Showing posts with label Cold War. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cold War. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 14, 2016

The Alternate History Map That Ended Up In A History Textbook

Did you know an alternate history map got published in a history textbook? Watch this video to learn more.
Check out Andri/Kuusinen's Deviant Art profile: http://kuusinen.deviantart.com/

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a blogger for Amazing Stories, a volunteer interviewer for SFFWorld and a Sidewise Awards for Alternate History judge. When not exploring alternate timelines he enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the day when travel between parallel universes becomes a reality. You can follow him on FacebookTwitterTumblr and YouTube. Learn how you can support his alternate history projects on Patreon.

Friday, May 13, 2016

Flag Friday: Communistic Norway by AHNorther71

Soviet style flags can be ugly sometimes, but they still have a lot of potential in the alternate history community. I see a lot of people making communist flags for historically capitalist nations, like Norway:
This is "Communistic Norway" by AHNorther71. There are actually two versions of this flag. The one you see above and one where the white and blue stripes are straight. Personally I liked the wavy lines, hence why I am featuring it today on Flag Friday. Anyway, here is the description of the flag of AHNorther71: "The anchor and the branches are bound together to represents the unification between labourers of the sea and land. The star represents unity and progression." I am assuming the blue represents the ocean and the white could be...mountains, snow, the purity of the proletariat...I don't know, you decide.

The question we need to answer now is why would Norway become a Communist state? Norway did have a socialist economy post WWII, but established closer ties with the United States and other western nations. Perhaps America sinks back into isolation following the end of the war and Norway has no choice but to court the Soviets and eventually reforms themselves in the process. Perhaps the German plan to use Norway as the last bastion of the Third Reich is carried out and the Soviets advanced further into Norway to finally defeat the Nazis. This could have left Norway a part of the Warsaw Pact in the alternate Cold War.

What do you think?

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a blogger for Amazing Stories, a volunteer interviewer for SFFWorld and a Sidewise Awards for Alternate History judge. When not exploring alternate timelines he enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the day when travel between parallel universes becomes a reality. You can follow him on FacebookTwitterTumblr and YouTube. Learn how you can support his alternate history projects on Patreon.

Friday, April 8, 2016

Flag Friday: Flags of the North Atlantic Pact Organisation by Marc Pasquin

For those who have watched some of the recent videos on my channel (The Alternate Historian) you may have noticed the art of a certain Marc Pasquin. He makes some great alternate history images and today's flags are no exception:
This is the "Flags of the North Atlantic Pact Organisation". Although there isn't much of a story with the flag chart, this is obviously a reverse Cold War timeline, especially with the reference Warsaw Treaty Alliance (although wouldn't the Eastern Europe Treaty Alliance be more appropriate?). I like to think the revolution began in the United States (i.e. Back in the USSA) and the other countries adopted communism after they were "liberated" from Nazi oppression. I especially like the flag of Canada. Its like what if Canada colonized the planet in Gears of War.

No honorable mentions this week, but seriously go check out Marc's work and consider hiring him if you need to commission some alternate history graphics.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a blogger for Amazing Stories, a volunteer interviewer for SFFWorld and a Sidewise Awards for Alternate History judge. When not exploring alternate timelines he enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the day when travel between parallel universes becomes a reality. You can follow him on FacebookTwitter and YouTube. Learn how you can support his alternate history projects on Patreon.

Thursday, March 24, 2016

Anime Review: The Place Promised in Our Early Days

Guest post by Sam McDonald.
Last year I served as the resident audio expert here on The Update. With some of the things I've got lined up for this year I'm probably going to wind up as the resident anime correspondent. Though I haven't completely abandoned audio works. Anyway, today we are going to take a look at an anime movie. We're reviewing The Place Promised in Our Early Days.

It's set in a world where the Soviet Union has occupied almost all of the island of Hokkaido since 1973. The Soviet began construction on a mysterious tower after they secured Hokkaido, while the rest of Japan is backed by the United States. The movie follows three characters named Hiroki, Takuya and Sayuri. The three initially meet as teenagers and make a promise that one day they will fly to the mysterious tower. The movie then skips ahead three years as tensions grow high between the United States and the Soviet Union.

Takuya is a physicist who is working with the United Nations on a project to contact other universes. Hiroki is a student in Tokyo and has been greatly effected by Sayuri's disappearance and is doing everything he can to find her. Meanwhile, Sayuri has slipped into a coma and is being monitored for possible psychic abilities. As the world draws closer to World War III could she be the key that ties everything together?

Now that sounds like a pretty good set up with lots of alternate history possibilities. Well, we'll talk about that in a minute. For now let's talk about the alternate history itself. Unless the Soviet Union was feeling suicidal, 1973 is way too late for them to nab Hokkaido. At best you might see them getting it in an alternate World War II outcome, but even that's kind of dicey given how small the Soviet Pacific fleet was. I suppose the film makers were trying to draw parallels to the partition of Korea. Also, the tower appears to stretch miles into the atmosphere and can be seen from Tokyo. The technology to build something like that didn't exist in the 1970s, or even in the present day for that matter.

The Soviet Union is shown to have survived to the present day though that was a bit more believable. Also, though it's never mentioned, I would assume that Korea is United under communist rule in this world.

Okay, now for the big one. You know all of that alternate history I just told you about within the setting? Well it's not really the main focus of the plot. Don't get me wrong, it does factor into the plot and is involved with moving the the story forward, but it isn't front and center like in something like Code Geass. Also, you only find our certain details of the setting if you read the back of the box the DVD comes in. The primary focus of the plot is on Hiroki and Sayuri's relationship. So how does it do in that regard?

I'd say, all things considered, reasonably well. Their relationship builds slowly and steadily. There's no grand deceleration of love or love at first sight. It all feels very genuine and sincere. They, as well as Takuya, are just average people trying to live their lives even as the world inches closer to conflict. I guess that's kind of how history works for the average person on the street. There are events going on around us that shape the world we live in, and will live in, but we all go on with out lives as best as we can.

I'd also like to take a minute to talk about the soundtrack. It's filled with lots of classical music and violin pieces. It is beautiful, elegant and adds a lot of emotional depth to the movie. The artwork, especially the scenery and flying scenes, is quite good as well. It's very reminiscent of the film's of Hayao Miyazaki and there are a few instances that feel like visual references to those films. The voice acting, and here I'm referring to the English dub, was also quite excellent.

All things considered, I quite enjoyed this movie and I think you will too. It's beautiful, elegant and heartfelt. However, if you're going into it primarily for the alternate history aspect you might be a bit disappointed, so just be aware of that.

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Sam McDonald is a college student from Shreveport, LA.  When not involved with his studies he can be found blogging on Amazing Stories, making and posting maps across the web and working on short stories that he hopes to have published in magazines such as Lightspeed, Strange Horizons, and the Escape Artists Podcasts.

Monday, February 22, 2016

Map Monday: The European Continent in 1960 AD by DPKdebator

I like how Map Monday can sometimes shine light on new or little known alternate cartographers. For example, lets look at DPKdebator's "The European Continent in 1960 AD":
The scenario is pretty straightforward: what if the Cold War was reversed? Thus you have Russia and Eastern Europe as capitalist democracies, while Western Europe and the United States (not seen here) are communist states. Its an Inkscape map and its very well-done, probably because DPKdebator used Rebecca "Upvoteanthology" Stirling's tutorial on Inkscape mapmaking.

