OK, I did not know of those tests but I was not wrong about EMP effects from nuclear blasts, either. There were none of any significance directly below a 1.4 megaton explosion only 250 miles up. Nor were there any significant EMP impacts from any nuclear detonation anywhere. Those tests when interpreted properly say that nuclear EMP effects are trivial and probably confined to mobile devices immediately beneath the blast as I said.
That does not mean that significant EMP effects cannot happen, only that they arise from a cloud of solar plasma shrouding the earth and making a mighty TWANG in the magnetic field of the planet. The CME event is something that we should plan for and harden the infrastructure against - but like the asteroid strike in Yucatan or the megavolcano under Yosemite or the "Big One" earthquake in California, it need not frighten us overmuch - it is a rare event, but if you wait long enough, almost certain to occur.







