Russia could detonate nuclear weapons over Yellowstone supervolcano and San Andreas fault to completely annihilate America says retired Kremlin military analyst
- Konstantin Sivkov wrote that Russia needs a new ‘asymmetric’ weapon
- He says detonating nuclear weapons on seafloor would unleash tsunamis
- Seismic activity would trigger volcano, pour feet of ash over the US
- He says tsunamis could affect 240 million Americans and hit Europe too
- Analyst says new weapons could be ready within 10 years
- TV presenter previously said Russia could turn US to ‘radioactive dust’
Konstantin Sivkov, who writes a column for the Military-Industrial Courier, wrote earlier this month that Russia needed new ‘megaweapons’ to unleash chaos and guarantee destruction of its enemies.
In an article titled ‘Nuclear Special
Forces’ he said that Russia should develop nuclear weapons manned by a
small force that can cause tsunamis on the US coasts and force a volcano
in Yellowstone National Park to erupt.
Konstantin Sivkov, a Russian military analyst, has said that his country needs to develop a new nuclear deterrent against the US
Sivkov wrote a column in the Military-Industrial
Courier that Russian should develop a small force of megaweapons that
can cause tsunamis and seismic activity at Yellowstone National Park
(pictured)
He said that the main objective of the new
system would serve as an asymmetric threat against the US, which is
‘moving to the borders or Russia’
The Russian analyst reasoned that because
80 per cent US population lives near the coast, generating tsunamis on
the San Andreas fault and in the Atlantic would be an effective way of
causing massive damage to 240 million people.
He references Hurricane Katrina’s impact
on New Orleans and says that detonating nuclear bombs near the bottom of
the ocean would create waves almost a mile high that would sweep
inland.
The military man says that all the seismic activity could release another wave that would wipe out the US’s European allies.
Sivkov, the president of the Academy of
Geopolitical Problems, says that Russia’s large inland territory in
Siberia will protect it from receiving too much harm.
He raises the stakes for the apocalyptic
scenario even further by saying that the tsunami could trigger the
Yellowstone Caldera, a supervolcano that last exploded 640,000 years
ago.
Triggering the Yellowstone Caldera, which hasn’t
erupted in 640,000 years, would spread ash across the country. Above, a
map from the United States Geological Survey predicts the amount of ash
from the blast
Sivkov says that triggering the supervolcano at
Yellowstone would cover most of the US in ash and serve as an asymmetric
weapon. Above, Mammoth Hot Springs at the park
The explosion would then unleash feet of volcanic ash over all of the United States.
Sivkov said that the normal nuclear deterrent was not good enough and too expensive given Russia’s economic problems.
While he is convinced of his idea, it
remains to be seen if the tsunami and the litany of destruction that
followed would be even be possible if the world came to nuclear war.
The journal that the analyst writes for is
a niche publication with less than 2,000 fans on the Russian social
network VKontakte.
He may not have the ear of President
Vladimir Putin, but Sivkov has a history of making attention-grabbing
statements about Russian military affairs for state-backed media.
He has imagined potential war between the
US and Russia before, telling the pro-Kremlin Independent Newspaper that
military games in eastern Russian north of Japan were ‘intended to
simulate a response to a hypothetical attack by Japanese and US forces.’
His other articles in VPK repeatedly call
for bigger and more powerful weapons for the Russian military and he has
bemoaned Russia’s lack of military spending compared to the US,
according to the Moscow Times.
Sivkov said that detonating nuclear bombs on the
ocean floor could generate deadly tsunamis and cause massive damage to
the US population. Above, devastation after the 2011 tsunami that hit
Japan
Russians’ once positive views of America
have slid sharply since the beginning of rising tensions between Moscow
and Washington over Syria and Ukraine.
Imagining America turned to ashes is a
frightening thought, though Sivkov’s article was not the first time that
it had been floated recently in Russia.
During the beginning of the Ukrainian
crisis and Russia’s annexation of Crimea, state-run television presenter
Dmitry Kiselyov said that President Obama’s gray hair was because of
worries about Russian nuclear weapons.
He said that Russia was ‘the only country in the world capable of turning the USA into radioactive dust.’
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