UwU
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I’m not overly concerned with the news from this morning. In fact I expected them to raise the nuclear force readiness prior to or simultaneously to commencing the invasion, not now, which is expected going into a time of conflict/high tension from normal peacetime readiness. I had about a 5% chance this will escalate to a nuclear war going into it, and it’s not much different now, certainly not above 10% (For context, my odds of escalation to full countervalue exchange in a US intervention in a Taiwan reunification campaign would be about 75%). Virtually all that probability is split between unfavorable developments dragging in NATO and accidents/miscalculation risk, which is elevated during tense times like this (something like, if the Russians had misinterpreted the attack submarine which entered their territorial waters last week as being a ballistic missile submarine sneaking up close to launch a first strike, or an early warning radar fluke/misidentification being taken seriously when it would’ve been dismissed during peacetime, either of which could’ve caused them to launch on warning).
Unintentional nuclear exchange will have no preceding signs, but unfavorable developments will, for example a NATO shootdown of a Russian plane or Russian fire straying over the border killing NATO troops which begins an escalation spiral. If we start seeing such incidents being reported, I would tell all my LW/EA friends to get the fuck out of NATO cities they’re living in immediately.
Finally, here’s a good thread on the heightened alert news. The US side still seems quite wary of nuclear escalation and hasn’t even announced a reciprocal raising of DEFCON, which contributes to my relatively sanguine assessment of the situation at present. Keep in mind that this means I still have at least 5% on it, and that I don’t feel comfortable living in a NATO (especially US) downtown core at ANY time, not just now, due to the significant and everpresent risk of accidental/sudden nuclear attack. For example, I’d really like it if MIRI would move out of Berkeley where they’d be instantly vaporized whenever nuclear war broke out, and now might be an even better time for them to take a temporary vacation outside the city (see my other comment in this thread), but I don’t think the situation is far more alarming than usual just yet.
- 12 Mar 2022 2:48 UTC; 25 points) 's comment on Samotsvety Nuclear Risk Forecasts — March 2022 by (
- 26 Mar 2022 15:49 UTC; 14 points) 's comment on Nuclear Expert Comment on Samotsvety Nuclear Risk Forecast by (
- 27 Feb 2022 22:30 UTC; 10 points) 's comment on Russia has Invaded Ukraine by (LessWrong;
Nuclear winter is a very unlikely, highly conjunctive theory which requires many independent things to ALL happen perfectly, which are already individually suspect. E.g. that cities will all firestorm after being hit by airburst detonations (which itself relies on assumptions like adequate fuel loading per square meter, collapsed structures from the air blast not suffocating the oxygen, etc.), that this will burn in a way producing lots of black carbon, that this carbon will be nearly all lofted into the stratosphere, that this will block a high percentage of sunlight, that the carbon will persist there for many years, that it has to happen during the summer in warmer climates, etc.
Altogether, I think it’s unlikely enough a possibility to be ignored in planning, which removes that utility of New Zealand, although it may still have value as a sheltered, unaffected place to escape the chaos and societal collapse of other countries following nuclear war.
I’m not sure if the bolthole idea is referring to an escape for EAs in particular or relocating as many people as possible in general, but the former is something I’ve considered which I think needs more discussion. Keeping valuable EAs (AI alignment researchers in particular) alive both through the initial exchange and the chaotic period which follows is extremely valuable to improve the world that follows a nuclear conflict, especially to improve the relative trajectories of AI alignment and capabilities by ensuring the built-up base of alignment knowledge & talent is not destroyed.
As such, people should be developing protocols to evacuate those researchers preemptively at times when nuclear war looks likely to ensure they’re not killed in the initial detonations (or better yet, permanently relocate them to places with no or much lower risk of nuclear attack in the first place); as well as have preplanned long-term locations where they can ride out fallout and societal collapse/civil violence, stocked with enough food for years etc. I believe it’s fine if such locations are in the US given no nuclear winter, and it would be difficult to travel to somewhere like NZ in the post-attack environment anyway.
