It is a really stupid plan for many reasons.
crazy to think that the self destruct mechanism would be to initiate a nuclear explosion.
They try hard to cement that idea(propaganda) in the public's mind, but nuclear weapons are designed with safety mechanisms to prevent detonation. Those mechanisms are susceptible to failure, however unlikely.
In July 1956, a plane crashed in Suffolk, nearly detonating an atomic bomb.
North Carolina in January 1961,a B-52 bomber accidentally dropped two Mark 39 hydrogen bombs over Goldsboro,"by the slightest margin of chance, literally the failure of two wires to cross, a nuclear explosion was averted". -Robert McNamara
1958: Warheads of all Mark 28 bombs are replaced after tests determine that an accident could trigger a nuclear detonation.
1970: The head of Sandia National Laboratory's nuclear safety department briefs the Atomic Energy Commission on how supposedly "failsafe" nukes can detonate under extreme heat and stress. The AEC takes no action.
1974: In a letter to a top AEC official, a Sandia VP warns that many nukes could accidentally detonate during a fire or crash. The AEC takes no action.
September 1980: A socket dropped by a maintenance worker punctures a Titan II missile in Arkansas. Its highly toxic fuel explodes, killing one person, injuring 21, and hurling the warhead 200 yards into a roadside ditch. That same month, a safety expert at the Sandia lab demonstrates to the Air Force inspector general how a Mark 28 nuclear bomb could detonate in a plane crash. The IG commissions a study.
1990: Advances in computing bring about "a realization that unintended nuclear detonations present a greater risk than previously estimated," notes a House Armed Services Committee report.
2003: Half of the Air Force units responsible for nuclear weapons fail their safety inspections, despite a three-day advance warning.
February 2010: A nuclear munitions crew at Kirtland Air Force Base is decertified for failing safety inspections.
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