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- Yes, the Soviet Union did build a Doomsday Machine during the Cold War. Here's how it worked, and here's how they built it. In the 1980s, the Soviets built a Doomsday Machine -- and it's still active.
www.wired.com/2009/09/the-soviets-built-a-doomsday-machine-its-still-working/
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Sep 26, 2009 · What few knew until recently is that in 1984, the Soviet Union actually did build a doomsday machine of sorts. They called it Perimeter. It's discussed in not one but two books released this...
In Strangelove, the doomsday machine was a Soviet system that automatically detonated some 50 cobalt-jacketed hydrogen bombs pre-positioned around the planet if the doomsday system’s sensors...
Sep 22, 2009 · Yes, the Soviet Union did build a Doomsday Machine during the Cold War. Here's how it worked, and here's how they built it. In the 1980s, the Soviets built a Doomsday Machine -- and it's...
Jan 17, 2014 · The most unlikely and absurd plot element in “Strangelove” is the existence of a Soviet “Doomsday Machine.” The device would trigger itself, automatically, if the Soviet Union were ...
Apr 11, 2017 · The doomsday machine provides for a massive salvo of these forces without any participation by local crews. Weapons commanders in the field may be completely bypassed.
Sep 21, 2009 · According to both Yarynich and Zheleznyakov, Perimeter was never meant as a traditional doomsday machine. The Soviets had taken game theory one step further than Kubrick, Szilard,...
Sep 7, 2007 · The Soviet doomsday device — a giant cobalt bomb rigged to explode were Russia ever nuked, rendering the earth’s surface uninhabitable — gained fictional fame in Dr. Strangelove.