Launch codes aren’t to block China from authorizing a launch. They’re there to keep someone in the military from doing a launch without authorization. China is probably one of the parties who least wants said codes leaking.
If you have a couple hundred people who can start a nuclear war, that war becomes a whole lot more likely than if only one can.
From China’s standpoint, the next best number of people who can launch against them after 0 is 1.
The British used bicycle keys on their nuclear bombs.
Though you could argue – since there was a point in time prior to PALs where there was no authorization system at all – that a very functionally-similar state existed prior to the implementation of those codes.
If only hacking was as easy as guessing the most obvious of passwords like in War Games and in Hackers. 😅
Or buying a new Amiga to run a dictionary attack like 23
Well considering that the US nuclear launch codes were just zeros for a while, it just might be realistic.
Tbf it still has the best security there is, air gap security
Unless someone sends the suit with the codes in it to the Chinese dry cleaners…again…and again.
Launch codes aren’t to block China from authorizing a launch. They’re there to keep someone in the military from doing a launch without authorization. China is probably one of the parties who least wants said codes leaking.
If you have a couple hundred people who can start a nuclear war, that war becomes a whole lot more likely than if only one can.
From China’s standpoint, the next best number of people who can launch against them after 0 is 1.
The British used bicycle keys on their nuclear bombs.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/7097101.stm
As people learned around that time, a really great way to bypass bicycle locks is with a ballpoint pen.
https://www.wired.com/2004/09/twist-a-pen-open-a-lock/
That was aimed more at keeping honest people honest.
I’ve seen some statements that this was apocryphal.
https://foreignpolicy.com/2014/01/21/air-force-swears-our-nuke-launch-code-was-never-00000000/
Though you could argue – since there was a point in time prior to PALs where there was no authorization system at all – that a very functionally-similar state existed prior to the implementation of those codes.