In a real nuclear exchange, the opening shots would be aimed less at people than at power: command centers, radar networks, and the ICBM silos stretching across Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska, and the Dakotas. These remote sites form the backbone of U.S. deterrence—and the heart of its greatest vulnerability. Models published in scientific journals and refined in 2024 show that these missile fields, and the states downwind of them, would endure the most intense radiation. Iowa, Minnesota, and parts of the central United States could be blanketed in fallout, even far from any direct hit.
Yet distance offers only an illusion of safety. The East Coast and much of the South might escape the worst contamination, but not the cascading chaos: poisoned crops, disrupted supply chains, failing infrastructure, and slow-building health crises. Experts are blunt—no state is truly safe. The only real protection is preventing such a war from ever beginning.

