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Description
Deep in the Arctic darkness, the world's most powerful military desperately scrambled to hide the radioactive remnants of its own paranoid arrogance. In the darkest, most desolate stretches of the Cold War, the United States maintained a relentless airborne alert, keeping nuclear-armed B-52 bombers continuously in the sky. But in 1968, the unthinkable happened. A cabin fire forced a crew to abandon their aircraft over Greenland, sending four thermonuclear weapons crashing into the frozen, unforgiving ice of North Star Bay.The resulting catastrophic impact shattered the bombs and exposed a lethal combination of military arrogance and geopolitical fragility. The covert operation to retrieve the radioactive debris from the fractured sea ice revealed the terrifying lack of preparation for a "Broken Arrow" scenario. The incident severely strained diplomatic relations with Denmark and highlighted the insane, apocalyptic risks of continuous nuclear deterrence.This meticulously researched book uncovers the chilling details of the Thule recovery operation. It explores the extreme logistical nightmare of working in absolute darkness and sub-zero temperatures, the long-term health consequences for the cleanup crews, and the subsequent desperate political cover-up.Grasp the precarious reality of the nuclear age. Analyze the terrifying margins of error inherent in complex military operations, respect the devastating environmental cost of geopolitical paranoia, and recognize how close the world came to accidental annihilation.



