — have been relentlessly hostile to American deployments of anti-missile systems.

Those of us who actually support U.S. missile defense believe it can and must be part of the answer — and would be, had the critics and the Obama administration not done everything possible to defund, dumb down, and otherwise constrain such systems.

The Times also promotes the meme that, even if EMP could be a threat, it isn’t at the moment, since the nations that we might worry about are at the “kindergarten stage” of obtaining the long-range missiles and nuclear arms they would need to engage in such attacks against the United States. This misses a couple of key points:

Among the nations that understand America’s vulnerability to EMP are Russia and China. They are certainly capable of exploiting it at any time.

In addition, an enemy need not have long-range missiles; short-range missiles launched off a ship would suffice to deliver a strategic EMP attack. Virtually all the world’s bad guys — including not only North Korea and Iran, but the Islamist terrorist group Hezbollah as well — have Scud missiles that could perform this mission. What is more, Iran has already test-launched ballistic missiles off of ships and launched another, the Shahab-3, in a manner that seemed to simulate a detonation at apogee. In other words, as soon as a nuclear weapon is available, Iran could be capable of waging an EMP attack.

The prospect of relatively short-range missiles being used to mount an EMP strike compounds the challenge to our modest anti-missile systems. They may or may not be able to contend with missiles launched from the sea close in to our shores. The determining factor would primarily be the location and readiness of the Navy’s missile-defense-equipped Aegis ships. Our west-coast–deployed, ground-based interceptors will be unable to do the job against short-range missiles fired off our east or Gulf coasts. (On this, see a recent article on NRO, co-authored by a former director of Pres. George H. W. Bush’s missile-defense program, Amb. Henry Cooper, and Dr. Robert Pfaltzgraff.)

Finally, the Times’s report ignores another, particularly ominous fact: Even if there were no danger of what the Obama administration calls “man-caused disasters” involving electromagnetic pulse attacks, there is the imminent problem that Mother Nature will unleash what amounts to the same thing, via cyclically occurring and intense solar flaring that is expected to occur within the next few years.

The result will be to expose large swaths of the northern hemisphere to high levels of electromagnetic energy. Missile defenses obviously provide no protection against such an effect. Only hardening of our electrical grid and other critical infrastructure will prevent a similar kind of disruption and possible destruction of both — with truly calamitous consequences for our country and its people.

In short, Newt Gingrich is absolutely right, and the New York Times shamefully wrong. The EMP threat to America is real and potentially catastrophic. Our enemies know this, and either have obtained the means to inflict such devastation or are well along in the process of acquiring them. Even if they do not execute such a strike, we must be prepared to contend with a naturally occurring phenomenon that may be every bit as devastating.

If the Times’s mischaracterization of this danger contributes to our continued vulnerability, it will represent more than journalistic malpractice. It may help exacerbate a looming disaster.

Frank J. Gaffney Jr. is president of the Center for Security Policy and host of the nationally syndicated program Secure Freedom Radio, heard in Washington, D.C., weeknights at 9:00 p.m. on WRC 1260 AM.

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COMMENTS   31

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John Walker
   12/13/11 07:34

But who launches an EMP strike first? Preemptive in this case may be triggered by those who have the best intelligence. He who EMPs first need not brace for the counter stroke. Israelis take note.

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Ceteris Paribus
   12/13/11 09:03

The semiT kroY weN (as the Soviets called it) will likely be near the epicenter of the non-events it predicts.

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   12/13/11 09:25

Newt's awareness and concern with the EMP threat speaks well of his ability to get us through the threats of the early 21st century. An EMP attack would be the most effective and least expensive way for an enemy to bring us to our knees. Unless we prepare for it we will be done in by it.

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thomas bullock
   12/13/11 09:25

The Times writer should do a little more research before writing such a inane column.

From the UK Telegraph
Defense experts are warning of a new danger of ballistic weapons proliferation after a Russian company started marketing a missile that can be launched from a shipping container.
It is feared that the covert Club-K missile attack system could prove "game-changing" in fighting wars with small countries, which would gain a remote capacity to mount multiple missiles on boats, trucks or railways.
Iran and Venezuela have already shown an interest in the Club-K Container Missile System which could allow them to carry out pre-emptive strikes from behind an enemy's missile defences.
Defence experts say the system is designed to be concealed as a standard 40ft shipping container that cannot be identified until it is activated.

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   12/13/11 09:27

Newt's awareness and concern with the EMP threat speaks well of his ability to get us through the threats of the early 21st century. An EMP attack would be the most effective and least expensive way for an enemy to bring us to our knees. Unless we prepare for it we will be done in by it.

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MattL
   12/13/11 10:14

Read a good book on an EMP attack scenerio on the US. Book was called "One Second After" by William R. Forstchen,

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JimRockford
   12/13/11 11:46

I read this book and it was horrifying. Anyone who reads it will support action defend against or survive an EMP attack.

