Icbm Escalation Repacketo -
The Department is proud to announce the finalization of the ICBM Escalation Repacketto. Following the realization that standard Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) lacks a certain je ne sais quoi, strategic analysts have devised a new protocol to ensure that when we escalate, we do so with maximum style and efficiency.
The "Repacketto" is not merely a launch sequence; it is a total re-imagining of the nuclear parcel delivery service. We are no longer simply "sending a message." We are sending a priority-signed, express-delivered diplomatic consequence.
Beijing is the wild card. China’s "No First Use" (NFU) policy is the antithesis of the Repacketo. However, as China expands its ICBM fleet to 1,500+ warheads, analysts fear they are building a "Repacketo reserve"—missiles that are technically NFU but operationally ambiguous. icbm escalation repacketo
Historically, an ICBM launch forces a radar operator to make a choice: "Is it nuclear?" Because you cannot tell a conventional warhead from a nuclear one until it detonates, the safe assumption is "yes, it is nuclear."
The Repacketo seeks to change that. The US tested this with the Prompt Global Strike concept. Imagine launching an ICBM from California to hit a terrorist camp in North Korea in 30 minutes. The missile flies the exact trajectory of a nuclear missile. The Department is proud to announce the finalization
The Risk: The target nation (Russia or China) cannot distinguish the conventional ICBM from a nuclear one. Their early warning systems will trigger a launch-on-warning protocol. By trying to "repack" the ICBM as conventional, you actually increase the chance of a nuclear response.
Historically, ICBM escalation has suffered from bureaucratic stagnation. The "Repacketto" doctrine streamlines this by treating every thermonuclear warhead as a high-priority data packet. We are no longer simply "sending a message
If a threat is detected, the Repacketto protocol initiates the "Three R’s":