It also reminds me of Back in the USSA by Eugene Byrne & Kim Newman, which followed a similar concept (although Britain was still capitalist in that universe). I also like how Ireland takes the place of Greece in our timeline, which was the only Balkan nation in our history that was on our side of the Iron Curtain. I think it was a missed opportunity, however, to not have Corsica as the last remnant of the French Republic instead of Algeria. It would have been an amusing parallel to the China/Taiwan situation. Even with that criticism, it is still a good looking map.

Honorable mention this week goes out to "The Sun Sets on the Eastern Front" by Zalezsky. You should also check out Atlas of Cursed Places: A Travel Guide to Dangerous and Frightful Destinations by Olivier Le Carrer, which is a book I was introduced to last week by Vintage News.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a blogger on Amazing Stories and a Sidewise Awards for Alternate History judgeWhen not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the day when travel between parallel universes becomes a reality. You can follow him on FacebookTwitter and YouTube. Learn how you can support his alternate history projects on Patreon.

Monday, November 30, 2015

Map Monday: Velvet What?! by Kryštof "Aven" Huk

Having an alternate timeline where there are more post-Cold War functioning communist states is nothing new, but I felt Map Monday newbie KryÅ¡tof "Aven" Huk managed to do something different with the old concept with his map "Velvet What?!":
In this world there was no Velvet Revolution and the communists in Czechoslovakia remained in power as the Iron Curtain collapsed. The Slovaks, however, have zero interest being Red anymore and declare independence. By the present day, the Czech Soviet Socialist Republic (CSSR) is a North Korean-esque state (and every timeline needs as many of those that we can fit in) allied with the last two remaining communist nations: Cuba and North Korea. Other changes from history include a European Union that hasn't managed to break into Eastern Europe, a peacefully divided Yugoslavia, an East Germany that is slowly unifying with West Germany and a Kaliningrad Oblast that was divided between Poland and Lithuania.

I enjoyed not only the recent divergence from history, but also the modern style of the map itself. The colors are soft and don't hurt the eye and since this map appears to be from the perspective of the alternate CSSR itself, I like the fact that they are centered in the map and the language of the map is in Czech. I have shared a lot of maps by Aven in the past on social media and I am glad he finally got enough eyeballs on his work to make it onto Map Monday.

Honorable mention this week goes out to "Mad Mac: Hand of Fire" by KapiTod.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update, a blogger on Amazing Stories and a Sidewise Awards for Alternate History judgeWhen not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the day when travel between parallel universes becomes a reality. You can follow him on FacebookTwitter and YouTube. Learn how you can support his alternate history projects on Patreon.

Monday, June 15, 2015

Weekly Update #195

Editor's Note

Hard to believe I am only 5 Weekly Updates away from #200. As I did for Weekly Update #100, I will record a special video message for all of our followers. Hopefully I will have some interesting news to share with you all.

In other news, I am going to retire the Videos for Alternate Historians segment. It has never been as successful as the other long running series of posts and I need to let it go. To be brutally honest, Videos for Alternate Historians has always been a cop out for when I didn't have the time or energy to write anything else. I am going to stop being lazy and really push myself to write more original content for the blog. I am still going to post YouTube videos I think you will enjoy on Facebook and Twitter and I may even share a "Video of the Week" here on Weekly Update, but I am no longer going to be dedicating a whole post to it.

And now the news...

Speeches that Never Were...
Did you guys read "5 Undelivered Speeches That Would Have Changed the Course of History" by Lucas Reilly on Mental Floss?

As the title states, the article lists five speeches that were never given due to historical events happening differently. Some of them are rather well known, such as Eisenhower's speech for a D-Day failure and Nixon's speech in the event of a Moon disaster, but there are few others on there that don't get a lot of attention, like Nixon's speech about not resigning and JFK's speech he would have given in Dallas if he was not assassinated.

What I like about this article is that it highlights how often politicians, general and other leaders have alternative speeches prepared so they can be ready for whatever happens next.

Do you know of any speeches that should have been added to the list?

The World That Wasn't Joins Facebook and Twitter
In case you missed it, the new alternate history podcast, The World That Wasn't is now on Facebook and Twitter. For those who don't know, TWTW is an alternate history talk show featuring our two hosts (Nicholas Davidge and Jamie Toal...got it right this time) and a guest historian. Their first episode focused on the Battle of Britain and you can read my review of it here.

Go check out my review and in the meantime, don't forget to follow TWTW on whatever social media platform you prefer. It is important to support all alternate historians out there. We are few in number, but we make up for it with our incredible passion for history and what ifs.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. Check out his short fiction. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Friday, June 12, 2015

Review: The Manhattan Projects Vol. 1: Science Bad by Jonathan Hickman and Nick Pitarra

So I finished volume 1 of The Manhattan Projects and...what the hell did I just read?

Let's cut straight to the recap: Turns out the historical Manhattan Project and the atom bomb was just a front for the real science happening at the Manhattan Projects (the plural is important). All of the various scientists, soldiers and politicians of the era make appearances, but not as history remembers them as. For example, Robert Oppenheimer, the civilian head of the agency, is actually being impersonated by his twin brother, Joseph Oppenheimer, who killed and ate him to get his intelligence and is increasingly being controlled by his ever expanding network of multiple personalities...don't ask. You also have Leslie Groves, who is a religious zealot, Albert Einstein, who is also being impersonated by his more violent (but less intelligent) doppelganger from another timeline, Wernher von Braun, who has a robot arm, and Enrico Fermi, who is an alien pretending to be human (which I have to admit is rather clever).

I would talk about the story, but...I am not sure if there is one. A lot of stuff just happens, including uploading FDR's brain into a computer so it can form a shadow government over the United States. If there is a story I don't see it yet and the book just follows the adventures of a group of mad scientists as they slowly take over the world. It is weird, surreal and has a dark sense of humor. I also liked how they used the colors red and blue to delineate good and evil when they used flashbacks. That all being said, I can see why this isn't for everyone. It relies a lot of conspiracy theories/secret histories despite many calling The Manhattan Projects an alternate history. There are a lot of shocking developments that also don't add much to the experience besides being shocking.

Did I think it was good? Well...I finished the first volume rather quickly and I am curious about the second one. I am not sure if The Manhattan Projects is good, but I think I can say with some certainty that it wasn't bad. It was an curious piece of weird fiction and I am happy I read it, but this is certainly going to go down as an acquired taste.

Additionally, it was fun to see depictions of these famous people again in an alternate history. Perhaps the last time I personally saw any of these characters in one story together was in Turtledove's Worldwar series. In fact Groves was an important POV character for that story, but Hickman and Pitarra's take was certainly memorable, if frightening

So if you looking for something that would make an alien space bat shake their head in disbelief, I would pick up a copy of The Manhattan Projects. If you are looking for something with a more coherent story, than I would look elsewhere.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. Check out his short fiction. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Thursday, April 30, 2015

Book Review: The Resurrections by Simon Louvish

Guest post by Robert Gill.
In light of the recent release of Turtledove's book, Joe Steele, about a would-be totalitarian dictator from OTL as a U.S. Citizen, changing the U.S. for the worse, here's something in a similar vein from 20+ years ago--Simon Louvish's The Resurrections (a.k.a. Resurrections from the Dustbin of History).

