I'd assume, though it is an assumption, that if Zilwicki hacked enough access to disable the location tracker that he'd also have enough access to disable a nuke or at least it's trigger.Bluesqueak wrote:Yes, he could have told them to put them back. Would they have listened to him?
It's made really, really clear in the book that Zilwicki wasn't in charge of those kids. He couldn't give them orders. If he had been able to give them orders, the orders would have been 'don't use the nukes'. That's in the book.
Another point would be that 'put them back where you got them' risks one of the kids getting caught, with a nuke (I was putting it back, officer, honest). They'd be interrogated. Zilwicki and Cachat would get caught. Manticore and Haven would never have found out about Mesa, billions would have died and the MAlign would have won.
Would it have been worth the risk?
Though disabling them and refusing to fix it sounds like a wonderful way of destroying relations with the Seccies and possibly pissing them off enough to finger you to Mesan security. (And disabling them but not telling the Seccies delays that discovery, but should make them more angry as it forces them to take the additional risk of placing the nukes without any benifit. And of course then you'd have to come with with a different plan or device to cover your escape - without any of the groups involvement as they can't know than plan A (the nukes) is defunct.
Still, morally that might have been the right thing to do. Heck simply killing all those people willing to use nukes on civilian targets might have been the moral thing to do.
But what do you do then?