Kind: captions Language: en ever since the invention of nuclear weapons Humanity has almost accidentally destroyed itself many times over this is a video about just some of those times it's about nuclear bombs and missiles accidentally detonated it's about hydrogen bombs being lost and it's about false alarms that could have led to the end of the world on the 17th of January 1966 a B-52 bomber was flying over the coast of Spain it was carrying four hydrogen bombs each one 75 times more powerful than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima this sounds crazy but in the mid-1960s during the height of the Cold War this was routine this was part of a military operation known as chromedome where bombers flew around the United States and skirted the borders of the Soviet Union with hydrogen bombs on board the thinking was that if the USSR initiated a first strike the U.S could rapidly retaliate by having bombers already up in the air and closer to their targets the flight took off from North Carolina and crossed the Atlantic Ocean with the plan to fly by the border of the Soviet Union and return home the plane would be in the air for more than 24 hours the flight was so long it required two mid-air refuelings but long flights and mid-air refuelings were commonplace flights like this happened every day the first refueling went smoothly after flying by the Soviet Union and turning around the plane needed to be refueled again so at 10 30 a.m over the coast of Spain above the small fishing Village of palomares the refueling tanker pulled up in front of the B-52 Larry Messinger the pilot of the bomber recalled we came up behind the tiger and we were going a little bit too fast there's a procedure they have or the room operator if you get a dangerous position it calls Breakaway Breakaway Breakaway and you immediately cut the throttles and drop down below well there was no such skull we were dropping down below the tanker and all of a sudden something happened there was an explosion of some kind two planes collided the boom arm which held the refueling nozzle hit the B-52 breaking off its left wing the resulting explosion was big enough that it was witnessed by another B-52 which was flying a kilometer and a half away all four men on the refueling tanker and three of the seven on the B-52 were killed in the accident the four bombs fell to Earth each one of them had a yield of 1.1 megatons of TNT about 75 times more powerful than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima a hydrogen bomb gets most of its power from the fusion of tritium and deuterium which are isotopes of hydrogen with extra neutrons when these Isotopes fuse into helium a little bit of mass is lost which is released as energy but it takes a tremendous amount of energy to get that reaction started which is why a hydrogen bomb is actually three bombs in one a conventional bomb which when detonated triggers the plutonium fission bomb which then creates high enough temperatures and pressures and releases enough energetic x-rays to trigger the fusion reaction the conventional explosives in two of the four bombs detonated on impact fortunately to trigger the fission reaction the explosion needs to be symmetrical but since the conventional explosives detonated on impact with the ground the shock wave wasn't symmetrical and so the fission and fusion bombs weren't set off unfortunately the conventional explosive blew up the plutonium core contaminating A 2.6 square kilometer area of the Spanish Coastline with radioactive material the area is still contaminated with radioactive atoms to this day [Music] but after the crash the villagers were told to eat no locally produced food and there was an embargo on it in nearby markets the third bomb was found intact in a nearby riverbed but the fourth bomb was missing Somewhere Out There off the sunny coast of southern Spain and h-bomb is missing it's been missing now for over three weeks Mr Ambassador how was your swim this morning did you by any chance stab your toe on the bomb while you're out there today wish you had 29 U.S army ships were involved in the search and it still took 81 days for the bomb to finally be located and recovered I want to say this again there was a hydrogen bomb that was 75 times more powerful than the one dropped on Hiroshima and it was missing for nearly three months this is not an isolated incident it's common enough that the US military has a term for accidents involving nuclear weapons the D-Day clock thus begun ticking with a potential Broken Arrow message from Nellis Air Force Base they call them broken arrows the Pentagon officially lists 32 such accidents between 1950 and 1980 five of them occurred during Operation Chrome Dome cases when a B-52 carrying hydrogen bombs crashed in 1961 the first year of Operation Chrome Dome a B-52 had a fuel leak and it crashed over North Carolina three members of the crew died in the accident it was carrying two four Megaton bombs both bombs fell to Earth one had its parachute deploy and it landed on the ground mostly intact the other slammed into a field and broke into pieces the good news is that the conventional explosives did not explode so radioactive plutonium was not strewn all over North Carolina the bad news is that the conventional explosives didn't explode and so there was a chance that the hydrogen bombs could be armed and ready to detonate with full force recalling the incident 52 years later Lieutenant Jack Revell who was responsible for the safe disposal of the bombs said and as we started digging down trying to find the second bomb one of my sergeants says hey lieutenant I found the arm safe switch and I said great he says Nah not great it's on arm at the time a spokesman for the Department of Defense said the bombs were unarmed and could not have accidentally exploded but in a report Declassified in 2013 it was stated that the bomb was armed a single switch could have triggered the detonation by the way the bomb is still there lodged about 50 meters under the field after the bomb fell on the field there was a flash flood which meant that it couldn't be recovered so to make sure that no one could dig up the bomb the U.S military placed a 120 meter diameter slab of concrete over the whole area according to the Pentagon report there is no detectable radiation and no hazard in the area but a portion of one weapon containing uranium is missing there are dozens more events like this like the plane crash over Greenland in 1968 the four hydrogen