The divergence? The survival of German Marxist leaders, Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht, in post-Great War Germany (murdered by the Freikorps, in OTL), followed in 1923 by a successful putsch against the Weimar government, and the fledgling Nazi Party fleeing into U.S. exile as a result. (An apparent spillover effect of this is Trotsky killing Stalin, and coming to power, post-Lenin, remaining in power until he dies in '67.) The exiled Nazis are active in U.S. politics for decades, agitating against the USSR and Germany, and engaging in cloak-and-dagger plots to overthrow the German government (similar to OTL's Cuban exile activity against the Castros), even as Joseph Gable (Goebbels' Anglicized Ellis Island surname) grooms Hitler's U.S.-born sons for the White House (not unlike Joe Kennedy, Sr. and his boys). This is increasingly likely, as this U.S., unaware of the Nazi evil, is receptive to their xenophobia and nativism, when a surviving Empire of Japan (its expansion blocked by the U.S. in the Pacific War) turns nuke-capable, launching a nuclear Pearl Harbor--9/11-style attack on L.A in '52, allowing the rise of the Nazis as an independent party that challenges the survival of both the Democrats and the GOP.

The book also examines what a world sans World War II would look like, including Mussolini surviving into the '60s, his death bringing about an “Italian Spring,” and dramatically increasing the odds of a Communist revolution led by Che Guevara, operating out of Italian Ethiopia (absent a Second World War to erode their foundations, European empires are only now crumbling), China under Marshall Chu-Teh, not Mao (dead at Chiang Kai-Shek's hands, yet with Chiang's own death aborting a Taiwan-based Nationalist regime), and multiple POV chapters, with the world seen through the eyes of Che, Gable, an Italian Major in colonial Africa, plotting with Che, exiles from a Greek junta coming to power after the death of “the Antichrist Trotsky”, idealistic young Jews in a Zionist diaspora (sans Nazis to spur the creation of a Jewish state, Jews in Palestine fall prey to internecine conflict, delaying statehood for a generation), and news media coverage of various crises, to name a few. And minus the shot in the arm that exposure of the Holocaust provided to the Civil Rights movement in OTL, the volatile, racist political climate in the U.S. proves detrimental to it (and its icons) in this reality.

Plenty of stuff in this book that would be ripe for dramatic cinematic treatment, no shortage of tension, skullduggery and scheming, and the Nazi struggle for the White House is particularly harrowing, the latter effort shocking in a manner not unlike an unrelated moment near the end of Michael Chabon's The Yiddish Policemen's Union. More than a few historical figures make Easter Egg cameos, if you keep an eye out for for them, and a 1990 Epilogue, rather than wrapping things up in a neat, tidy package, describes a world continuing to rotate on its grim axis, new world crises replacing old ones, which I felt added a level of realism.

Also, for a book written in 1994, much in the book feels eerily prescient. A nail-biter of a close Presidential race, the final outcome of which is to be decided by Florida? Check. A 9/11-style suicide attack on U.S. soil, nationwide outrage followed by later-discredited GOP administrations (McCarthy-Nixon) dragging the U.S. into wasteful decade-and-a-half long wars (Japan and Cuba) that are blamed for reducing the U.S. to a “political, economic, and moral basket case"? Check. Right-wing conspiracy-mongers (U.S. Nazis) manufacturing bogus claims about U.S. Presidents (or Presidential aspirants) having crypto-Communist, non-Christian, non-U.S. origins and/or names? Again, check; while hardly a new development, casual racist references to Rosenfelt/Roosevelt, Stevenson/Stevenshein, Goldwasser/Goldwater, and Rothschild-feller/Rockefeller remind one uncomfortably of present-day Birthers targeting “Barry Sotero” (i.e., Barack Obama).

If I had any complaints about the book, it's that Simon Louvish, not a U.S. Author (the jacket cover describes him as a “Scots-born Israeli”) needed to do a bit more research about U.S. politics, getting U.S. Presidential election years wrong on a few occasions, (describing 1921, 1935, 1961, and future political dates 1973 and 1978), as Presidential campaign years, days leading up to Mussolini's death are out of order (ailing on July 19th--dead on the 13th?), and a George McGovern statehood gaffe that might surprise South Dakota voters! Despite this, I would definitely recommend it, if you can find it.

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When not contributing zines to the alternate history APA, Point of Divergence (as he has done for nearly 16 years), Robert Gill is employed at a book binding facility in Central Wisconsin, surrounded by many books (often of a historical nature), yet lacks leisure time to peruse said texts. Despite honing writing skills in a writer's workshop, he has no published works (or rejection slips) to call his own, and must, alas, submit his humble observations on AH titles, hoping others find them worthy or intellectually stimulating.

Monday, March 23, 2015

Alternate Nuclear Wars

Guest post by Mark Appleton.
The Cold War going hot is one of the classic alternate histories, behind only the Nazis winning World War II and the CSA winning the Civil War.  Piles and piles of books were written between 1945 and 1992, back when it was future history instead of alternate history, and the influx hasn't ended with the fall of the Soviet Union.  Most of these books follow a common formula, at least for the war itself: a thirty-minute mutual suicide.

Now, I'm not saying that that is an inaccurate depiction of a nuclear war (though most of these books get a lot of the details wrong, especially about how radiation works), but it's not necessarily accurate, either. If you dig through the old strategic literature of the Cold War, you can find a remarkable panorama of ideas about how to fight, survive, and even win a nuclear conflict.

I've compiled a list of some of the more interesting beliefs about what a nuclear war would look like.   These have all been seriously proposed at various times, by well-informed, intelligent people. That doesn't mean I personally believe they're plausible, but these concepts were put forth by strategists who devoted far more of their lives to thinking about this problem than either you or I have. They might be right and they're certainly interesting.

The Nuclear Blitz

This one is already fairly well-known within the alternate history community, although it's still obscure in the wider culture. This was the US Strategic Air Command's war plan through the 1950s: an overwhelming nuclear attack on all aspects of Soviet society, to both destroy both their economy and their ability to retaliate.

For most of the 1950s, the Soviets had very few aircraft able to carry atomic bombs across intercontinental distances. A US surprise attack would have a good chance of wiping out most or all of these aircraft. This is part of why Curtis LeMay and other American generals were so bellicose during the Cuban Missile Crisis – they believed a war with the Soviet Union was inevitable, and wanted to fight it while the US could still win it. A nuclear blitz, if it worked, would be a genuine victory for the United States. The US would likely not get off completely scot-free, especially later in the 1950s, but probably only a few cities and military bases would be lost – “only” a few million American citizens killed. It would be a genuine, if costly, American victory.

