The Heritage Foundation
Protecting America in the New Missile Age

Blog

Why Heritage Went Hollywood: An Update on ’33 Minutes’

July 20th, 2008

Jim Carafano filming on the beach in Los Angeles

In his job at The Heritage Foundation, Jim Carafano (left in photo) coordinates research on national security and foreign policy. Making movies isn’t his thing. But last week he flew to Los Angeles to do just that. Here’s a report he filed from 30,000 feet:

It’s my task to make sure “33 Minutes” is technically accurate and “fair and balanced,” but I also go stuck with a cameo roll. It’s my job to explain the impact of a nuclear weapon delivered by a ballistic missile.

We started filming in New York to demonstrate what would happen in a missile attack on the Big Apple. In Los Angeles, I talked about what would happen if a nuclear weapon, instead of being detonated over a city, exploded at a very high-altitude above the center of the United States. The short answer is we would all be victims, New York, Los Angeles, and everyone across the 3,000 miles of the United States.

We would all be victims of EMP — Electromagnetic Pulse, a force so powerful it would fry every electronic device in America from the electrical grid to iPods.

While in Southern California, the filming took me to the home of Dr. Bill Graham, former chairman of the Commission to Assess the Threat to the United States from Electromagnetic Pulse Attack and the former national science adviser to President Ronald Reagan. Graham was just in Washington last week testifying to Congress about the EMP threat.

The taping in Los Angeles couldn’t be more timely with all the news about Iranian “saber-rattling” missile tests, negotiations with North Korea over nuke inspections, and riveting testimony on the Hill over the threat nuclear weapon generated EMP. They serve to remind us how important it is to tell this story.