This story originally appeared on War Is Boring.
In
a near-future war, 1,000 missiles scream toward Russia at Mach 20. Each
one a pinpoint strike hitting the Kremlin’s nuclear missiles, military
radars, submarine bases—you name it.
Within minutes, 80 percent of
Russia’s nuclear arsenal is destroyed without the United States
launching a single nuclear weapon of its own. Russia’s military networks
are blind, the nation’s ability to strike back eliminated or severely
degraded.
The incoming missiles were no ordinary weapons, but
hypersonic glide vehicles developed largely in secret under the US
Prompt Global Strike program. They travel so fast, shooting them down is
effectively impossible.
The capability, begun as a Pentagon
project in the mid-2000s, was envisioned as allowing America to strike
anywhere on the globe nearly instantaneously, without resorting to
nukes. In this futuristic war, it succeeds wildly.
To be sure,
Prompt Global Strike is real, but the scenario above is fiction. It will
take many years, and billions upon billions of dollars, to make it
possible. And that’s if the technology works.
That scenario is
a real fear, however, in the minds of many Russian military officials.
Russian military journals regularly feature articles presenting future
American hypersonic weapons as an existential threat. Far more
significantly, the Pentagon’s research—haphazard as it is—has provoked a
radical restructuring of the Kremlin’s armed forces.
READ MORE:http://motherboard.vice.com/read/russia-is-concerned-about-americas-far-off-space-weapons
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