Attempted
Military Coup in Turkey Puts American Nukes at Risk
18
July, 2016
The attempted coup in Turkey this past Friday resulted in unexpected national security concerns for the United States. The purportedly spontaneous uprising called into question the security of American hydrogen bombs currently stored in a Turkish airbase.
Located
in southeast Turkey, the Incirlik Airbase includes NATO’s
largest nuclear weapons storage facility. The American embassy
in Ankara issued an "Emergency Message for US
Citizens,"on Saturday morning, cautioning that “local
authorities are denying movements on and off of” Incirlik
and that power had been cut. US Air Force planes stationed at the
base were prohibited from taking off, and the airbase had
to rely on backup generators for power. The threat
level reached FPCON Delta, the highest alert, usually declared
after a terrorist attack or if an attack is deemed imminent.
The
base commander, General Bekir Ercan Van, along with nine other
Turkish officers, was detained at Incirlik on Sunday
for allegedly supporting the coup. American airbase flights have
resumed, but power has not been restored.
Hans
M. Kristensen, director of the Nuclear Information Project
at the Federation of American Scientists, claims that the
Turkish airbase contains about fifty B-61 hydrogen bombs, more
than a quarter of all the nuclear weapons in the NATO
stockpile. What separates the B-61 from other weapons is its
ability to adjust nuclear yield. The bomb dropped on Hiroshima,
for example, had the impact of roughly fifteen kilotons
of TNT. The adjustable yield of the bombs held at Incirlik
can range 0.3 to 170 kilotons, making for a more versatile
weapon.
Built
by the US Army Corps of Engineers following World War
II, Incirlik became a critical American base in the Cold War
era, particularly after Turkey joined NATO in 1952.
Its
chief attribute was logistical, being a one hour flight from the
borders of the former Soviet Union. Incirlik housed bombers, U-2
spy planes, tankers, fighters and nuclear weapons. Nuclear firepower
was central to NATO’s strategy, to counter the threat
of similar Soviet weapons. The source of the policy
of nuclear deterrence in modern times, it was thought that
the threat of nuclear retaliation would keep the Soviets
from entering NATO territory.
Because
of stockpile reductions under the administrations of George
H.W. Bush and George W. Bush, the US now has about 180 nuclear
weapons deployed with NATO, all of them B-61s. Along
with the Turkish base at Incirlik, US weapons are also
stored at bases in the Netherlands, Belgium, Italy
and Germany. The value of these bombs today is considered more
symbolic than actual. Missiles that carry nuclear warheads
travel more reliably, more accurately, and much faster than other
weapons.
An
ever-increasing contingent of the world’s population, both
official and civilian, including German foreign minister Frank-Walter
Steinmeier, who strongly opposes nuclear weapons such as the
B-61, consider the bombs to be "absolutely senseless,"
serving only to invite attention from terrorists
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