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Old 10-03-2008, 08:09 AM   #2
Antaletriangle
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Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: U.K.
Posts: 3,380
Default Re: BBC Releases Nuclear Attack Guidelines...For 1970

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7648042.stm
This can be interpreted in quite a disconcerting way-why suddenly this has been released?Is a nuke attack expected??The reason i say this is because it's on todays headlines page and why make headlines?.He points out that a recorded announcement by an unfamiliar voice, or one that had not been heard for some years might suggest that the BBC was no longer "still there".

"Indeed, if an unfamiliar voice repeats the same announcement hour after hour for 12 hours listeners may begin to suspect that they are listening to a machine set to switch on every hour (or even that it has got stuck) and that perhaps after all the BBC has been obliterated," he warned.

He advises that a more obvious "Voice of the BBC" might emerge during the days and weeks of crisis leading up to any attack.


BBC nuclear bomb script released

Scripts were written to reassure the public the BBC was "still there"
A script written by the BBC and the government to be broadcast in the event of a nuclear attack has been published.

The script, written in the 1970s and released by the National Archives, included instructions to "stay calm and stay in your own homes".

It said communications had been disrupted, and the number of casualties and extent of damage were not known.

Other papers reveal debates about how to ensure the person reading the script was authoritative and comforting.

The script was discussed from 1973 to 1975, during the Cold War.

'Voice of the BBC'

It was released along with letters between government departments and BBC executives.
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