Surviving
EMP to depend on
preparation
'Many people may die for lack
of basic elements
necessary'
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=70472
Posted: July 26, 2008
12:00 am Eastern
A report from the federal Commission to
Assess the Threat to the United States from
Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) Attack has
painted a bleak picture for America under
such attack: Electricity grids down,
uncontrolled fires from exploding gas
transport systems, no communication to summon
firefighters and if they could come, no water
to battle fires. All in city after city after
city.
The 200-page report says Americans should
look to past incidents, then multiply those
impacts by the number of cities that could be
hit by such an attack. For example: San Diego
County Water Authority and San Diego County
Gas and Electric companies experienced severe
electromagnetic interference. Both
companies found themselves unable to actuate
critical valve openings and closings. This
inability necessitated sending technicians to
remote locations to manually open and close
water and gas valves, averting, in the words
of a subsequent letter of complaint by the
San Diego County Water Authority to the
Federal Communications Commission, a
potential 'catastrophic failure' of the
aqueduct system.
The report explained the potential impact
could have included an "aqueduct rupture"
with disruption of service, severe flooding
and related damage to private and public
property. The source of the 1999 problem?
Errant radar on a ship 25 miles off the coast
of San Diego, the report said.
The report, published on the commission
website, cited other scenarios that should be
expected to develop subsequent to an EMP
attack on the U. S. On Aug. 19, 2000, an
explosion occurred on one of three adjacent
large natural gas pipelines near Carlsbad, N.
M., Twelve people, including five children,
died. The explosion left an 86-foot-long
crater. The explosion happened because of
failures in maintenance and loss of
situational awareness, conditions that would
be replicated by data acquisition disruptions
caused by an EMP event.
The report also cited a 1994 refinery
disaster in the United Kingdom in which
lightning strikes resulted in a half-second
power loss.
"Consequently, numerous pumps and overhead
fin-fan coolers tripped repeatedly, resulting
in the main crude column pressure safety
valves lifting and major upsets in the
process units in other refinery units There
was an explosion in the FCC unit and a number
of isolated fires. As a result of this
incident, an estimated 10 percent of the
total refining capacity in the United Kingdom
was lost until this complex was returned to
service."
WND has reported several times on the threat
of EMP attacks, including just two weeks ago
when William R. Graham, chairman of the
commission, told the House Armed Services
Committee an EMP attack is "one of a small
number of threats that can hold our society
at risk of catastrophic consequences."
Not taking the steps necessary to reduce the
threat in the next three to five years "can
both invite and reward attack," Graham told
the committee.
The scariest and most threatening kind of EMP
attack is initiated by the detonation of a
nuclear weapon at high altitude in the range
of 25 to 250 miles above the Earth's surface.
The immediate effects of EMP are disruption
of, and damage to, electronic systems and
electrical infrastructure. Such a detonation
over the middle of the continental U. S. "has
the capability to produce significant damage
to critical infrastructures that support the
fabric of U. S. society and the ability of
the United States and Western nations to
project influence and military power," said
Graham.
"Several potential adversaries have the
capability to attack the United States with a
high-altitude nuclear weapon-generated
electromagnetic pulse, and others appear to
be pursuing efforts to obtain that
capability," said Graham. "A determined
adversary can achieve an EMP attack
capability without having a high level of
sophistication. For example, an adversary
would not have to have long-range ballistic
missiles to conduct an EMP attack against the
United States. Such an attack could be
launched from a freighter off the U. S. coast
using a short- or medium-range missile to
loft a nuclear warhead to high altitude.
Terrorists sponsored by a rogue state could
attempt to execute such an attack without
revealing the identity of the perpetrators.
Iran, the world's leading sponsor of
international terrorism, has practiced
launching a mobile ballistic missile from a
vessel in the Caspian Sea. Iran has also
tested high-altitude explosions of the
Shahab-III, a test mode consistent with EMP
attack, and described the tests as
successful. Iranian military writings
explicitly discuss a nuclear EMP attack that
would gravely harm the United States. While
the commission does not know the intention of
Iran in conducting these activities, we are
disturbed by the capability that emerges when
we connect the dots."
