
As global tensions rise, experts are quietly assessing what a nuclear strike on U.S. soil might actually look like. Their analysis is stark and strategic.
The first missiles would target military installations, command centers, and critical infrastructure. These are the primary objectives in any initial exchange.
That means nearby cities and states would face the greatest danger in the opening hours. Proximity to these targets determines the immediate risk.
Some regions, however, may be less exposed in the first wave. Analysts point to parts of the East Coast and Midwest as geographically farther from key strategic sites.
States like Maine, Vermont, and New Hampshire could be relatively safer, at least initially. They lack the dense concentration of high-value military targets found elsewhere.
None of these places would be truly safe in a full-scale nuclear war. The devastation would eventually reach far beyond the initial blast zones.
Still, for those quietly planning for the unthinkable, geography matters. It could mean the difference between immediate annihilation and a fragile chance to survive.