The world afterwards would resemble the world after World War II, only on a far greater, more terrible scale, and without the Soviet Union as a threat to unify the Western nations. It's difficult to imagine NATO occupying more than a token patch of the Soviet Union and China. At the same time, they could not allow any government to emerge there that might pose a future threat to the West, and with the nuclear taboo permanently broken, I expect that Strategic Air Command would be kept busy after the war “policing” the shattered remains of the Communist bloc. While the US would win the war, it's hard to see how they could win the peace.

Disarming First Strike

Over time, the nuclear blitz evolved into the disarming first strike. The idea is simple: the only rational goal in a nuclear war is to minimize the number of nuclear weapons that fall on your own people. Murdering your enemy's civilians does not benefit you in any way; but destroying his bomber bases, missile silos, and submarines keeps him from using them against your civilians.   In fact, surviving enemy civilians are an asset: you will probably not succeed in destroying all of your enemy's nuclear weapons, but you can hold his surviving people hostage to demand a surrender, promising to spare them if he refrains from firing his remaining weapons. Although the most notorious proponent of the concept was Herman Kahn, the disarming first strike is a concept found in the works of many nuclear strategists.

After the mid-1960s, the Soviet nuclear arsenal was big enough that an American disarming strike would be unlikely to succeed – but that's not quite the same thing as impossible. Supposedly, in the late 1970s the US discovered a critical vulnerability in the Soviet strategic communications network, which would allow the US to disable their communications long enough to execute a first strike. The possibility was studied in the 1980s by a small group under the Joint Chiefs of Staff, under the code name CANOPY WING. A copy of the study found its way to the Soviets via East Germany, and the flaw was fixed. I said this “supposedly” happened because our only source of information on CANOPY WING is documents from East German intelligence, leaked after the fall of the Berlin Wall via memoirs of East German intelligence officers trying to justify their careers, so it's possible the story is a hoax – but it does seem to be taken seriously by historians.

Skipping over the problems with any attempt to keep a nuclear war “limited”, let's assume that Russia or the US launches a successful disarming first strike against the other. What does the world look like afterwards? While fallout would kill many people – the usual estimates are in the millions – the number of dead would be comparable to World War II in the Soviet Union. After a few years the radiation would die down enough that the contaminated farmland could be used again. So the world would have gotten away with relatively little damage, compared to what could have happened.

Perhaps that would inspire a great revulsion against nuclear weapons and a determination to rid the world of the menace – but I doubt it. The losing side in the nuclear war would have suffered enormous casualties and lost tremendous power and prestige – but in a limited nuclear war, “surrender” would mean giving up on the issue at hand and making concessions. The loser would still have too many weapons left for the winner to demand unconditional capitulation. Instead they would have to be left alone to nurse their wounded pride, and dream of revenge. The Cold War would resume the day after World War III ended, and with it the arms race – but, this time, one party would no longer be content with detente or peaceful coexistence. A disarming first strike would most likely set up a World War IV a few decades down the road, just as World War I set up World War II.

Protracted Nuclear War

The protracted nuclear war is an extension of the logic of the disarming first strike. By the 1970s, both sides had arsenals big enough that, even after absorbing a first strike, the victim would still have enough weapons left to destroy the attacker. But, the logic continues: the victim gains nothing from retaliating against the attacker's civilians. Would it not be more rational for him to launch a disarming strike of his own?  This back-and-forth might continue for a long time – months, perhaps even years – as each side slowly used up its arsenal. Eventually, one party would run out of weapons, and concede. That's the idea, anyway. Protracted nuclear wars have actually been portrayed in fiction a few times – it's the premise of David Mace's Fire Lance, and is part of the background of John Varley's Gaea trilogy.

I have a hard time believing that any prohibition on hitting cities would last. Actually, I think it offers one of the few visions of Armageddon that is worse than a thirty-minute mutual suicide: a nuclear war that does not end. Nuclear strategy is premised on the rationality of the decision-makers, but after years of apocalypse, would the goal still be negotiating a favorable peace – or would it be to finally destroy whatever is left of the enemy? There might never be a formal end to the war, an official ceasefire – instead it would slowly stutter to a halt as the stockpiles are exhausted, the shattered survivors never knowing if that was really the last weapon or if tomorrow destruction will visit them once again.

Tit-for-Tat War

The tit-for-tat war is a different version of a lengthy nuclear war. In the protracted nuclear war, the goal is to destroy the enemy's weapons. In the tit-for-tat war, the goal is to destroy their resolve, by the careful, precise destruction of cities, one at a time.

Conceivably, the war might be relatively bloodless. There's no reason to not give fair warning before the strike, to give the enemy time to evacuate: killing people would only harden his determination.   So issue an ultimatum, allow a week to clear the city, then nuke it. Repeat until someone concedes.

It's hard to imagine anyone being happy with the conclusion of a tit-for-tat war. The losers would have lost both cities and the war. The winners might have won the war, but I doubt they would view Berlin, or whatever else was at stake, as worth the loss of New York, Los Angeles and Dallas – or Moscow, Leningrad and Minsk. Both governments would probably end up overthrown, either by the military or the populace.

Catalytic Nuclear War

As I've said before, the only rational goal in a nuclear war is to keep your enemy's nuclear warheads from landing on your soil. The best way to do that is to get your enemy to shoot them at someone else. A catalytic nuclear war is a war between two powers started by a nominally neutral third power, who has launched an attack on one or both of the belligerents designed to appear as if it came from the other. The first two powers then destroy each other, leaving the third power to inherit the Earth. The concept has been portrayed in a number of works of fiction, including Tom Clancy's Sum of All Fears and Peter George's Commander-1. Kenneth Sewell, in Red Star Rogue, claimed this actually almost happened with the Soviet submarine K-129, with rogue KGB operatives trying to trigger a US-China nuclear exchange, though that book could charitably be described as implausible.

This is trickier to pull off than novels sometimes make it seem. You can't just nuke Moscow and Washington and assume they'll launch on each other, but aside from that, a state that is both powerful enough and antagonistic enough to try to do something like this is probably going to be hit in the exchange as well and even if they aren't, congratulations: you get to rule over a bombed-out, glowing ruin of a world. Have fun with that.

Preemptive Surrender

You're in a nuclear war. As a good nuclear strategist, your goal is to minimize the number of nuclear strikes on your country. Whatever weapons your enemy has already launched cannot be recalled.   There's nothing that can be done about them now; your concern is how to keep his remaining weapons on the ground. The best way to do that is to surrender.

This is about the only way I can imagine something like the classic “USSR occupies the US” situation happening – an American president deciding to surrender rather than fight a nuclear war. Any such occupation would be little more than a token in practical terms, given the size of the US, and I doubt it would end any better for the occupier than it does in the many books on the subject.

Conclusion

I actually have quite a few more than this – Mutually Really Assured Destruction, Defensive Advantage, the Nuclear Coup – but I think this is long enough. The permutations of nuclear strategy are virtually endless, especially if you expand your vision to encompass conflicts between state and non-state actors, or between elements of a single state.

