© imaginima/Getty ImagesBombs away! No holds barred!
The program will model a scenario in which the region faces an atomic disaster, documents show.
The US Defense Department has ordered a study to simulate the impact of a nuclear conflict on global agriculture. According to a solicitation
notice posted on a government procurement platform, the study will focus on regions "beyond Eastern Europe and Western Russia," which in the simulation is the
epicenter of the hypothetical nuclear weapons deployment.
The project will be spearheaded by the
US Army Corps of Engineers, Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC).According to the notice posted earlier this week, the ERDC has already chosen
Terra Analytics, a Colorado-based company that specializes in advanced data visualization and analyses, as the contractor. However, it states that other potential contractors are invited to share their proposals if they are able to provide similar services.
The notice lists requirements for contractors to fulfill, such as providing personnel, equipment, facilities, supervision, and other items necessary to conduct the study. The contractor would, among other things, need to incorporate aerial mapping in the
simulation and model a scenario in which a "non-destructive nuclear event" takes place. The cost of the contract has been set at $34 million.
It is unclear from the notice how the Pentagon intends to use the study. However, the order comes at a time when talk of a potential nuclear war has intensified in light of the Ukraine conflict and the growing discord between the NATO and Russia. Many experts have warned that a direct confrontation between Russia and the US-led bloc could result in a nuclear disaster. According to the
Federation of American Scientists, Washington and Moscow control the largest atomic arsenals in the world, with around 5,000 and 5,500 warheads, respectively.The New York Times reported last month that the US administration had approved a new version of its nuclear strategy. According to the newspaper, the document ordered
US forces to prepare for possible coordinated nuclear confrontations with Russia, China, and North Korea.Russia has often warned that the West's military support of the Ukrainian government could exacerbate the current conflict, turning it into a world war. Russian policymakers have recently been
considering making adjustments to the country's own atomic doctrine to provide for pre-emptive nuclear strikes.
Moscow has, however, consistently stated that a nuclear war must never be fought.
Will this be like Event 201 in Oct. of 2019? A practice round?
Or are they trying to determine where to drop the nukes to do the most damage to the enemy, and the least to themselves?