Strath Committee
The Strath Committee was set up by the British Ministry of Defence to consider the implications of thermonuclear weapons for the United Kingdom.[1]
The Strath Report (officially known as "The Defence Implications of Fall-Out from a Hydrogen Bomb: Report by a Group of Officials"[2]), issued in 1955 and finally declassified in 2002, estimated the type of damage and casualties Great Britain would suffer from what the Committee considered a "limited" thermonuclear attack of 10 hydrogen bombs dropped on UK cities. The result of the attack, according to the Committee's Report, would be "utter devastation". There would be up to 12 million deaths, with 3 million of these resulting from radiation poisoning. The Committee estimated a further four million serious casualties, which would overwhelm the remnants of the British medical system. Half of Britain's industry would be destroyed, logistics and distribution systems would break down, and food and water would be contaminated, leaving the 40 million survivors in "siege conditions."[1][3]
"The Report found it impossible to predict whether Britain could recover with the social and economic fabric of the country destroyed - in even such a limited attack."[1]
The Committee's Report was discussed in a DEFE (Chiefs of Staff, Ministry of Defence) paper entitled "An Appreciation of the Likely Form and Duration of a Future Major War: With Reference to the Problem of Stockpiling in the United Kingdom" (DEFE 5/80, COS (57) 278, 18 Dec 1957).
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Baylis, John (1995). Ambiguity and Deterrence. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 190. ISBN 0-19-828012-2.
- ^ Kraft, Alison (2018). "Dissenting Scientists in Early Cold War Britain: The "Fallout" Controversy and the Origins of Pugwash, 1954–1957". Journal of Cold War Studies. 20 (1): 69. ISSN 1520-3972 – via pure.mpg.de.
- ^ Young, Ken (11 July 2016). The American Bomb in Britain: US Air Forces' Strategic Presence, 1946–64. Manchester University Press. pp. 144–145. ISBN 9780719086755.