- 7 Mar 2022 1:58 UTC; 17 points) 's comment on Preserving and continuing alignment research through a severe global catastrophe by (LessWrong;
- 9 Mar 2022 1:22 UTC; 14 points) 's comment on Nuclear Preparedness Guide by (
- 5 Mar 2022 3:57 UTC; 13 points) 's comment on When should you relocate to mitigate the risk of dying in a nuclear war? by (LessWrong;
- 6 Mar 2022 5:17 UTC; 11 points) 's comment on Higher Risk of Nuclear War by (LessWrong;
- 27 Feb 2022 22:30 UTC; 10 points) 's comment on Russia has Invaded Ukraine by (LessWrong;
- 9 Mar 2022 3:20 UTC; 1 point) 's comment on When should you relocate to mitigate the risk of dying in a nuclear war? by (LessWrong;
X-posting my comment from LW.
Imo, evacuating to another country when a nuclear war looks literally imminent may not even be a good move because you’d have to enter a large city with an international airport with transcontinental flights, and the increased risk while you’re reentering the city & waiting for your flight is probably greater than the survival benefits from arriving at your SH destination, not to mention flights would probably be booked out if things really looked that dire. A better strategy would be to evacuate whenever the risk looked heightened, but then you’d run into a “no fire alarm” problem and it’d be very unclear when you should do so, and in any case you’d be doing it repeatedly. The biggest problem with this approach is it wouldn’t save you from sudden nuclear war. All it takes is an accident, the risk of which with China now joining Rus + US in adopting Launch on Warning has arguably risen at least 50%. Or something like Kim having a bad day/internal turmoil within the unstable NK regime which had no outwardly visible signs until after the fact, and the Bay Area is gone in a flash. (Looking at you, MIRI and like 3⁄4 of the entire alignment community based there...)
The best strategy imo is to relocate permanently to somewhere with a much lower risk of attack: e.g., a smaller non-US NATO city like Kitchener, or a very small US city. E.g. the Toronto area may be attacked, but it’s pretty unlikely Kitchener would because a marginal warhead would be better spent on another US city, even for Russia with 1500 deployed warheads. And your very small US city/suburban area of 10-20,000 people is quite unlikely to be attacked, because all cities with greater population would be attacked before it, unless it had some unique importance.
Doesn’t really make sense to consider yields or anything like that, whether your metropolitan area is annihilated by a single 25 megaton warhead from an R-36M or a bunch of MIRVs in the low hundred kiloton range makes no difference and is just down to which missiles are assigned which targets. No one knows exactly which places would be targeted, just that some places are of course likelier than others, and certain things about strategy (e.g. China has a pure countervalue strategy for now, targeting all warheads at cities only).
Lastly, recall one problem with the strategy of evacuating at the last possible moment when warheads look like they could be falling any minute, is that if many others have the same idea as you, the roads out of the city will be jammed to a standstill. In fact, governments may be attempting to evacuate the cities at that time too. This is another advantage of being in a smaller town/outlying area: you won’t be hindered whenever you decide to evacuate.
- 27 Feb 2022 22:07 UTC; 19 points) 's comment on Nuclear attack risk? Implications for personal decision-making by (
- 26 Mar 2022 15:49 UTC; 14 points) 's comment on Nuclear Expert Comment on Samotsvety Nuclear Risk Forecast by (
- 15 Mar 2022 17:46 UTC; 12 points) 's comment on Samotsvety Nuclear Risk Forecasts — March 2022 by (
- 9 Mar 2022 23:23 UTC; 11 points) 's comment on Nuclear Preparedness Guide by (LessWrong;
Don’t buy the stuff about expecting a famine that kills billions at all? Especially since she didn’t seem to have dug into the actual criticisms of the nuclear winter theory in her post sequence, e.g. the independent components of the theory. I think very likely (>90%) there won’t be any change in temperature at all, which will be the case if any of those components fail. And as I understand it she has since updated towards being less bullish on it since those posts, and people who succeeded her at RP don’t think nuclear winter is that likely either.
You mentioned the successful SM-3 intercept test in 2020. While it’s true it managed to intercept an “ICBM-representative target”, and can be based from ships anywhere they sail (thus posing a major potential threat to the Chinese/NK deterrent in the future), I don’t know if I (or the US military) would call it a meaningful operational capability yet. For one we don’t even know its success rate. The more mature (and only other) system with ICBM intercept capability, the Ground-Based Interceptor, has barely 50%. [1] I’m not sure what you meant by “sending it to Europe”[2] because US Navy Aegis ships carrying the SM-3 interceptors would have to be positioned close to under the flight path to intercept Russian ICBMs in midcourse flight. That’s the weakness of a midcourse BMD strategy, and why China is developing things like Fractional Orbital Bombardment which lets them fire an ICBM at the US from any direction, not just the shortest one, to avoid overflying sea-based midcourse interceptors. The thing is because Russian ICBMs would likely fly over the North Pole the ships would probably have to be in the Arctic Ocean, which I’m unsure is even practical due to ice there etc. Anyway there’d be no hope of intercepting all the hundreds of ICBMs, even ignoring Russia’s SLBM force which can be launched from anywhere in the world’s oceans.
