The uncomfortable truth is that America’s “safest” places are defined not by beauty or comfort, but by whether they matter to a missile planner studying a map in the dark. Analysts point to vast stretches of the East Coast and parts of the Midwest that, while densely populated, lack nearby nuclear silos or critical launch facilities. Maine’s forests, Vermont’s hills, and even crowded coastal states like New Jersey or Florida may face fewer immediate strikes than the lonely plains of the Upper Midwest.By contrast, the quiet fields of Montana, Wyoming, the Dakotas, Nebraska, Colorado, Iowa and Minnesota sit near the hardened silos designed to unleash retaliation. In a true nuclear exchange, those silos become bullseyes. Yet experts warn that any sense of safety is fragile, even illusory. With thousands of warheads in existence and cities, ports and bases on every coast, the harsh conclusion remains: some places may be hit later, but nowhere is truly beyond the reach of war.
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