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Page added on February 25, 2022

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The Risk of Nuclear Disaster in Ukraine

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Of all the obvious dangers that come with war, one of the most far-reaching in the current Russia-Ukraine conflict has been woefully underappreciated. Even if commanders took pains to avoid striking Ukraine’s 15 nuclear power reactors, that might not be enough to avoid a catastrophe.

LOS ANGELES – Russia’s large-scale military mobilization on Ukraine’s border has grim historic precedents. But should the Kremlin pull the trigger, it will encounter a hazard that no invading army has ever faced before: 15 nuclear power reactors, which generate roughly 50% of Ukraine’s energy needs at four sites.

The reactors present a daunting specter. If struck, the installations could effectively become radiological mines. And Russia itself would be a victim of the ensuing wind-borne radioactive debris. Given the vulnerability of Ukraine’s nuclear reactors and the human and environmental devastation that would follow if combat were to damage them, Russian President Vladimir Putin should think again about whether Ukraine is worth a war.

Power plants are common targets in modern conflict, because destroying them inhibits a country’s ability to carry on fighting. But nuclear reactors are not like other energy sources. They contain enormous amounts of radioactive material, which can be released in any number of ways. Aerial bombing or artillery fire, for example, could break a reactor’s containment building or sever vital coolant lines that keep its core stable. So, too, could a cyberattack that interrupts plant operations, as would a disruption of offsite power that nuclear plants rely on to keep functioning.

Were a reactor core to melt, explosive gases or belching radioactive debris would exit the containment structure. Once in the atmosphere, the effluents would settle over thousands of miles, dumping light to very toxic radioactive elements on urban and rural landscapes. And spent nuclear fuel could cause further devastation if storage pools were set afire. The health consequences of such fallout would depend on the population exposed and the toxicity of the radioactive elements. The UN Chernobyl Forum estimated that the 1986 Ukraine accident would inflict 5,000 excess cancer deaths over 50 years, though some environmental groups think that figure grossly understates the likely toll. Indeed, thousands of thyroid cancers emerged in the years immediately following the accident. In the midst of a pandemic that has killed millions, nuclear-reactor fatalities may seem trivial. But that would be an unconscionable misreading of the risk. To reduce the uptake of radiation that settled on the ground after Chernobyl, Soviet authorities had to relocate hundreds of thousands of people and remove large swaths of agricultural land and forests from production for decades. In and around the reactor, 600,000 “liquidators” were deployed to clean up the site. Engineers built a giant “sarcophagus” over the reactor building to contain further releases. Millions of people suffered psychological trauma, and some seven million received social compensation. Eventually, the economic losses mounted into the hundreds of billions of dollars. Japan is still counting the hundreds of billions that the 2011 Fukushima disaster will cost, and that incident released only one-tenth of the radiation that Chernobyl did, mostly into the ocean. A war would magnify these risks, because the reactor operators who might mitigate the fallout would be more prone to flee for fear of being shot or bombed. If a reactor is in the middle of a chaotic battlefield, there may not even be any first responders, and ill-informed populations hearing rumors would be on their own wandering – and panicking – in contaminated zones.

After the guns went silent, Ukraine would be saddled with the long-lingering effects that follow from any nuclear accident. And, as Chernobyl demonstrated, it would not be alone. Radiation releases do not observe national borders, and Russia’s proximity would make it a sink for radioactive aerosol deposits.

Given Chernobyl’s legacy, one might think that Russia would shun attacks on operating reactors. And avoidance is indeed the historic norm. True, Israel has attacked Syrian and Iraqi suspected nuclear-weapons plants, and Iraq bombarded two reactors in Bushehr, Iran, during the 1980s war. But in those cases, the plants were still under construction. There have also been instances when attacks on operating nuclear power plants were considered: Serbia weighed a strike against Slovenia’s Krško nuclear plant early in the Balkan War, and Azerbaijan contemplated attacking Armenia’s Metsamor plant in the 2020 war. But there are other cases when only dumb luck, rather than reason, prevailed. These include Iraq’s failed Scud attacks on Israel’s Dimona weapons reactor during the Gulf War and the US strike on a small research reactor at Iraq’s Tuwaitha Nuclear Research Center outside Baghdad during the same conflict. Ukrainian anxieties about its nuclear vulnerability bubbled up in 2014 when Russia invaded and annexed Crimea. Concerned that further conflict could result in a reactor attack, it appealed to the International Atomic Energy Agency and the Nuclear Security Summit to help boost its defenses. Unfortunately, there is no defense that can withstand a Russian bombardment. Is a reactor strike a bridge too far for Putin to cross? Russia’s combat behavior since the breakup of the Soviet Union gives cause for concern. In the Afghan, Chechen, and Syrian wars, Russian forces acted with scant regard for conventional boundaries. Then there are the vagaries of war generally. Bad stuff happens; combatants make mistakes; soldiers in the field ignore restraints.