That’s all to say, I don’t see how that’s a possible event which could happen and be escalatory? Of course if the US could do something in Europe which would actually threaten Russia’s second strike capability that would be massively destabilizing, but they can’t at this point. [3] Russia’s deterrence is quite secure, for the time being.
I basically agree with Graubard’s estimate, btw. But, I mean, 3/5% is still a lot...
Edit: I’m not sure who mentioned the 60% probability of successful detonation over London after launch, but that’s absurd? Modern thermonuclear warhead designs have been perfected and are extremely reliable, very unlikely to fail/fizzle. Same goes for delivery systems. The probability of successful detonation over target conditioning on launch and no intercept attempts is well over 95%. London doesn’t even have a token BMD shield to speak of, while Moscow is at least protected by the only nuclear-tipped ABM system left in the world.
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There are lots of other details. Both GMD/GBI and Aegis BMD/Aegis Ashore are mainly intended to defend against crude ICBMs like those from NK, Russian/Chinese ones carry lots of decoys/penaids/countermeasures to make midcourse interception much harder and thus their success rates lower. Plus the claimed rate is in an ideal test environment, etc.
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Perhaps you meant construct more Aegis Ashore facilities? But there would have to be an AWFUL lot constructed to legitimately threaten the viability of Russia’s deterrent, plus it would take tons of time (far, far longer than sailing a few Aegis destroyers over) and be very visible, plus I’m unsure they could even place them close enough to the northward flight trajectories of Russian ICBMs as mentioned to intercept them.
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Not for lack of trying since the dawn of the arms race. Thermonuke-pumped space x-ray lasers, bro.
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Also, not sure where best to post this, but here’s a nice project on nuclear targets in the US (+ article). I definitely wouldn’t take it at face value, but it sheds some light on which places are potential nuclear targets at least, non-exhaustively.
- 15 Mar 2022 17:46 UTC; 12 points) 's comment on Samotsvety Nuclear Risk Forecasts — March 2022 by (
- 13 Mar 2022 2:15 UTC; 11 points) 's comment on When should you relocate to mitigate the risk of dying in a nuclear war? by (LessWrong;
- 13 Mar 2022 2:17 UTC; 10 points) 's comment on Nuclear Preparedness Guide by (LessWrong;
See my comments here and here for a bit of analysis on targeting/risks of various locations.
Btw I want to add that it may be even more prudent to evacuate population centers preemptively than some think, as some have suggested countervalue targets are unlikely to be hit at the very start of a nuclear war/in a first strike. That’s not entirely true since there are many ways cities would be hit with no warning. If Russia or China launches on warning in response to a false alarm, they would be interpreting that act as a (retaliatory) second strike and thus may aim for countervalue targets. Or if the US launches first for real, whether accidentally or because they genuinely perceived an imminent Russian/Chinese strike and wanted preemptive damage limitation, of course the retaliatory strike could happen quickly and you’d be unlikely to hear that the US even launched before the return strike lands. Etc. These plus a few other reasons mean cities may actually be among the first struck in a nuclear war with little to no warning.
- 26 Mar 2022 15:49 UTC; 14 points) 's comment on Nuclear Expert Comment on Samotsvety Nuclear Risk Forecast by (
https://reducing-suffering.org/near-miss/
Just gonna boost this excellent piece by Tomasik. I think partial alignment/near-misses causing s-risk is potentially an enormous concern. This is more true the shorter timelines are and thus the more likely people are to try using “hail mary” risky alignment techniques. Also more true for less principled/Agent Foundations-type alignment directions.
One point about the Pentagon figure, they said “700 warheads by 2027 and at least 1000 by 2030”[1]. Meaning most likely over 1k. I actually made a bet that they will revise the estimate up again in this/next year’s report, e.g. this year we may see “900-1000 by 2027 and 1200-1500 by 2030″. They said the stockpile was only expected to double over the decade to the ~400s in the 2020 report to Congress, so by increasing estimates more gradually they’re probably mitigating a loss of face & hard questions over the massive intelligence failure. Signs point to China simply seeking parity with the US/Rus (~1500 deployed), I don’t see why they’d expand only to 1000 and stop there.