What I'm hoping you'll take away from this isn't that a tit-for-tat war or a preemptive surrender is likely. They aren't. In particular, most of these concepts rely heavily on the twin assumptions that political leaders will continue to be rational and able to effectively command their military forces even in the midst of a nuclear holocaust, which, bluntly, they probably wouldn't.

My point, rather, is that we don't know what would happen in a nuclear war. The fact that so many very intelligent people could propose such wildly different visions for how a nuclear war would unfold is evidence for that. I don't really know that presidents and premiers wouldn't think with ice-cold logic even as their people are cut down by the millions. No one in the history of the world has ever been in that position, so we can't truly know how they would respond.

Nevertheless, that is one of the least of the uncertainties. We don't know how reliable or accurate the missiles really are. We don't know how military officers controlling nuclear weapons would react if they were cut off from higher orders. We don't know how the civilian population would react. We don't know what the real targeting plans are. We don't know how bad nuclear winter would be. We don't know how bad the EMP effects would be. We don't know how bad the damage to the ozone layer would be. We don't know if there would be enough industrial base left to piece together a working economy afterwards.

There are so many things we don't know about this vitally important subject, so many things we can't know. All we can really say for sure is that a nuclear war would be the greatest disaster in the history of the human race, a step into an abyss whose true depth we cannot now fathom. Some would argue that it doesn't really matter as long as it doesn't happen, and, well, they have a point, but as long as these weapons continue to exist – and they show no signs of evaporating – there will remain a risk that they will be used. If we are to think rationally about nuclear weapons and nuclear war, we need to realize the gaps in our knowledge.

Also, on a lighter note, these ideas are interesting in and of themselves, and I hope they'll spark some entertaining thoughts among the readers. A tit-for-tat war or a preemptive surrender is possible even if it's unlikely, and they're fertile material for fiction.

Finally, if you want to see my personal hunch for what a nuclear war would look like, read "Protect & Survive". Not only is it magnificently well-written, but it is as realistic as any story of an event that never happened can be, which is all we can really ask for.

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Mark J. Appleton blogs on atompunk history at Atomic Skies.

Monday, March 16, 2015

Map Monday: The World of "The Grasshopper Lies Heavy" in 1962 by Bruce Munro

I am still excited about The Man in the High Castle getting a full season on Amazon Prime, but the next episode is still months away. So I have been craving content from that universe and when I saw Bruce Munro's map featuring the in-universe alternate history, The Grasshopper Lies Heavy, I had to feature it today on Map Monday:
In Dick's fake novel, the Axis Powers lose WWII just as they did in OTL, but the world becomes locked in a Cold War not between the USA and the Soviet Union, but instead the USA and the British Empire. In the 1960s, the British and Americans are more rivals then enemies (the ideological differences between the US and the UK just aren't extreme enough) and both are vying for the top spot. The British have swung to the far right in order to maintain their Empire, while America leads the nations of the Pacific Rim in their effort to oppose colonialism.

We see from Bruce's description that he has removed some of the sillier aspects from Dick's original work (British troops on the Eastern Front, etc.) and managers to reference many other works of pop culture like James Bond. The fun part about The Grasshopper Lies Heavy is that America will lose this alternate Cold War, and I really would like to see Bruce share his version of how that could happen. Graphically the map is very well done, with the usual detailed work found in a Munroist map.

Honorable mentions this week go out to Ephraim Ben Raphael's hand-drawn map of North America, featuring various myths from the Age of Exploration (which I almost gave the top spot to, if only it was easier to read), and Rvbomally's The Red and the White featuring a world where the Russian Empire fragmented after WWI. You should also check out Vox's map of where the world's migrants go when you get the chance. If you want to submit a map for the next Map Monday, email me at ahwupdate at gmail dot com with your map attached and a brief description in the body of the email.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. Check out his short fiction. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Monday, October 20, 2014

Map Monday: American Caesar by rvbomally/General_Finley

Although rvbomally made the map that I am featuring below, it was inspired by General Finley so they both get credit for this one:
In this universe, Douglas MacArthur established a military dictatorship after a civil war with a communist faction, turning the Cold War on its head. Rvbomally's map is set in the future of General Finely's scenario, but what I liked best of both is how it got the gears in my mind turning.

You see neither alternate cartographer went into much detail about why there was a "Second American Civil War" in the first place. Looking at the first map and second map together, you get the idea there was a lot of changes in the 1930s. An America without a New Deal, an Imperial Japan that avoided war in China and a Soviet Union that defeated Nazi Germany and "liberated" Europe on its own are just a few possibilities. I can't pin point an exact POD that would lead to MacArthur taking over America in 1940, but certainly there were a lot of changes that would make a great alternate history if anyone decided to flush out the timeline.

Honorable mentions this week go out to Bruce Munro's map (description here) on a more plausible Crystal Empire by L. Neil Smith. If you want to submit a map for the next Map Monday, email me at ahwupdate at gmail dot com with your map attached and a brief description in the body of the email.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. Check out his short fiction. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Friday, May 30, 2014

Book Review: A Kill in the Morning by Graeme Shimmin

Sometimes reading about how a book got published is just as interesting as reading the book itself. A Kill in the Morning by Graeme Shimmin, to be published in June, actually got its start on AlternateHistory.com when it was published as a alternate history James Bond fan fiction. Over time it was reworked into the novel it has become today. From my point of view, that is pretty cool. I have always held that much of the fiction I read on places like AlternateHistory.com is good enough to be published and now Transworld, which is part of Random House Penguin, agrees with me!

Enough about online alternate history, lets get to the meat of A Kill in the Morning. The story is set in an alternate 1950s where Churchill died in 1941. Britain made peace with Germany thus freeing the Nazis up to make war on the Soviets. The two sides fought themselves to a standstill, but after Stalin is overthrown in a coup, peace is made. Germany gains the western SSRs, but the core of the Soviet Union still exists. Now the powers are locked in a three-way Cold War for supremacy over the world. The United States and Imperial Japan still exist (Japan never attacked Pearl Harbor is this timeline), but neither is considered a great power due to lack of will or resources respectively.

Our hero is a nameless British agent working for "The Service", a combined British intelligence agency made up of MI6 and the SOE. He is an expert assassin who chases skirt, drives fast cars and lives the high life...but he is not James Bond (damn you copyright laws). Nevertheless, the nameless agent is actually a nice touch (they've given you a number and taken away your name) since this is a love letter to the Cold War spy fiction. We follow him play out those old tropes in this alternate timeline where the evil of Nazi Germany replaces the somewhat more mundane evil of Communist Russia.

Reinhard Heydrich is the main antagonist of the piece, making a decent Bond villain despite being a common actor in many WWII alternate histories. The death of the head of the Service, Stewart Menzies a.k.a. the Old Man, is blamed on Heydrich and motivates our hero to seek out vengeance with or without the help of the British Empire. His simple plan of vengeance goes awry as he uncovers a massive conspiracy that could result in another war between Britain and Germany.

