US considered blasting alternate Suez Canal with nuclear bombs in '60s

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Israel canal plan

An annotated map of Egypt and Israel shows the placement of the existing Suez Canal and an approximation of plans for a canal through Israel that the US considered in the 1960s. Google Maps/Insider

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The US considered a proposal to use 520 nuclear bombs to carve out an alternative to the Suez Canal though Israel in the 1960s, according to a declassified memorandum.

The plan never came to fruition, but having an alternative waterway to the Suez Canal could have been useful in March 2021, when a cargo ship stuck in the narrow path was blocking one of the world's most vital shipping routes.

According to the 1963 memorandum, which was declassified in 1996, the plan would have relied on 520 nuclear bombs to carve out the waterway. The memo called for the "use of nuclear explosives for excavation of Dead Sea canal across the Negev desert."

The historian Alex Wellerstein called the plan a "modest proposal for the Suez Canal situation" on Twitter on March 24, 2021. 

The memorandum was from the US Department of Energy-backed Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.  

It suggested that an "interesting application of nuclear excavation would be a sea-level canal 160 miles long across Israel."

Conventional methods of excavation would be "prohibitively expensive," the memo said. "It appears that nuclear explosives could be profitably applied to this situation."

The memo added that "such a canal would be a strategically valuable alternative to the present Suez Canal and would probably contribute greatly to economic development."

As part of the pricing model, the memorandum estimated that four 2-megaton devices would be needed for every mile, which Wellerstein calculated as meaning "520 nukes" or 1.04 gigatons of explosives, he tweeted.

One possible route the memorandum proposed stretched across the Negev desert in Israel, connecting the Mediterranean to the Gulf of Aqaba, opening access to the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean. 

The laboratory noted that there were 130 miles of "virtually unpopulated desert wasteland, and are thus amenable to nuclear excavation methods." 

The "crude preliminary investigation" suggested that using bombs to create a canal through Israel "appears to be within the range of technological feasibility," the memo said.

But the memo conceived that one problem, which the authors had not taken into consideration, might be "political feasibility, as it is likely that the Arab countries surrounding Israel would strongly object to the construction of such a canal."

The memo came as the US Atomic Energy Commission was investigating using "peaceful nuclear explosions" to dig out useful infrastructure, Forbes reported in 2018. There were also plans to use this method to dig out a canal in Central America, Forbes reported.

But the PNE project remained experimental, after the US found that 27 experiments with PNEs heavily irradiated the landscape. The Atomic Energy Commission was also abolished in 1974. 

Meanwhile, the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory still exists. According to its website, it is dedicated to "ensuring the safety, security and reliability of the nation's nuclear deterrent."

The 1963 memorandum had also come less than a decade after the Suez crisis, a conflict for the control of the strategic waterway which was a defining event in the Cold War.

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Doctor Marianne Guenot is a science reporter based in the UK who writes about health, AI, nuclear sciences, archeology, solar and planetary sciences, space exploration, and the commercial and political impact of science and tech. As part of her work, she visited the world's first final repository for nuclear waste, probed the economy of the climate crisis, untangled the complex factors playing into how the food chain pushes a health and climate crisis, tracked mysterious uranium cubes from the Manhattan project back to a Germany first prototype nuclear reactor, examined the motivations behind a tech tycoon's disastrous exploration of the deep sea, and deciphered the intricate business case behind NASA's return to the moon.Marianne holds a master's and Ph.D. in biomedicine and a master's degree in science communication. She worked with Business Insider from 2021 to 2024. Before then, she edited news and opinion at The Lancet and Nature Medicine. There, she wrote editorials read by leading policymakers. Selected works include.