Comments by DoD people support this hypothesis[2]. Common sense tells us this too: Even if the ~300 new DF-41 silos discovered last year are each armed with only 3 warheads (the missile can carry ~10 max), and no other silos are built/discovered, that’s still 900 warheads on top of the ~400 already in service. China’s nuclear force has traditionally been mobile-based, and TEL (truck)/rail[3]-basing are probably expanding similarly; silos are just the most visible. (Plus, submarines.)
I know a lot of ways to reduce China-US nuclear risk even without non-starters to the pro-democracy crowd (e.g. giving up defence commitments to certain US allies). There seems to be some major civilizational inadequacy in this area; i.e. obvious ways to have a major reduction on the risk that just nobody’s bothered to implement. I don’t think economic tensions/trade wars are very relevant to nuclear risk compared to more important factors in the grand scheme of things to be frank.
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https://www.stratcom.mil/Portals/8/Documents/2022 USSTRATCOM Posture Statement.pdf?ver=CUIoOCLyos9xe9C9I0XjMQ%3D%3D
Just one thought: there are so many ways for a nuclear war to start accidentally or through miscalculations (without necessarily a conventional war) that it just seems so absurd to see estimates like 0.1%. A big part of it is even just the inscrutable failure rate of complex early warning systems composed of software, ground/space based sensors and communications infrastructure. False alarms are much likelier to be acted on during times of high tension as I pointed out. E.g., during that incident Yeltsin, despite observing a weather rocket with a similar flight profile as a Trident SLBM and having his nuclear briefcase opened, decided to wait a bit until it became clear it was arcing away from Russia. But that was during a time of hugs & kisses with the West. Had it been Putin, in a paranoid state of mind, after months of hearing Western leaders call him an evil new Hitler who must be stopped, you’re absolutely sure he wouldn’t have decided to launch a little earlier?
Another thing is I’m uncomfortable with is the tunnel-vision focus on US-Russia (despite current events). As I also pointed out, China joining the other 2 in adopting launch on early warning raises the accident risk by at least 50% - at least since it’s probably higher at first given their inexperience/initial kinks in the system that haven’t been worked out, etc.[1]
As a last note, cities are likelier to be hit than many think. For one the not explicitly targeting civilians thing isn’t even true. Plus the idea doesn’t pass the smell test. If some country destroys all the US’s cities in a massive attack, you think the US would only hit counterforce targets in retaliation? No, at a minimum the US would hit countervalue targets in response to a countervalue attack. Even if there were no explicit “policy” planning for that (impossible), a leader would simply order that type of targeting in that eventuality anyway.
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plus other factors like a big portion of the risk from Launch on Warning being from misinterpreting and launching in response to incoming conventional missiles, and the arguably higher risk of China being involved in a conventional war with the US/allies which includes military strikes on targets in the Chinese mainland.
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Hey Michael, sorry I didn’t get around to commenting on this before you published haha. Long thought dump below:
I’m not sure if they count as “technological developments”, but 2 of the largest things I see contributing to nuclear risk are development of ballistic missile defence (BMD) and proliferation of tactical nuclear weapons (TNWs).
The dangers from BMD are manyfold. One is being the cause of a conventional conflict. E.g. As the US continues to develop its maritime ICBM intercept capability, it’ll pose a major threat to foreign arsenals. If a significant number of USN ships surround China, it may feel the need to sink them preemptively to ensure its ICBMs can get through. Russia has threatened similar against the land-based counterpart.[1] Some even want to revive Brilliant Pebbles over the New Hysterical Threat in the east. Given that it (and SDI in general) were the most destabilizing things in history (you think the USSR would’ve just sat there and watched as it lost its strategic deterrence?), that’s not great.
Another risk is making a first strike by either party likelier. As said, a nation will behave unpredictably if it sees its nuclear capability slipping away (now or never?). And something often pointed out is even if the BMD system doesn’t work, as long as leaders believe it might, they may be emboldened to strike (hoping their BMD can mop up the rest).