I enjoyed reading A Kill in the Morning. Besides the occasional James Bond or Austin Powers film, my experience with Cold War spy thrillers has been minimal. Not knowing what to expect, I enjoyed the constant dangers the main characters were in and the secret war fought between the intelligence agencies of the rival blocs. Shimmin's timeline is unique that it has a victorious Nazi Germany without turning it into a wank and having the British Empire be the leader of the free world instead of the Americans was a good change of pace. I always liked the multi-polar Cold War after World War II, a scenario I would to love see more of, and Shimmin did a great jog giving detailed descriptions of the weapons and vehicles that came out of this alternate timeline.

The story was reminiscent of Moore's Bring the Jubilee which was one of the first classics of the genre that I read and I can see how it inspired A Kill in the Morning. I also enjoyed the supplements that came with the story including a glossary of terms from Shimmin's alternate timeline, a timeline and a list of all the historical persons who had cameos in the story. Many were obscure and I was surprised to discover that many characters who I assumed were fictional were actually real people.

The book is not without its faults. I read an uncorrected proof copy so I can't comment on how many typos will be in the final copy, but there were other issues I think need to be mentioned. The map of Europe at the front of the book could have been more detailed and I am not sure if I completely find the border of Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union to be plausible. There was also the question about who killed Menzies that was left unresolved. The protagonist is confident that it was Heydrich, but many other characters expressed doubt about that theory. Nevertheless, we never find out exactly who killed Menzies although this becomes less and less important as the real threat in the story unveils itself.

My biggest issue with A Kill in the Morning, however, is the use of the alien space bat plot device. I don't want to give too much of the plot away (so skip to the last paragraph if you are worried) but some of the exotic technology the Nazis use comes from an unknown alien race that intervened in human affairs eons ago. Now in general I don't have a problem with the ancient astronaut trope in fiction. I have seen it plenty of times, most recently in Age of Shiva by James Lovegrove. The problem is I am seeing it too often across the entire SF spectrum. It is starting to become overdone like time travel, parallel universes or steampunk. Not saying any of those categories or tropes are bad by themselves, but I am going to get burnt out soon and turn down the next book that involves little green men mucking around in the past.

Despite my tiny rant above, I can still recommend A Kill in the Morning by Graeme Shimmin. It was an engrossing tale of espionage against a truly evil enemy. It was a unique twist on the Nazis win World War II scenario and notwithstanding some quibbles I had with the plot, I still think you will find it an entertaining read written by a true fan of alternate history.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. Check out his short fiction. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

What If Wednesday: The Soviet Union Wins the Cold War

I was sitting in a meeting about hedge funds the other day at work and I started thinking: would this meeting be taking place in a world where the Soviet Union won the Cold War?

It is difficult to use words like "won" in alternate history, because not all historical events have a clearly defined winner and loser. Just because the Soviet Union doesn't exist anymore is not evidence that the United States won the Cold War, only that Russia got a new government (and is now trying to get their empire back). At least in this scenario I define "won" (or "wins) as a world that most resembles the present, except with the roles of the United States and the Soviet Union/Russia reversed.

I always liked the idea of using Operation Downfall to create such a world. Perhaps the Manhattan Project fails to produce a bomb in time or else Truman listens to some of his advisers who were critical of its effectiveness. Either way, the worst predictions for Japanese resistance proves correct and millions die. Meanwhile, the Soviets take advantage of the fighting to invade Japanese-occupied China (Mao conveniently dies and is replaced be someone more pro-Soviet, thus hopefully forestalling the Sino-Soviet split) and Korea (which is united under communist rule and thus the Korean War is avoided) and even launch an amphibious invasion on Hokkaido. The Japanese eventually surrender and the island is split between a Soviet-controlled north and an allied controlled south (much like this map).

The huge loss of life so soon after V-E Day takes a huge toll on America's willingness to involve themselves in any more foreign affairs. Non-interventionist Robert Taft wins the Republican nomination and eventually the White House. The New Deal is rolled back and proposals like the Marshall Plan and NATO are rejected. Turkey and Greece fall to communism, encouraging Western Europe to band together to defend themselves, but follow a policy the can be characterized as Finlandization so as not to anger their neighboring superpower. The Soviets, happy to use them as their bankers, agree to this relationship.

Things go well for the Soviets in the 50s and 60s. As decolonization takes place more nations adopt communism or socialism, giving the Soviets new trade partners, which helps the war-battered Soviet economy. De-Stalinization happens at a more rapid and expanded pace under General Secretary Lavrentiy Beria who even grants more autonomy to Soviet republics and international Communist organizations are reformed to allow non-Russians to ascend to positions of authority (I'm not sure if the Warsaw Pact would exist in this timeline without NATO, but something might arise in response to any European unification). Without the intense competition with the United States, the Soviets are able to spend more money on their infrastructure and consumer goods, thus the life of an average Soviet citizen is relatively better in this timeline.

Eventually something happens to get America outside of its isolation. Perhaps too many nations in the Americas adopt communism/socialism touching off a different Red Scare powered by the stark realization the world is going red. America overcompensates, intervening in Latin America using ridiculous amounts of force causing a lot of collateral damage. Meanwhile, a form of McCarthyism on steroids is adopted as domestic policy in effort to defend America from commie takeover. Civil liberties are rolled back and traditional American values are enshrined, thus social progress slows considerably. Peaceful civil right protests are met with force and more African-Americans turn to violent means for their freedom. Catholics, Mormons and Jews also find life in America to be difficult. Gender equality is postponed and the less said about how homosexuals are treated the better.

Now even with an increasingly fascist United States and a more moderate Soviet Union, there is still no guarantee the Soviets will come out on top in this universe. There are still economic weaknesses inherent in communism and their is always a chance there could be a nuclear war and that means no one wins. The further we get from the original point of divergence, the less plausible my speculation becomes. Still I promised a what if where the Soviets win and by God I will give you that.

Let's assume the Soviets continue to institute economic reforms while the Americans continue to isolate themselves through their actions at home and abroad. To maintain control of the White House, the dominate party makes a deal with big business to support them in exchange for little or no regulation of the economy. A new era of economic inequality grips the country, meaning the average American can enjoy low wages, few benefits and possibly early death after being drafted to prop up some dictator in Latin America or elsewhere. Minorities have it even worse off and are using terrorist methods to make their anger known, meaning sometimes federal troops are called to pacify parts of Americas (especially the Deep South).

Eventually there is a really bad recession around election time and a reform candidate actually gets elected with enough members of Congress on his side that he can actually get some of his policies implemented. The plutocrats flip out about this "New" New Deal and something like the alleged Business Plot is actually carried out by some willing generals who arrest the President, his Cabinet and members of Congress under some trump upped charge regarding voting irregularities or something.

This backfires as people take to the streets and some state governments threaten to secede. When soldiers refuse to fire on the protesters, the civil disturbances quickly turn into a revolution. The President is released, American troops are withdrawn from whatever countries they were occupying and a whole new era of leftist policies begins in America. Perhaps a few states might make good on their secession threats, but the United States lacks the ethnic/religious differences that the different Soviet Republics had with Russia. Although Hawaii, Utah and parts of Black Belt are possibilities.