bombs it was carrying burned up in the fire the decontamination of the surrounding area took four months that same year the Soviet k-129 submarine sank in the Pacific Ocean killing all 98 of its crew it was also carrying three nuclear warheads part of the submarine was covertly recovered by the CIA another standout incident occurred in 1965 about a hundred kilometers off the coast of Japan A Douglas A4 jet carrying at least one hydrogen bomb fell off the aircraft carrier during a training exercise the plane the bomb and the pilot were never recovered so for more than half a century there has been a one Megaton hydrogen bomb lying on the sea floor four kilometers below the surface of the ocean it is one of at least six U.S nuclear weapons that have been lost and never recovered in 1998 Alexander lebed Russia's former Chief of National Security asserted that there are more than 100 one kiloton nuclear bombs that are unaccounted for the most well-known Broken Arrow event happened in September 1980. inside a silo in rural Arkansas a team was conducting routine checks on the Titan II intercontinental ballistic missile the missile was fueled ready to launch at a moment's notice in its nose cone sat a 9 Megaton hydrogen bomb as one of the repairmen was walking around The Silo the socket from his ratchet wrench fell off it fell 24 meters hitting the fuel tank of the missile and puncturing a hole the highly flammable Rocket Fuel began to leak Into The Silo the missile complex and surrounding area were evacuated but a number of military personnel remained on site to try to Defuse The Situation the maintenance team had an indication of an engine fire and a rise in in Vapor concentration inside the The Silo at 3 A.M about eight and a half hours after the puncture of the fuel tank the leaking fuel Vapors ignited resulting in an explosion this explosion led to one death and 21 injuries the 740 ton door keeping the silo sealed flew more than 60 meters into the air it was recovered 200 meters away the Warhead containing the hydrogen bomb was also blown out of The Silo Landing some 30 meters away luckily it did not detonate and these are just the near misses that we know about of the 32 Broken Arrow events listed by the Pentagon one which occurred in the spring of 1968 remains classified there are likely many dozens more nuclear mistakes and near misses the public knows nothing about from every nation that has a nuclear Arsenal the worry of a nuclear mishap is not just the immediate Damage Done by a hydrogen bomb explosion it's also the misunderstanding and retaliatory strikes that could arise imagine that in 1966 instead of hydrogen bombs falling off the coast of Spain the plane crash occurred closer to the border with the Soviet Union Humanity has been on the brink of nuclear war many times and so far we've been lucky the closest we've likely ever come was in October 1962 during the Cuban Missile Crisis the U.S Navy began dropping signaling charges into the water to bring a Soviet submarine to the surface the tensions were high and the submarine had not been in radio contact with Moscow for days the captain of the submarine decided that war had broken out and he was about to launch a nuclear torpedo but the launch required the authorization of three men two out of the three authorized the launch but vasili arkapov did not a full-blown nuclear exchange between the United States and the Soviet Union was avoided by the rational decision of one person the historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr later noted that this was not only the most dangerous moment of the Cold War it was the most dangerous moment in human history and during the Cuban Missile Crisis with the tensions between the U.S and USSR at an all-time high both countries still conducted high altitude nuclear tests the U.S set off a 410 kiloton bomb 50 kilometers above the Pacific Ocean and a smaller seven kiloton bomb at an altitude of 147 kilometers two of the 300 kiloton tests conducted by the Soviets occurred in space it's pretty hard to justify these actions but if one of these tests was thought to be a nuclear First Strike leading to all-out war because false alarms happen for something a lot more innocuous than nuclear tests in space on the 26th of September 1983 the Soviet satellite-based early warning system detected the launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile and their policy dictated that if any inbound missiles were detected there was to be an immediate counter-attack against the United States this would have likely led to all-out war but the Soviet officer on duty at the time of the detection stanislav Petrov was skeptical of the reading he reasoned that if there was a genuine first strike the US would launch hundreds of icbms simultaneously not just one the detection system then warned Petrov of another four missiles headed towards the USSR but these two he dismissed as a glitch Petrov was right he made the right decision and his clear thinking likely saved millions of lives the warning system malfunctioned it confused sunlight reflecting off high altitude clouds for ballistic missiles after this incident Petrov took an early retirement and later suffered a nervous breakdown another close call happened on January 25th 1995 when scientists launched a rocket off the coast of Norway their rocket was there to study the northern lights but Russian radar picked up this launch as it had a similar flight pattern and speed as the submarine launched Trident ICBM the incident was serious enough that a briefcase containing the nuclear launch codes was taken to the Russian president Boris Yeltsin I think most people believe the biggest threat posed by nuclear weapons is their deliberate use there is this idea that as long as Nations only have them and don't use them they could act as a deterrent keeping us safer but all of these incidents demonstrate the real risk of nuclear weapons is some freak accident so far Humanity has been lucky but how long until our luck Runs Out but there is hope in 1986 there were more than 70 000 nuclear weapons in 2022 that number had dropped to twelve thousand seven hundred and five and more are being dismantled but as long as there are any nuclear weapons remaining the future of humanity is not safe hey this part of the video is brought to you by Henson shaving close shaves are bad when it comes to nuclear weapons but they're great when it comes to shaving Henson is a 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