Lastly, it’ll spur nations to develop ever more destabilizing offensive systems to maintain their deterrence.[2] Crazy nuclear-powered cruise missiles like Skyfall are just the start, I have some (very infohazardous) ideas for better nuclear delivery others may have thought of too. Also, one way to counter BMD is simply to increase arsenal like China’s doing, as it’s generally cheaper to make delivery than interception systems. Risks from larger stockpiles are obvious.On TNWs: I think the odds of nuclear war would be far lower if they didn’t exist. The fact that they’re always present as an option during any conventional conflict makes the odds of crossing the nuclear threshold so much higher than if only strategic weapons existed, it’s hard to overstate. For instance, the US is developing (additional) undersea TNW options clearly intended to be used against China over Taiwan.[3] Biden even called it a “bad idea” while campaigning but is now forging ahead with it. In fact one of my likeliest concrete NW scenarios is one of US first use after its in-theatre bases and fleet suffer decimation at Chinese hands in such a war. Weapons on the Chinese side exacerbate this, like the DF-26 IRBM, but those are purely in response to US TNWs.[4] You can’t just expect them to have no response: indeed, lack of a symmetrical response ability is likely more destabilizing. Under China’s previous city-buster-only force composition, the US would be both likelier to employ TNWs without credible threat of in-kind retaliation, and if China did retaliate it’d escalate straight to countervalue.
Agree with the goal of reducing silos: they are highly destabilizing, as I’ve written before. Stationary targets are vulnerable, even if you try to mitigate this with Launch on Warning (LoW). Stealthy cruise missiles are one such threat. Another is an obscure idea called “x-ray pindown” that could suppress them from firing by continuously detonating warheads overhead; it should be possible to combine it with other counterforce weapons[5] and destroy the silos, thus defeating LoW. There’s an exceptional 11-pg analysis from SciAm in 1984 diving deep into the problems with LoW including pindown (I have the full copy for anyone interested). If you could reduce or eliminate silos and have the nuclear powers’ force compositions switched entirely to mobile & sub, that would greatly improve strategic stability & lower nuclear risk, as there would be almost no targets vulnerable to a first strike[6]. Downside is if one still broke out it may go countervalue more easily due to there being fewer rungs on the escalation ladder, from the paucity of meaningful counterforce targets.[7] But this consideration probably isn’t large due to being outweighed by the elimination of the overwhelming majority of accidental nuclear risk (no more LoW), plus they can still always target military bases, there’ll never be a shortage of those. Also, you mentioned you’re “unsure where Chinese mobile warheads are”, well the answer is they’re in PLARF bases in the middle of nowhere, which is great from the smoke-producing perspective.[8]
On the point about reducing entanglement: Much has been made about intermingling of conventional/nuclear forces, like China’s “hot-swappable” DF-26. But I think it’s not as huge a problem as claimed. These are not intercontinental-range forces, they would be flying in-theatre, not headed towards the enemy homeland, so e.g. the US could afford to wait to see whether it was conventional before retaliating since it wouldn’t be threatening their own nuclear forces, in contrast to an inbound ICBM where you’d have minutes to decide whether to launch on warning or risk losing your own. Similarly, even if the US targeted China’s IRBMs (unlikely anyway because they’re mobile), China probably wouldn’t feel that its strategic deterrent were being degraded (and thus much use-it-or-lose-it pressure).
On hypersonics: I think this excellent chart is the most concise thing I’ve seen to dispel the hype around them. They don’t really contribute to nuclear risk imo[9], in fact they do the opposite by preserving deterrence. The associated report is a great read.
ASATs are indeed dangerous. So much so that if we saw mass satellite warfare, I’d expect a high chance of a nuclear exchange following shortly. Once your space based early warning is blinded, you’d be extremely vulnerable & face considerable pressure to use (indeed countries may interpret it as a prelude to first strike & launch). This is only compounded as HGVs continue to proliferate & make up a larger portion of deployed arsenals because of their lower flight path, enemy land-based forces will be sitting ducks without early warning satellites.
This paper is a good resource on your question of whether Poseidon is salted. Remember that the neutrons used to activate cobalt would’ve otherwise been hitting a fissile/fissionable uranium jacket, so they’d be incurring a massive yield handicap.
A lot of nuclear risk reduction just strikes me as highly intractable though. It just seems that if a nuclear war does happen, it’ll be due to forces and military pressures much too strong and preordained for us to influence one way or another. E.g., these are similarly implausible:
-Making the big 3 give up their silos. Lots have tried and failed in the US. Even unlikelier for China: it’s an attractive basing option as cheap install capacity for a country looking to expand arsenal + great for soaking up enemy warheads.
