Bombs from B-52 bomber fell over North Carolina in 1961
"The arming wires were yanked out, and the bomb responded as though it had been deliberately released by the crew above a target," Schlosser writes in Command and Control, an investigation of US nuclear mishaps. "The bomb hit the ground, and the piezoelectric crystals inside the nose crushed. They sent a firing signal." Of course, the bomb didn't ultimately explode. The Air Force said there was never a chance it would have, but that's not true, Schlosser says. Today, Schlosser tells Mother Jones in an interview, we've forgotten about the danger of these weapons: They "are machines, and I think they are the most dangerous machines ever invented," he says. "And like every machine, sometimes they go wrong." The book is out tomorrow, the Raw Story reports. (Click to read about a woman who's been protesting nukes across from the White House ... for 32 years.)
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