As the United States struggles to reinvent itself, the Soviet Union declares "victory" by pointing out the success of the Communist system. In reality this Soviet Union is more like our timeline's China. It practices a version of "market socialism" with a healthy dose of technocracy. The average Soviet is better off than our timeline, they have jobs and a large welfare system, but it still isn't anywhere near this timeline's level. There is no Internet as we know it and Soviets don't try to hide the fact that they spy on their citizens (smile for the camera, comrade). Most nations practice some version of socialism, either on the Soviet model or one of their own making, with those few hard-lined communist states generally not being pleasant places to visit for anyone. There are still some capitalist states, mostly in Europe and North America, who are more to the left than some would be in our timeline. I am not sure what the Space Race would be like in this timeline and I am hesitant to just say "the Soviets landed on the moon, huzzah" without more research.

So what did I get right? What did I get wrong? What did I miss completely? Let me know in the comments and if you have a what if question you would like me to answer or one you would like to submit yourself email us at ahwupdate at gmail dot com for a chance to have your what if featured on What If Wednesday.

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Matt Mitrovich is the founder and editor of Alternate History Weekly Update and a blogger on Amazing Stories. Check out his short fiction. When not writing he works as an attorney, enjoys life with his beautiful wife Alana and prepares for the inevitable zombie apocalypse. You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter.

Thursday, January 30, 2014

Atomic Machines: An Atompunk Sampler

Guest post by Mark J. Appleton.

The dawn of the atomic age in 1945 inspired myriad proposals for ways to apply this terrifying new force.   Some of these – power plants, ships, and submarines – were actually built.   Many more were not.

As a connoisseur of atompunk – retrofuturism based on the 50s and 60s, standing to Robert Heinlein and rocketships as steampunk is to Jules Verne and zeppelins – I have collected some of the more entertaining possibilities thrown up in those heady early years.   I've decided to limit my selection to American proposals for the moment, but similar projects were launched in other countries as well.   These were not merely the musings of fanciful journalists, but serious proposals put forth by scientists and engineers that, with a change in circumstances, might perhaps have been built.

The Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion Program
What: ANP aimed to build a plane with jet engines powered by heat from a nuclear reactor instead of burning oil.   The massive radiation shielding needed meant the A-plane would be expensive, slow, and huge – more than twice the size of the B-52 – but it could potentially stay aloft for weeks.   A nuclear-powered airplane could orbit over the oceans continuously, beyond the reach of Soviet attacks, and then approach and strike its targets from any direction.

When: 1945 to 1961, with some research continuing into the early 70s.

How Far: Convair installed a low-power nuclear reactor in a B-36 and flew it 47 times – followed by a plane carrying paratroopers.   If the NB-36 crashed, their job was to jump down and secure the wreckage – the 2 MWth reactor was too small to contaminate a large area, but the intense radioactivity would make the crash site extremely dangerous for unprotected onlookers and would-be rescuers.
GE also built and static-tested three nuclear-powered turbojets in Idaho, known as the Heat Transfer Reactor Experiments.   HTRE-3 was essentially a prototype of a flyable atomic jet engine.
And Oak Ridge National Laboratory built and briefly operated a prototype molten-salt-fueled reactor for a more advanced indirect-cycle propulsion system, although it wasn't connected to a jet engine.

Why Not: The Air Force kept changing their mind through the 1950s about whether or not they actually wanted a nuclear airplane; the resulting oscillations in the budget seriously delayed development.   By the time Kennedy was elected the government had spent $2 billion on the project – more than $15 billion in modern money – and expected to spend a lot more before an A-plane could see combat.   Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara decided that the money could be better spent on intercontinental ballistic missiles.

How It Could Happen: The simplest point of divergence would be more consistent support from the Pentagon; with stable funding, a low-power prototype could fly before 1960, although it would not be suitable for combat.   It's harder to find a way to keep A-planes flying, given the obvious safety and environmental problems, but they could perhaps find roles as ballistic missile carriers and airborne command/communications posts.

Further Reading: Giving Wings to the Atom

Project PLUTO
What: A nuclear-powered cruise missile.   Actually, it was more like a nuclear-powered unmanned bomber – powered by a direct-cycle nuclear ramjet, and without the need for any wussy “radiation shielding”, the Supersonic Low-Altitude Missile (SLAM) could reach Mach 3.   Boosted to its operating speed by strap-on solid rockets, the SLAM would penetrate Soviet airspace at treetop height, carrying 12 hydrogen bombs and spraying radioactive fission products behind it.

When: 1957 through 1964.

How Far: Two nuclear ramjets, Tory-IIA and -IIC, were static-tested in Nevada.   Tory-IIC reached 513 MWth power for five minutes, cooled by pressurized air supplied by 25 miles of oil well casing.
Why Not: PLUTO, like ANP, found itself outclassed by cheaper, simpler ballistic missiles.   An extra problem was that no one could figure out a way to test such a machine without running the risk of the guidance computer going haywire and, say, taking it on a tour of downtown Los Angeles, spraying fallout behind it.   One engineer proposed flying it over Nevada tied to a gigantic tether.

How It Could Happen: Stall the development of ballistic missiles long enough and PLUTO might have a chance.   PLUTO was as fast as the planned B-70 Valkyrie, could remain on airborne alert for weeks, and could penetrate Soviet airspace via circuitous routes at low altitude.   Perhaps if the Nazis had put the money for the V-2 into more V-1's instead, leading to less post-war support for ballistic missiles, ballistic missiles could be delayed long enough for PLUTO to fly.

Further Reading: The Flying Crowbar

Project Orion
What: A spacecraft propelled by nuclear explosions.   The ship would be mounted on top of a giant “pusher plate”; small hydrogen bombs would be ejected out the back, and the ship would ride the shockwave.   An ideal spaceship drive has both a high thrust, so that it can push out of the Earth's gravity, and a high fuel efficiency, so that it does not need a massive fuel tank.   Existing spaceship drives can only achieve one or the other; Orion is one of the few proposals that could offer both.   Project engineers envisioned 10,000-ton spaceships making three-year cruises of the Saturn system or putting thousands of tons of payload into Earth orbit.
When: Although first proposed in 1946, real development work began in 1958 and continued until 1964.

How Far: Several small model-scale demonstrators using conventional explosives were flown; one reached a height of 56 meters.

Why Not: Orion always faced a number of challenges, but the proximate cause of the project's demise was the Partial Test Ban Treaty of 1963, which forbade nuclear explosions that were not contained deep underground.

How It Could Happen: It's not entirely clear even today if Orion would actually work – several serious technical problems remained, such as pusher plate ablation, misfire recovery, and coping with the EMP generated during launch.   Leaving those aside, the simplest way to get Orion flying is for the human race to need to launch a lot of payload into space as quickly as possible.   Say, if aliens showed up, or we discovered the Earth is going to explode.

Further Reading: Project Orion

The Pan-Atomic Canal
What: A new canal excavated through central America with hundreds of hydrogen bombs.   The new canal would be wider than the Panama Canal, allowing bigger ships to cross, and located at sea level, so it would not need the Panama Canal's complicated system of locks to carry ships over the mountains.
When: The late 50s through mid 60s.

