This book is a historical overview of the US nuclear weapons program with detailed narratives of nuclear weapons accidents, known as
Broken Arrows. In September 1980 at Launch Complex 374-7 near Damascus, Arkansas a dropped wrench socket ruptured the first stage fuel tank of a
Titan II missile. The resulting leak led to the 1980 Damascus Titan missile explosion which expelled a nine-megaton
W-53 nuclear warhead from the missile silo, though the warhead did not detonate. Schlosser uses the framework of the Damascus incident to build the seventy-year history of the development, maintenance and mismanagement of US and global nuclear arsenals. He covers the
Manhattan Project, the
Cold War, and the spread of nuclear capability worldwide. The book also describes other broken arrow incidents. In January 1961, a
B-52 Stratofortress broke apart mid-air near
Goldsboro, North Carolina, carrying two
Mark 39 nuclear bombs. One bomb's arming sequence was almost fully complete, while the other was recovered intact. In January 1966, another B-52 collided with a
KC-135 Stratotanker during mid-air refueling over
Palomares, Spain. The accident dropped four
B28 nuclear bombs, spreading plutonium across the countryside. Through these accounts, Schlosser highlights institutional cover-ups and examines recurring tensions between operational control and weapon reliability. ==Critical reception==