Art Bell welcomes Philip Hoag, author of No Such Thing as Doomsday, for a sobering examination of the shifting nuclear landscape between the United States, Russia, and China. Hoag details alarming policy changes under the Clinton administration, including the decision to absorb a first nuclear strike before retaliating, the removal of submarine commanders' unilateral launch authority, and the grounding of strategic bombers.
The discussion turns to Russia's multi-layered missile defense system, its massive underground bunker complex at Yamantau Mountain, and its road-mobile ICBMs. Hoag argues that incremental U.S. disarmament has left the nation vulnerable, while technology transfers to China through most-favored-nation trade status have financed a rising military superpower. Art presses him on whether mutual assured destruction still holds.
Hoag warns that without course correction, the country faces either a nuclear exchange or eventual capitulation within five years. The first hour features open lines with callers discussing NASA's proposal to move Earth's orbit, shadow people detection via strobe lights, and a Methodist minister's perspective on the Bible's origins.