-For the US (the main developer of BMD) to give up its obsession with neutralizing the nuclear threat its enemies pose it.[10]
-Eliminating TNWs (that have been around for 70 years): Want the US to? Good luck with that when Russia has thousands of them (and relies on them due to conventional military weakness).
-Prevent countries from developing ASAT: countries are even willing to incur costs like worldwide condemnation & endangering their allies to strengthen this key capability. No great power will stop developing in the space domain.
Even something as simple as a NFU pledge has proven impossible, even more of a political nonstarter after recent events. Overall, I think it’s a great decision for EAs to focus more on AI. There’s already a huge community of capable folks working on risk reduction from every angle. Some pathways to x-risk from nukes also seem quite unrealistic. E.g. Alexey Turchin voiced to me concerns about gigaton-scale salted bombs. There’s no way a single salted bomb large enough to be x-risky would be deliverable, so the country would have to detonate it on their own territory (“backyard delivery”). But it’s very unlikely (and unprecedented) for countries to devise strategies explicitly harming let alone sterilizing their own nations. The optimal cost-effective strategy that maximizes deterrence while minimizing self-harm the great powers have stabilized on is simply many warheads that maximize blast radius (i.e. the typical diversified MIRV’d ICBM forces you see today), which is why you haven’t seen any doomsday devices created. Seeing as the main one left is nuclear winter, I guess that should be the main focus of research despite the (imo) low probability. One potential research project I’d like to see is assessing the independent components of the hypothesis, i.e. doing a complete analysis and incorporating all available evidence into each one (e.g. generating an updated probability in light of the observations of Gulf oil well plumes, wildfires etc. for the lofting assumption) for optimal probabilities of each independent piece, then multiplying them together, to get overall conjunctive likelihoods. Allfed’s Denkenberger said he got 20% chance of agricultural collapse using a Monte Carlo model, I haven’t gotten to read the paper yet but I’m significantly lower, maybe ~5%? Another potential thing to investigate longer-term is I guess detection of SSBNs (as that’s probably the largest conceivable strategic stability killer, other than an infallible BMD system), but again massive public & private (MIC) R&D will always be going into improving & ensuring the survivability of their undersea deterrents so I don’t see how we’d help.Finally, I’ve been thinking about your 3rd point in the 9 mistakes doc. Maybe there’s a tendency for wars between nuclear powers to draw in the rest, if after suffering enough damage, nations decide it’s best to bring others down with them. E.g., perhaps China, after being devastated in an exchange with the US in 2028 where each expended 1000 warheads, decides to glass regional enemy India with its remaining 500 to ensure it doesn’t emerge unscathed as a massive future threat, calculating that cost of the additional Indian retaliation isn’t meaningful in light of the destruction already suffered.[11] I can easily see the US doing this to China after a full exchange with Russia (that China wasn’t involved in), to ensure that even if it’s gonna lose its hegemony, the hated ChiComs won’t take its place. So who knows, scenarios depicting an exchange confined to only 2 powers may not be so realistic after all.[12][13] The only scenario this “cascading nuclear war” fear of mine doesn’t seem at all plausible in is if a large nuclear power is attacked by a small one: e.g. if the US is only hit by a couple dozen NK nukes, I can’t see them knowingly choose to nuke China too and forfeit the rest of their country.
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To expect to ever actually win the BMD arms race for good is a faint hope due to the offence-defence imbalance: it’s inherently easier to make something than to make something that stops that thing.
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“This is no fantasy: the U.S. military is already developing nuclear-tipped, submarine-launched cruise missiles that could be used for such purposes.” Note they already have W76-2 low-yield warheads which can also be used in this role; technically they could even use higher-yield strategic weapons on a Chinese invasion force if they wanted.
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“By late 2018, PRC concerns began to emerge that the United States would use low-yield weapons against a Taiwan invasion fleet, with related commentary in official media calling for proportionate response capabilities” (which have since entered service). And it’s not like those fears are remotely unreasonable.
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cruise missiles, SLBMs fired from another angle or slipping in between the high-altitude detonations, etc.
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Excepting air bases, but you can mitigate this with 24⁄7 air patrols, as the US did for quite a long time initially in the cold war
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Kind of like regressing to the original countervalue-only doctrine in the early cold war when counterforce wasn’t yet an option due to technical limitations (missile accuracy etc.)
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Those TELs (Transporter Erector Launchers) would be sent out and dispersed throughout the hinterlands in times of high tension to protect against first strikes.