A case in point was the March 26, 2017, bombing of the Islamic State-held Tabqa Dam in Syria. Standing 18 stories high and holding back a 25-mile-long reservoir on the Euphrates River, the dam’s destruction would have drowned tens of thousands of innocent people downstream. Yet, violating strict “no-strike” orders and bypassing safeguards, US airmen struck it anyway. Dumb luck saved the day again: the bunker-busting bomb failed to detonate. For the Kremlin, the lesson ought to be clear. Invading Ukraine poses the risk of a radiological disaster that will affect not only the host country but also Russia itself. No war of choice merits such a gamble.

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6 Comments on "The Risk of Nuclear Disaster in Ukraine"

  1. Biden’s hairplug on Sat, 26th Feb 2022 12:01 am 

    RussoMaidan instead of EuroMaidan:

    https://twitter.com/ASBMilitary/status/1497411319934468097

  2. Biden’s hairplug on Sat, 26th Feb 2022 12:21 am 

    It took America 2 weeks to capture Baghdad, give Putin a break, will ya?

    https://twitter.com/ramzpaul/status/1497403591275040772

    It took the Germans 6 weeks to over run half of France and 2 weeks to overrun half of Poland. Ukraine will take a few weeks too, and maybe Putin is only after the eastern half.

  3. Theedrich on Sat, 26th Feb 2022 12:24 am 

    The U.S. death star doesn’t care. It is God. Nuke! Our propaganda media and our puppet governments like Germany will prove how right we and our billionaire bribers are.  Anglo-Zionist strategists are confident that their version of “democracy” is worth the cost of destroying half the world.  Or even all of it.  The Bible says we should exterminate whatever our bribe-ocrats label as evil, all ye Yid-Cretins out there.

    Slowly, the vast, age-long corruption of the American snake pit is bearing fruit.  The millions it has murdered in the name of “eliminating racism,” or “saving civilization,” or “protecting the Chosen People,” or “advancing American interests” and the like are bringing the world to the brink of annihilation.  The threat of nuclear power plants being bombed and spreading their poisonous radiation worldwide is of no concern to self-praising Americans.

    And the regime’s tactic of “nuclear ambiguity” as a threat to opponents encourages nuclear non-ambiguity in those opponents.  But the despots who run the Washington regime ignore such fine points.  Their only concern is to destroy the White race.

    So the masses who elect them may soon find out that they have gotten what they wished for.

  4. Theedrich on Sat, 26th Feb 2022 12:26 am 

    The U.S. death star doesn’t care. It is God. Nuke! Our propaganda media and our puppet governments like Germany will prove how right we and our billionaire bribers are.  Our omniscient strategists are confident that their version of “democracy” is worth the cost of destroying half the world.  Or even all of it.  The Bible says we should exterminate whatever our bribe-ocrats label as evil, all ye Yid-Cretins out there.

    Slowly, the vast, age-long corruption of the American snake pit is bearing fruit.  The millions it has murdered in the name of “eliminating racism,” or “saving civilization,” or “protecting the Chosen People,” or “advancing American interests” and the like are bringing the world to the brink of annihilation.  The threat of nuclear power plants being bombed and spreading their poisonous radiation worldwide is of no concern to self-praising Americans.

    And the regime’s tactic of “nuclear ambiguity” as a threat to opponents encourages nuclear non-ambiguity in those opponents.  But the despots who run the Washington regime ignore such fine points.  Their only concern is to destroy the White race.

    So the masses who elect them may soon find out that they have gotten what they wished for.

  5. Biden's hairplug on Sat, 26th Feb 2022 3:55 am 

    Even I am surprised that India refuses to back the West and chimes in with China!

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10553505/Russia-vetoes-U-N-Security-action-Ukraine-China-abstains.html

    “China, UAE and India ABSTAIN from voting on United Nation’s Security Council resolution condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine”

    China and India, that’s almost half of the planet. And Trump and Tucker Carlson back Putin too, sort of.

    The West is going to be shredded to peaces, good riddance to that shithole.

    Interesting consideration, once Russia has the renegade province of Ukraine under control again, it won’t make a difference if oil and gas arrive in Europe via Nord Stream or the Brotherhood pipeline. Ukraine will no longer exist, probably split in two parts, east and west of Djnepr river.

    Next the “denazification” of Ukraine will begin, that is ethnic cleansing/killing of hardcore Ukrainian nationalists, certainly from the Eastern Ukraine, like the Right Sektor and Azov Command types, who are indeed VERY right-wing, real oldschool fascists (the Proud Boys pussies in the US can only dream of that):

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0kPBHOsw6xE

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H7LjCSzN9bQ

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hE6b4ao8gAQ

    It is cynical that jewish neocons like Victoria Nuland and Obama and Merkel, made use of people they normally hate, white fascists, for their anti-Russian purposes and help overthrow a pro-Russian regime. The goal justifies the means.

  6. Biden's hairplug on Sat, 26th Feb 2022 5:31 am 

    Throwing Russia out of SWIFT will hasten dedollarization:

    https://asiatimes.com/2022/02/chinas-swift-alternative-may-undercut-us-sanctions/

    “China’s SWIFT alternative may undercut US sanctions”

    Bring it on.

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