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From the High Desert

A Cultural History of Art Bell

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October 8, 2006: Energy Weapons and North Korea Nuclear Test - Dr. Doug Beason

Oct 8, 2006
2h 39m
0:00 / 0:00
Art Bell welcomes submarine veteran Kenneth Sewell and Los Alamos National Laboratory associate director Dr. Doug Beason on the night North Korea announces its first nuclear weapons test. Broadcasting from Manila, Art opens with breaking news of the detonation and its seismic readings, then dives into the geopolitical fallout with both guests.

Sewell, author of Red Star Rogue, warns that North Korea possesses over 48 submarines capable of reaching the U.S. coast, making a naval blockade the most urgent response. He describes how even aging diesel submarines on a one-way mission could deliver a crude nuclear device to an American harbor, and argues the president must act immediately to bottle up the regime. The discussion turns to whether Kim Jong-il is reckless enough to sell a weapon to terrorists or provoke an arms race across Asia.

Dr. Beason, though unable to share classified analysis, explains how seismic signatures and atmospheric evidence help confirm underground nuclear tests. He then pivots to his book The E-Bomb, detailing how the Airborne Laser program could shoot down ballistic missiles at the speed of light, and why directed energy weapons represent the future of strategic defense.

Key Moments

  1. North Korea's submarine threat to the U.S. coast: Kenneth Sewell warns that North Korea's second-largest submarine fleet in Asia could deliver a nuclear device to the U.S. coast.

  2. If I were president: blockade North Korea: Sewell says if he were president he would immediately blockade the entire country until inspections and a halt to the nuclear program.

  3. Could Kim sell a bomb to al-Qaeda?: Sewell raises the proliferation nightmare: a cash-starved Kim selling a nuclear weapon to terrorists who could attack a U.S. city anonymously.

  4. Airborne Laser: kill missiles in boost phase: Beason explains the megawatt-class airborne laser mounted on a 747 designed to shoot down ballistic missiles seconds after launch.

  5. USGS confirms zero-depth event in North Korea: Art reads a fresh USGS bulletin: magnitude 4.2 at zero kilometers depth, which Beason agrees points strongly to a nuclear detonation, not an earthquake.