By David Davidian
The following fictional Red Cell scenario is intended to stimulate alternative thinking and challenge conventional wisdom, tying together events in operational fiction with national realities.
The goal was to ensure there was no chance of an accidental activation of Armenia’s Samson Option. After all, there is no way of reversing the effects of detonating Armenia’s Metsamor Nuclear Power Station (NPP) operating at full power. The Samson Option refers to the strategy whereby Israel would launch a massive nuclear retaliatory strike if the state itself was being overrun, just as the Biblical figure Samson is said to have pushed apart the pillars of a Philistine temple, bringing down the roof and killing himself and thousands of Philistines who had gathered to see him humiliated.
An Armenian Samson Option would be the absolute last-ditch effort to deter capturing and eliminating what remains of the Armenian homeland and its people. Suppose an enemy of Armenia plans on attacking Armenia, destroying or cleansing its population and what remains of its culture. In that case, it will be met with so much radioactive contamination and fallout that the enemy will surely think hard about destroying what remains of Armenia and capturing its land. What remains of Armenia and surrounding lands will be uninhabitable for centuries. Armenia’s enemies are just outside of Armenian borders, and the radioactive contamination carried by prevailing atmospheric conditions will wreak havoc on them to such an extent as to make the Chernobyl nuclear disaster look insignificant. Chernobyl was due to blatant human error. Armenia’s Samson Option will be planned for maximum effect.
Armenians either live on what remains of their once vast homeland, or nobody does. Two-thirds of Armenians in Asia Minor were exterminated in the 1915 Turkish genocide of the Armenians, with their lands carved up between Turkey and the Soviet Union. This genocide extended into lands outside of Turkish borders into Persia, Tsarist Armenia, Georgia, and Azerbaijan. Armenian history is tragic, but the Armenians have decided to write their own epilogue. Is this option ethical? It is just as ethical as the Cold War nuclear standoff with the United States and the Soviet Union armed with almost 60,000 nuclear warheads, enough to destroy all life on earth hundreds of times over. That was tolerated. Since the fall of the Soviet Union, wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, Libya, Serbia, and Ukraine have all been justified, with many hundreds of thousands of innocent people murdered. All these actions were planned, justified and tolerated. The Armenian Samson Option is no different than any of these post-WWII examples of acceptable human behavior. The Armenians were finally serious and made friends with horror.
After a diasporan conglomerate purchased Armenia’s Metsamor NPP from Rosatom and the international intrigue died down after the theft of its spent nuclear fuel, ‘The Division’ was still looking for the twenty-four spent fuel assemblies that were unaccounted for in the aftermath of this heist. The Division was the moniker for Armenia’s National Security Services (NSS) branch that dealt with integrating advanced technologies in the country and investigating high-technology crimes. A new level of state security clearance was added to the existing Confidential, Top Secret, Of Special Importance levels. This new level was called the Black Level (BL). Anybody with a BL clearance doesn’t have much of a life, has a high IQ, and is highly multi-disciplined. A BL cleared individual undergoes periodic reinvestigation and, counter to its ancient Soviet-era counterpart, is mandated to independently undertake the most critical operational decisions. It is no surprise that those at this security level are neither married nor have a family. Armenia’s NSS was transformed from a top-down organization to something horizontal with constant checks and balances.
Armenia’s geopolitical situation is one where it cannot afford to make any strategic mistakes. BL’s overarching function was the continued updating and implementation of Armenia’s Grand National Strategy. BL operatives enabled the implementation of Armenia’s Samson Option. BL was crucial in planting targeted individuals in the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), and its agents accompanied sanctioned IAEA inspections of the Metsamor NPP. Within BL’s charter was an active program to create and gather “kompromat” on foreign leaders of importance to Armenia’s national security.
Five issues had to be overcome to successfully design Armenia’s Samson Option, each with its challenges:
1) Secrecy.
2) Placing nano-thermite and a new experimental high explosive bis(1,2,4-oxadiazole)bis(methylene) dinitrate, or BOM for short, in strategic locations in Metsamor NPP’s infrastructure. This was the best performance per unit volume explosive available.
3) Ensuring there is no chance of a self-detonation (such as with nuclear weapons), being disabled or detonated by an enemy EMP class of weapon.
4) Addressing the diplomatic fallout upon the “denial of such capability.”
5) Purging, co-opting, or compromising spies.
The detonation was accomplished with three independent circuits, each with digital controllers that, even before power was applied (a combination of line and battery backup) to the networked detonators, each ran a diagnostic on the detonator side. A result code was sent to The Division headquarters and several undisclosed locations, each with different transport mechanisms. The diagnostics ran on an average of once every hour. In reality, they ran randomly to avoid prediction. This redundancy was to ensure that it would work in case of a planned or auto-enabled detonation, with the chance of an accidental detonation being effectively zero. Months of testing were performed in a mock reactor building, including developing techniques for insulating detonators circuits from high temperatures in many vital locations.
Of course, autonomous systems would take over the detonation of Metsomor given an incapacitated state apparatus. This capability used a combination of social media, radio and electronic monitoring, AI algorithms, and the combination of several layers of redundancies, each based on mutually exclusive information. Several redundant systems connected The Division’s headquarters with the Metsamor NPP, including a human to press the final button inside Metsamor if all else failed. The NSS BL had nearly unfettered access to Metsamor and performed periodic and unannounced security inspections due to the heist of spent fuel. It was the perfect cover to place explosives, detonation components, and their networking.
Explosive devices would be planted and disguised, while others physically placed at the last minute. Some devices would be robotically placed, especially those near Metsamor’s VVER-440-230’s reactor vessel. Metsamor’s spent fuel heist allowed Armenia’s NSS special access to the refueling cranes, pullies, and rails. Suicide drones (UAVs) would also be used to ensure maximum destruction of Metsamor NPP’s cooling infrastructure and reactor building as a backup mechanism if something prevented either manual or auto-destruction of Metsamor. Specific details of the interaction of these and other redundancies were not available at the time of this writing.
The map below details the extent of nuclear contamination that would result from an accident at the Metsamor NPP. Ironically, it comes from a Turkish study. The effects of the destruction of Metsamor would be many times more devastating due to its planned optimization.
Projected Trajectories of Radioactive Contamination from a Metsamor NPP Accident Over a Period of Thirty Years. The dot shows the location of the Metsamor NPP.