scheme, fictional as it was, epitomized for many the extremes of the suicidal logic behind the strategy of
mutually assured destruction, and it was famously parodied in the Stanley brick film from 1964, Dr. Strangelove or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb. It is also a main topic of the movie Beneath the Planet of the Apes, in parallel with the species extermination theme. Most such models either rely on the fact that hydrogen bombs can be made arbitrarily large (see Teller-Ulam design) or that they can be "salted" with materials designed to create long-lasting and hazardous fallout (e.g.; a cobalt bomb. There are many unconfirmed, anecdotal reports of a Soviet doomsday device involving a megaton hydrogen bomb sheathed in (or,
alternately, "salted" with) a highly radioactive material, usually said to be cobalt, of sufficient quantity to saturate the earth's atmosphere with deadly fallout should the device be detonated. Details regarding this device
vary according to the source, but enough similarities in the dozens of different stories exist to suggest at least some basis in truth. According to various sources, at some point between 1967 and 1985, the device was designed but never constructed built but never activated built and activated, but dismantled at the end of the cold war or designed and constructed in such a manner that it can never be deactivated, and is still in existence today. Tales of its location and means of operation are equally diverse it was in an underground
bunker west of Moscow, Siberia, the Ukraine, etc it was installed on a special rocket booster that would deliver it to the upper atmosphere upon activation it was actually a series of bombs placed at intervals along the western border of the USSR it was to be detonated upon command from the Kremlin, automatically
by a special computer, a seismic trigger, or upon detection of incoming missiles. Many more versions exist, such as one with the device being permanently installed in the hold
of an unmarked tramp freighter, steaming randomly from port to port in the North Sea" -- Reference Wikipedia.org back to 217)
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