How Far: Several nuclear cratering tests were conducted at the Nevada Test Site, most famously the 100-kiloton SEDAN test.
Why Not: Like Orion, the project was scuppered by the Partial Test Ban Treaty.   Work continued for some time after the PTBT was signed, since the Atomic Energy Commission hoped the Soviets might agree to a revision of the treaty for “peaceful nuclear explosions”, but this was not to be.   Besides this, it was rather questionable if the US could find a partner in Central America willing to host several hundred thermonuclear detonations.   Panama was certainly not interested – in addition to the obvious issues, a new sea-level canal would mean the thousands of Panamanians employed operating the existing canal lock system would be laid off.

How It Could Happen: Not only do you need a very different public attitude towards radiation, but also a reason for why the Panama canal could not be used.   That means somehow detaching Panama from the American orbit and attaching it to someone else's, presumably Russia.   A communist-aligned Panama under the Soviet nuclear umbrella, though implausible, would definitely lead to a new canal of some kind.

Project PACER
What: Electrical power generated from nuclear fusion has been a holy grail for physics since the mid-1950s, but so far we've only been able to produce fusion energy in bombs.   So a group of Los Alamos scientists proposed a simple solution to the problem: detonate hydrogen bombs in enormous underground chambers filled with steam, and use the heat produced to drive a turbine.   Two 50-kiloton blasts per day would power a 2 GWe generating station, enough to power 1.6 million American homes.

But electricity would really be a side-benefit; PACER's main product would be neutrons from the blast, which would transmute thorium into fissile uranium-233 to power conventional nuclear reactors.   The U-233 would produce ten times as much energy as the PACER machine itself.

When: The concept was proposed in 1957 and studied off-and-on by the Plowshare project.   PACER itself lasted from 1972 to 1974.

How Far: One nuclear test in 1961, GNOME, had power generation as a secondary purpose, but PACER itself was largely limited to computer modeling and nuclear charge design.

Why Not: PACER would only be cost-competitive if it could produce U-233 fuel more cheaply than conventional uranium fuel could be mined – and an outside review in 1975 concluded the price of uranium would have to rise by a factor of eight before that happened.

How It Could Happen: It probably couldn't happen historically – but it's imaginable it might come into use some time in the far future, if all other resources are depleted and no better alternative is found.

The Manhattan Shelter Study
What: A system of underground bomb shelters deep enough to survive (hopefully) a direct hit with a high-yield thermonuclear weapon and the ensuing radioactive fallout.   Although the study used Manhattan as a case study, the plan was to build them in every major urban area in the country, with space for 200 million people in total – the system would make Fallout's Vaults look like broom closets.   The Manhattan shelters would have enough supplies for two months of underground living, and be powered by four submarine reactors.

When: 1956 through 1958.

How Far: A preliminary study with some concept art.

Why Not: It would be insanely expensive – the study estimated their proposed national shelter system would cost $1.6 trillion in 2012 dollars, and I have it on expert authority that that is likely an underestimate by a factor of six.   Also, one in every ten people in the country would be recruited as quasi-military “civil defense cadres”, and the Eisenhower administration was unwilling to endorse such a permanent militarization of American society.

How It Could Happen: Given the titanic resources demanded for such a project, it will only happen if the US government and populace believe nuclear war is not just possible, but actually imminent.   My suggestion would be that continued US neutrality in World War II allows the Nazis to defeat Russia; by 1960 the US has woken up to the threat and is furiously building up for an anticipated nuclear war with a genocidal Third Reich led by an increasingly unstable Hitler.

Further Reading: Rock to Hide Me

The Subterrene
What: A tunneling machine that would drill through the Earth by melting the rock in front of it with heat from a nuclear reactor.
When: 1970 through 1976.

How Far: Small-scale versions using electrical heating elements instead of an atomic reactor were built and successfully tested.   Patents were filed on the nuclear version, but no serious development work was done.
Why Not: I haven't found any record for the specific reason, but the 1970s were not a good time to be proposing new and exciting uses for the atom.   The Atomic Energy Commission was transforming into the Department of Energy and nuclear energy wasn't sexy anymore; there was no appetite in Washington for the effort needed to turn this into a working technology.

How It Could Happen: There's likely no way to rescue the subterrene in the '70s.   But a world that saw significantly more use of nuclear energy in general, and a public more tolerant of radiation hazards, could perhaps see the machines be built.   And even if it was never used on Earth, there have been several proposals to use it in space, such as on a probe to melt through the Europan ice cap to the ocean underneath.

Further Reading: The Atomic Subterrene

Thermal Radiation Attenuating Clouds (TRAC)
What: Massive smoke generators would cover cities with dense banks of smog.   The smoke would absorb the pulse of heat from an atomic bomb detonation, attenuating it and reducing the damage.   A bomb would still damage a TRAC-protected city, but to a lesser degree.

When: 1951 through the late 60s.

How Far: Prototype smoke generators were built and tested in two nuclear tests in the 1950s.
Why Not: I have not found a specific reason for TRAC's cancellation, but I suspect it was cancelled because while it did work, it only reduced (not eliminated) the damage, and only one type of damage – TRAC did nothing to shield against blast or radiation.

How It Could Happen: Like the Manhattan Shelter Study, TRAC is only likely to happen if the United States believes that a nuclear war is imminent, and is desperately trying to do anything it can to minimize the damage.

Chrysler TV-8
What: It's a nuclear-powered tank.   Yes, really.

When: 1955.

How Far: They made a really cool-looking scale model.   The TV-8 was a speculative tank design proposed more as a thought experiment than anything else.   The nuclear engine was just one possibility listed among a number of other propulsion options, and most of the work was on the unusual (and bizarre) hull design intended to resist near-misses by tactical nuclear weapons.

Why Not: It was determined the TV-8's unusual design did not actually offer any advantages.

How It Could Happen: It probably couldn't.   Even if the TV-8 was somehow built, it wouldn't have a nuclear engine – I'm skeptical a reactor could even be made small enough to move such a vehicle using 1950s technology.   It certainly could not be done at a price even the Pentagon would be willing to pay.

Further Reading: The Chrysler TV-8 Concept Tank

Nuclear Gas and Oil Stimulation
What: Using deeply-buried hydrogen bombs to break up rock to release natural gas or oil – think of it as nuclear fracking.

When: The late 50s through early 70s.

How Far: Three natural gas stimulation shots were conducted (GASBUGGY, RULISON, and RIO BLANCO), as well as several tests at the Nevada Test Site to develop nuclear explosives that would produce less radioactive contamination in the gas.

Why Not: Three reasons: because of worry about nuclear proliferation, because the biggest experimental test failed to actually produce much gas due to mistakes in site selection, and because by the early 70s people no longer thought that a little radiation in the morning put hair on your chest.

How It Could Happen: The Russians actually did it, setting off 25 oil and gas stimulation shots, so it apparently can be cost-effective (English-language reports disagree about whether the gas produced was radioactive).   However, widespread use of nuclear stimulation goes against the strong anti-proliferation inclinations of the US government since the 60s, and as long as simpler, less nukey options are available it's very unlikely the technology would be deployed even if radiation was not a concern.   Perhaps if the US became extremely desperate for oil it might be deployed.

Check out Part 2!

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Mark J. Appleton blogs on atompunk history at Atomic Skies.