Trump Is Either Telling Us We Have Superweapons More Powerful Than Nukes Or He Can't Do Math (Or Both)

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President Donald Trump talks to Chairman, President and CEO of Lockheed Marillyn Hewson and Chief Test Pilot Alan Norman in front of an F-35 fighter jet during the 2018 Made in America Product Showcase July 23, 2018 at the White House in Washington, DC.
President Donald Trump talks to Chairman, President and CEO of Lockheed Marillyn Hewson and Chief Test Pilot Alan Norman in front of an F-35 fighter jet during the 2018 Made in America Product Showcase July 23, 2018 at the White House in Washington, DC.
Photo: Getty Images

Twice in the last month, the President of the United States has claimed that the Pentagon has weapons even more powerful than nuclear weapons, with the ability to easily kill millions. He is either bluffing, confused, or is incapable of understanding the difference between conventional and nuclear weapons.

President Donald Trump made the claim during remarks to commemorate the 18th anniversary of the September 11th attacks in New York, Washington, and Pennsylvania.

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According to The Washington Post, Trump told an audience, emphasis mine:

“The last four days, we have hit our enemy harder than they have ever been hit before, and that will continue,” Trump said, apparently referring to the Afghanistan war and drawing applause from the crowd. “And if for any reason they come back to our country, we will go wherever they are and use power the likes of which the United States has never used before — and I’m not even talking about nuclear power. They will never have seen anything like what will happen to them.”

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Less than a month ago, on August 20, Trump claimed that the U.S. military could kill 10 million people in Afghanistan within a week. “This is not using nuclear [weapons],” he said.

So what could he be talking about, then?

One possibility is that he thinks the United States could drop so many conventional weapons they would have effects greater than nuclear weapons. The second possibility is that he’s talking about a new type of weapon, one previously limited to science fiction.

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B-52 bomber unloading conventional bombs on a target, location and date unknown.
B-52 bomber unloading conventional bombs on a target, location and date unknown.
Photo: U.S. Air Force (Getty)

Conventional weapons—and let’s just limit our discussion to blast weapons—use high explosive weapons to deal damage through overpressure, heat, and shrapnel. Examples of these are aircraft bombs, which typically range from 250 to 2,000 pounds (one ton)—mostly high explosive with a steel bomb casing. Tomahawk cruise missiles and similar weapons have 1,000 pound high explosive warheads. These are the weapons that would do the most damage, quickly.

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There are exceptions. A few outlying bombs, such as the Air Forces’s GBU-43B, also known as the “Mother of all Bombs,” get up to 21,600 pounds. Russia’s Aviation Vacuum High-Power Bomb, which it calls the “Father of all Bombs” reportedly has a yield of 44 tons. But these are specialized bombs, and few and far between.

Although inert, these Mk. 84 2,000 lb. bombs are still quite large.
Although inert, these Mk. 84 2,000 lb. bombs are still quite large.
Photo: U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Dillian Bamman (DVIDS)
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The point is, conventional bombs typically max out at one ton, and often rate far less. In fact, thanks to precision targeting, the long term trend is toward increasingly smaller warheads in exchange for longer range and improved ability to penetrate hardened structures, like a command bunker.

Nuclear weapons, on the other hand, are easily a thousand times more powerful than conventional weapons. The first atomic bomb used in action at Hiroshima had an explosive yield of 16 kilotons—or 16,000 tons of TNT. That’s the equivalent of 16,000 Mk. 84 2000 pound high explosive bombs. A B-52H bomber can carry just 18 Mk. 84 bombs, meaning it would need to fly 888 missions to drop the same amount of TNT as the Hiroshima bomb. Other bombers and fighters could pitch in to help out, but the point is it would take hundreds of missions over several days just to replicate Hiroshima.

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The destruction caused by the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan, August 1945.
The destruction caused by the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima, Japan, August 1945.
Photo: Getty

Another thing to consider: U.S. nuclear weapons are now considerably larger and more destructive than those used in World War II. The W76 warhead on America’s Trident missile submarines is rated at 100 kilotons—about six times bigger than Hiroshima. The W87 warhead on the Minuteman III missile is 300 kilotons, the B61 gravity bomb ranges between 100 and 150 kilotons, and the B83 gravity bomb has a staggering yield of 1.2 megatons (1,200 kilotons.)

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Conventional bombs, even served up in large numbers, could not approach the destructive power of nuclear weapons. The 44-ton “Father of All Bombs” looks like a wet firecracker compared to the 1,200,000 ton B83 bomb. Even the United States, which virtually invented assembly line warfare, could not build enough cruise missiles, bombers, and bombs to outdo nuclear weapons.

Could Trump be talking about something else? Whatever the weapon, it would have to use even more of a compact energy source than a nuclear bomb for it to be more powerful.

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Antimatter bombs fit the bill: just one pound of antimatter would generate an explosion equivalent to 19 megatons of TNT. A pound of plutonium, by comparison, generates about a 9 kilotons of nuclear boom.

In 2004, The San Francisco Chronicle reported the U.S. Air Force was researching antimatter bombs. The Chronicle reported that in March 2004, Kenneth Edwards, director of Revolutionary Munitions at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida, gave a speech on the usefulness of antimatter as an explosive. A copy of Edwards’ speech posted on the Internet at the time emphasize the lack of radioactivity of an antimatter bomb explosion versus a nuclear bomb explosion. After the Chronicle began making inquiries, the Air Force clammed up about an antimatter bomb and nothing I can find has been written about it since.

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A U.S. Air Force C-5M Super Galaxy transport about to load the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, meant to detect antimatter, for transport to the International Space Station, 2010.
A U.S. Air Force C-5M Super Galaxy transport about to load the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer, meant to detect antimatter, for transport to the International Space Station, 2010.
Photo: U.S. Air Force Photo/ Staff Sgt. Ryan Crane (DVIDS)

Still, is there an antimatter bomb be out there, in some black Pentagon program? Probably not. Anything more than a token amount of antimatter is out of reach for a long, long time.

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Scientists believe that it would take ten billion years and a “million billion dollars just to accumulate a gram’s worth of the stuff—all that time and money for an explosion less than half the size of the W76 warhead. Until it becomes much, much easier and cheaper to acquire antimatter, such bombs are a dead end. For now antimatter bombs remain in the realm of Dan Brown novels and other works science fiction.

And so either Trump is bragging about a superweapon that doesn’t exist or he apparently has no idea how powerful nuclear weapons are. I’m not sure what’s dumber, or scarier.