Submitted via IRC for Bytram
The war game that could have ended the world
On 7 November 1983, around 100 senior military officers gathered at Nato headquarters in Brussels to ‘fight’ World War Three. The annual simulation, known as Able Archer, came at the end of a large-scale conventional exercise – Autumn Forge – involving tens of thousands of Nato troops across western Europe.
[...] The imagined ‘war’ started when Soviet tanks rolled across the border into Yugoslavia. Scandinavia was invaded next, and soon troops were pouring into Western Europe. Overwhelmed, Nato forces were forced into retreat. A few months after the pretend conflict began, Western governments authorised the use of nuclear weapons.
Role-playing Nato forces launched a single medium range nuclear missile, wiping Ukrainian capital Kiev from the map. It was deployed as a signal, a warning that Nato was prepared to escalate the war. The theory was that this ‘nuclear signalling’ would help cooler heads to prevail. It didn’t work.
By 11 November 1983, global nuclear arsenals had been unleashed. Most of the world was destroyed. Billions were dead. Civilisation ended.
Later that day, the Nato commanders left their building and went home, congratulating themselves on another successful – albeit sobering – exercise. What Western governments only discovered later is that Able Archer 83 came perilously close to instigating a real nuclear war.
(Score: 3, Insightful) by DeathMonkey on Thursday November 29 2018, @06:18PM (2 children)
We can already see the same exact same news story scripts being recited in once-local TV News stations around the country, often almost word for word.
Or in the case of Sinclair Media, literally word-for-word.
Sinclair Forces Local TV Stations to Air Segment Defending Tear-Gassing Migrants [thedailybeast.com]
Literally, word-for-word. [youtube.com]
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday November 29 2018, @06:50PM (1 child)
The video is unavailable
(Score: 2) by DeathMonkey on Thursday November 29 2018, @07:15PM
The video is unavailable
Oh, sorry, better link:
Watch: dozens of local TV anchors read the same anti-“false news” script in unison [vox.com]