Armageddon, a fact-based historical novel, is the third book of The First Strike Trilogy: A high-stakes race against time and politics unfolds in this gripping historical account of SIOP-62, revisit the tension of a pending nuclear attack, at a time when the safety of the entire world is in peril.
"As the Cold War tensions escalated and President Kennedy grappled with the Berlin crisis, Dr. Young became entangled in the web of political intrigue, deception, and nuclear brinksmanship. Yeggy's narrative explores the complexities of international relations, military strategy, and the personal sacrifices made by individuals who seek to prevent a global catastrophe."
~K.C. Finn (Readers favorite)
JCS-NSC Joint Meeting, Situation Room, October 16,
Caleb continues his criticism of SIOP-62
"On March 1, 1954, off Namu Island in Bikini Atoll, we conducted a thermonuclear test called Castle Bravo," Caleb began. "We exploded a 15-megaton surface burst bomb called the Shrimp. The resulting fireball was approximately 4.5 miles in diameter. It created a crater more than 6,500 feet in diameter and 250 feet deep. The mushroom cloud reached 47,000 feet with a diameter of 7 miles all in one minute. Nine minutes later, the cloud was 130,000 feet and 62 miles in diameter. It expanded at more than 100 meters per second. The blast-just a single nuclear weapon, mind you contaminated more than 7,000 square miles of the surrounding Pacific Ocean. Measurable fallout was detected in such faraway places as the Southwestern United States and Australia. Crew members on the Daigo Fukuryu Maru, a fishing vessel sailing approximately 200 miles east of the explosion, experienced severe radiation sickness. Some died. Look at what a 15-kiloton bomb did to Hiroshima, killing over 60 percent of its 250,000 residents. Yet SIOP-62 proposes 240 kilotons for all Soviet cities of a similar size and a total of more than 7,000 megatons for all targets. This is massive overkill and will destroy the entire Earth's atmosphere."
Book III will take you to a post-nuclear war world where life is solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and mercifully short.
"As the Cold War tensions escalated and President Kennedy grappled with the Berlin crisis, Dr. Young became entangled in the web of political intrigue, deception, and nuclear brinksmanship. Yeggy's narrative explores the complexities of international relations, military strategy, and the personal sacrifices made by individuals who seek to prevent a global catastrophe."
~K.C. Finn (Readers favorite)
JCS-NSC Joint Meeting, Situation Room, October 16,
Caleb continues his criticism of SIOP-62
"On March 1, 1954, off Namu Island in Bikini Atoll, we conducted a thermonuclear test called Castle Bravo," Caleb began. "We exploded a 15-megaton surface burst bomb called the Shrimp. The resulting fireball was approximately 4.5 miles in diameter. It created a crater more than 6,500 feet in diameter and 250 feet deep. The mushroom cloud reached 47,000 feet with a diameter of 7 miles all in one minute. Nine minutes later, the cloud was 130,000 feet and 62 miles in diameter. It expanded at more than 100 meters per second. The blast-just a single nuclear weapon, mind you contaminated more than 7,000 square miles of the surrounding Pacific Ocean. Measurable fallout was detected in such faraway places as the Southwestern United States and Australia. Crew members on the Daigo Fukuryu Maru, a fishing vessel sailing approximately 200 miles east of the explosion, experienced severe radiation sickness. Some died. Look at what a 15-kiloton bomb did to Hiroshima, killing over 60 percent of its 250,000 residents. Yet SIOP-62 proposes 240 kilotons for all Soviet cities of a similar size and a total of more than 7,000 megatons for all targets. This is massive overkill and will destroy the entire Earth's atmosphere."
Book III will take you to a post-nuclear war world where life is solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and mercifully short.
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