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   12/13/11 12:59

Agreed--it is a must-read book--written very well, and seriously disturbing. (For a less disturbing Forstchen book, try The Lost Regiment series)

The only silver lining about this entire situation is the almost certain knowledge that the NYT-types would be among the first to suffer the terminal consequences of this type of attack and its aftermath. Unfortunately, there would also be many innocents who would bear the results of the NYT's stupidity.

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   12/13/11 10:39

I've been interested in EMP weapons since the 80's. We haven't in this time doesn anything to defend against it, while new toys have developed (short range pulse cannon are still being developed, but while they're on, they can damage computers. Imagine what would happen if one of these things was 'shot' at a hospital or an electronic storehouse?)

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   12/13/11 10:58

NYT writer doesn't know anything about big serious subject involving huge threat to US security, widely known and written about for something like 30 years, and given frequent coverage in the last 10.

Film at 11.

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George B TX
   12/13/11 11:38

I used to worry about nuclear EMP, but I now conclude that Iran would be stupid to use a nuclear weapon to generate EMP when they could have a much larger effect detonating the same bomb in Washington, DC. The only reason I can think of to launch an EMP attack is to hold the morally superior high ground of not directly killing people, making a nuclear counterstrike look like overkill.

The press conflates the separate parts of EMP into an almost supernatural phenomenon, but I believe that practical solutions are possible if you break the problem into pieces.

The fast E1 and E2 components that potentially damage electronic circuits are sort of like lightning. I'd approach the problem by making lightning protection act faster to also cover the fast E1 pulse. The magnitude of the E1 pulse is limited by the atmosphere, not the size of the bomb, so protecting critical electronics is manageable.

The slow E3 pulse that potentially damages the power grid looks like an extreme coronal mass ejection event from our sun. It's separate from the fast E1 and E2 pulses that potentially damage electronics. E3 affects system connected together with miles of wire. To a power transformer, the super slow E3 pulse looks like DC. Burn up enough power transformers and it could potentially take years to restore power. Build protection circuits into the grid to protect the transformers and power can be restored in days.

External Link 

External Link 

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Boris 69
   12/14/11 01:11

The Iranians would never nuke DC. That would be doing us a favor.

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OldSeabee
   12/13/11 14:46

About 30 years ago, a large solar flare disrupted the electric grid in the Northeastern United States. The NYT writer must have been asleep during that time. If a relatively small solar flare can cause that much havoc, what happens when the bigger flares erupt? Protection against EMP should be a high priority item for POTUS, unless he is a dolt or a poltroon.

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Jay Wye
   12/14/11 13:53

This assumes that POTUS actually wants the US to continue in it's present state. I don't believe Comrade Obama is for that. I believe Comrade Obama is out to intentionally weaken the US and diminish US power and influence,economically,politically,and militarily.He's succeeding,too.

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   12/13/11 15:49

Sadly, Dan Drezner over at Foreign Policy Magazine has piled on using the terminally flawed NTY article as his diving board.

Too bad Drezner didn't read this piece first.

Or... perhaps he did.

You know how the Left is - see no fact, hear no fact, speak no fact.

(*WINK*)

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physicsprof
   12/13/11 15:51

As an undergrad I helped build an EMP generator which we understood was to be used on a sub-contract from EG&G for the Air Force to test shielding (~1988). When it accidentally discharged from a partial load in our physics lab it seized up all the computers. Didn't fry them, but it was only a partial charge. It was easy enough to build that with some direction from a post-doc I mostly did it myself. We tested it with TDR and hall-probes in a dairy field a few miles down the road and handed it over to 'the man' and that was the last I heard of it.
My point is that it needn't be an atmospheric blast to be damaging. Our generator was portable and small enough to fit in the back of a pickup truck.

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The Raven
   12/13/11 16:48

Grat, another threat ... Do I now have to take my glasses off at the airport?

Seriously, our planners have known about the threat of an exoatmospheric nuclear detonation as the precursor to a larger attack, which is why key military systems are hardened, but they were planning against enemies interested in going beyond mere mischief, in which cases hardening the whole nation's infrastructure was a moot point.

Life would be uncomfortable for some time, but we would all slog through, probably at a comparable or lower cost than if we were to try to harden everything. Newt is right to point out he danger, but the vaccination would be more expensive than contacting the disease.

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Jay Wye
   12/14/11 14:07

"life would be uncomfortable" is a HUGE understatement,akin to blithely dismissing the real,serious problem of EMP attacks. An EMP attack on the US would put us back to 19th century conditions with a populace not able to survive in those conditions. Cities would become unlivable,no food,no clean water,no sewage disposal. Medicines would be unavailable,the factories that make them inoperative,and no refrigeration to keep medicines usable. No transportation would be working,because trains,planes,and trucks depend on computers and electricity.
You should read One Second After by William Forstchen and EDUCATE yourself instead of putting blind faith in disaster planners.

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   12/14/11 16:54

My Wye has the better part of this exchange. Seriously, when one counts the number of people who think food originates in supermarkets and water originates in the kitchen hydrant, have no clue how to do field hygiene or basic first aid, no idea what native vegetation is edible or poisonous, no idea how to get around in the dark, you come up with a staggering number of probable casualties.

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Mjolnir
   12/15/11 22:08
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