The committee's report analyzes the impact of
an attack on electrical supplies,
telecommunications, banking and finance,
petroleum and natural gas, transportation,
food, water, emergency services, space
systems and government.
The news was dire throughout. The electrical
grid, for example, is needed to distribute
water, food, fuel, communications, transport,
financial transactions, emergency services
and government services. "Should significant
parts of the electrical power infrastructure
be lost for any substantial period of time,
the commission believes that the consequences
are likely to be catastrophic, and many
people may ultimately die for lack of the
basic elements necessary to sustain life in
dense urban and suburban communities," the
report said.
"In fact, the commission is deeply concerned
that such impacts are likely in the event of
an EMP attack unless practical steps are
taken to provide protection for critical
elements of the electric system and for rapid
restoration of electric power, particular to
essential services," the report
said.
Current disaster preparedness and recovery
plans "may be of little or no value" under an
EMP attack because of the length of time it
would take to obtain and install replacement
parts or repair other damage. The cascade of
trouble would be significant. No electricity
would mean out-of-control water, natural gas
or fuel flows through distribution systems.
Some explosions likely would happen, fires
could ignite. But no emergency services could
be contacted for help, and if they already
were on scene, it's unlikely water would be
ready. Even worse, when such fires burn
themselves out, and repairs are begun,
supplies could neither be ordered nor
delivered because of communications and fuel
disruptions, and the critical workers needed
for repairs might not be able to get to the
location.
At some point, repair and recovery simply
become impossible, the report said.
"There is a point in time at which the
shortage or exhaustion of critical items like
emergency power supply, batteries, standby
fuel supplies, replacement parts, and
manpower resources which can be coordinated
and dispatched, together with the degradation
of all other infrastructures and their
systemic impact, all lead toward a collapse
of restoration capability.
"Society will transition into a situation
where restoration needs increase with time as
resources degrade and disappear," the report
warned. It is the first report from the
commission since 2004 and identifies
vulnerabilities in the nation's critical
infrastructures, "which are essential to both
our civilian and military capabilities."
Graham also had warned Congress such an
attack could come without the backing of an
international power, such as China or
Russia.
Theoretically, an EMP attack is devastating
because of the unprecedented cascading
failures of major infrastructures that could
result. Because of America's heavy reliance
on electricity and electronics, the impact
would be far worse than on a country less
advanced technologically Graham took the EMP
debate out of the realm of science fiction by
reminding the committee that as recently as
May 1999, during the NATO bombing of
Yugoslavia, Russian leaders threatened a U.
S. congressional delegation with the specter
of an attack that would paralyze the U.
S.
He also quoted James J. Shinn, assistant
secretary of defense for Asian and Pacific
Security, who several weeks ago told the same
House committee that China's arms buildup
includes exotic experiments with
electromagnetic weapons that can devastate
electronics with bursts of energy similar to
those produced by a nuclear blast.
"The consequence of EMP is that you destroy
the communications network," Shinn said. "And
we are, as you know, and as the Chinese know,
heavily dependent on sophisticated
communications, satellite communications, in
the conduct of our forces. And so, whether
it's from an EMP or it's some kind of a
coordinated [anti-satellite] effort, we could
be in a very bad place if the Chinese
enhanced their capability in this area."
Graham says terrorists who get their hands on
one or a few unsophisticated nuclear weapons
might well calculate they could get the most
bang for their buck from attempting an EMP
attack.
Ultimate recovery from an EMP attack could
end up taking years, during which time
America very well may have to exist without
many high-tech services, from cell phones
inoperable due to damaged towers unrepaired
because of parts shortages to a disruption in
the food supply path because of fuel
shortages.
"A serious national commitment to address the
threat of an EMP attack can lead to a
national posture that would significantly
reduce the payoff for such an attack and
allow the United States to recover from EMP,
and from other threats, man-made and natural,
to the critical infrastructures," Graham told
the committee.