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at least not on their own, see next paragraph
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Understandable of course, making peace with the fact that hated enemies like China can annihilate you at any time and the only way prevent it is deterrence is a tough psychological ask for any nation, much less one as exceptionalist as the US; they’ll always struggle against this and have a natural desire to pursue better self-protections.
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After which India does the same to Pakistan by the same logic, and so on
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A similar idea is a US nuclear attack on either Russia or China causing the other to also launch on warning (because e.g. they don’t know the BMs aren’t aimed at them), but this comment is long enough already.
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Further evidence: ”...one of the more egregious features of nuclear target planning, can’t remember pre-SIOP or in early editions, was that targets in China would be attacked regardless of whether Beijing was complicit in whatever Moscow was doing that triggered the attack.” I imagine other countries’ planning is similar.
Little known detail about the Arkhipov incident. Unsure if true, but if so it sounds like he agreed to fire the torpedo and it all came down to the coincidence of the light getting wedged in the hatch making a few second-difference. Something that may not have happened if the signals officer’s motor neurons had fired just slightly differently.
I disagree with the claim that the overall accident risk is going down. While it’s probably true early warning systems are getting more reliable (though the actual degree of this is really hard to gauge due to their complexity)[1], a third party (China) adopting launch on warning arguably raises the risk at least 50%, if not more due to initial kinks. Also, as many have pointed out, the emerging trilateral dynamic of three nuclear peers is unprecedented in history and less stable.
Also, what would count as an accidental nuclear war? I think e.g. the US launching a large salvo of low-observable cruise missiles deep into the Chinese mainland during a conventional war could easily be mistaken as an attack on the silo fields and trigger a nuclear launch.
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What I mean by this is it’s not like EW systems have been static and only the sensors have been refined over time to make them more reliable, they have been made into ever larger informationized networks etc. and it’s not at all clear that the risk of a false alarm generated by any one part of the system is significantly lower now. For examples on how these more complex systems have more points of failure see e.g. this
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Look into suffering-focused AI safety which I think is extremely important and neglected (and s-risks).
I agree nuclear winter risk is overblown and I’m glad to see more EAs discussing that. But I think you’re also overrating the survivability of SSBNs, especially non-American ones. They are not a One Weird Trick, Just Add Water for unassailable second strike capability, with upkeep/maintenance only being one aspect of that. Geography plays a huge role in how useful they are, with the US deciding to base most of its warheads on SSBNs because they have the most favourable conditions for them (unrestricted access to and naval dominance of two oceans). In contrast, Russia has much less room to play with (mainly some parts of the Arctic ocean) and suitable ports to deploy the subs from, and China’s situation is even worse. The seas surrounding it have unfavourable bathymetry (very shallow) and the only paths to open ocean are chokepoints.[1] It’s not as hard to detect a submarine as one might think, otherwise noise-quieting measures like pumpjets, reactor cooling design and tiles as you mentioned wouldn’t be such a huge deal. Most importantly, the US has a large fleet of advanced attack subs (SSNs) the others lack, which pose an enormous threat to SSBNs. They could pick up a tail without knowing it and be destroyed before they can launch their missiles.[2]
OTOH American SSBNs should be fine at least for the time being as long as they don’t do anything stupid like try to sneak up close to another country. But emerging technologies like Magnetic Anomaly Detectors and such will make concealing SSBNs even more difficult and increase reliance on land-based forces in the future.
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In fact from what I know about Chinese nuclear strategy, SSBNs aren’t expected to play a major role in the nuclear force at least until Taiwan is taken and the first island chain is broken, granting unrestricted access to the Pacific.
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Which is why the concept of “bastion operations” was developed, a sanitized area of water close to the coast where SSBNs can operate relatively safely, supported by friendly air and naval ASW assets to keep hostile SSNs out. Yes China and Russia can do this but it’s still suboptimal for many reasons.
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A bunch of scenarios are collected in the s-risk sub wiki
The fellowship will cover what we currently consider to be the most important sources of s-risk (TAI conflict, risks from malevolent actors).
Any reason CLR believes that to be the case specifically? For instance, it’s argued on this page that botched alignment attempts/partially aligned AIs (near miss) & unforeseen instrumental drives of an unaligned AI are the 2 likeliest AGI-related s-risks, with malevolent actors (deliberately suffering-aligned AI) currently a lesser concern. I guess TAI conflict could fall under the second category, as an instrumental goal derived risk.
Right, and the alternative here (US leaders) don’t do that?