Loren Pechtel wrote:It wouldn't be hard to make something virtually foolproof. Put a simple acid fuse that's activated by missile-level acceleration. The hard part would be making it destroy enough. Complete destruction would require firing the warhead and that obviously could malfunction.
You'd think so. But we've been building and firing fuzes out of cannons and dropping them from airplanes for well over a century. Nobody wants an accurately delivered bomb or shell to not go off on the target, and nobody wants kids getting blown up for the next 50 years by duds.
I would still very strongly urge you not to cross the fence of a military impact area. I know a guy who was towing a target into an impact area behind an M88 when they found an 8" artillery shell the hard way. Which lifted the 50 ton M88 into the air and blew the tracks and road wheels off one side.
The current US weapons still has a dud/non-self-destruction rate ranging from 4% to 0.2%. That's because one of the critical things you need ordinance to do is not explode while you are handling, or firing it, or transporting it. So there are numerous safety measures that prevent the weapon from arming until it senses whole series of events that should only be experienced when you deliver the weapon.
So the idea that you can magically have a 100% success rate in the future is akin to the idea that you can magically prevent everyone from committing crimes in the future.
Particularly when you consider that there were tens of thousands of entire pods containing missiles that were totally cold and in magazines that would have been moving at a noticeable percentage of the speed of light out of the system when the ship they were in tore apart. I really, really doubt that the self-destruction system of RMN warheads will go off if a forklift drops a missile inside a 200 km long space station.