C.J. Chivers has an engrossing article in The New York Times Magazine about red mercury, a fictional weapon that many people believe is real and some have died trying to acquire. Chivers calls it "the gullible man's shortcut to a nuclear bomb."
Here's an excerpt:
Classic Cars America
To approach the subject of red mercury is to journey into a comic-book universe, a zone where the stubborn facts of science give way to unverifiable claims, fantasy and outright magic, and where villains pursuing the dark promise of a mysterious weapon could be rushing headlong to the end of the world. This is all the more remarkable given the broad agreement among nonproliferation specialists that red mercury, at least as a chemical compound with explosive pop, does not exist.
Legends of red mercury's powers began circulating by late in the Cold War. But their breakout period came after the Soviet Union's demise, when disarray and penury settled over the Kremlin's arms programs. As declining security fueled worries of illicit trafficking, red mercury embedded itself in the lexicon of the freewheeling black-market arms bazaar. Aided by credulous news reports, it became an arms trafficker's marvelous elixir, a substance that could do almost anything a shady client might need: guide missiles, shield objects from radar, equip a rogue underdog state or terrorist group with weapons rivaling those of a superpower. It was priced accordingly, at hundreds of thousands of dollars a kilogram. With time, the asking price would soar.
DC
The whole piece is worth your time; you should head over to the NYT site and read it. I'll quote just one more passage here—one where the legend of red mercury is found fusing itself to some older sorts of folklore:
Safi al-Safi, an unaffiliated rebel and small-time smuggler specializing in weapons, antiquities and forged documents, sat in an open-air cafe beside the Syrian-Turkish border. He was smoking scented tobacco from a water pipe while discussing the cross-border mercury trade. "Red mercury has a red color, and there is mercury that has the color of dark blood," he said. "And there is green mercury, which is used for sexual enhancement, and silver mercury is used for medical purposes. The most expensive type is called Blood of the Slaves, which is the darkest type. Magicians use it to summon jinni."
Start your day with Reason. Get a daily brief of the most important stories and trends every weekday morning when you subscribe to Reason Roundup.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com
posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary
period.
Subscribe
here to preserve your ability to comment. Your
Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the
digital
edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do
not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments
do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and
ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
I was pretty well read in the Cold War stories and spy novels. And after the fall of the Soviet Union, the big scare was nukes (particular from Ukraine) getting sold on the black market. But I have never even heard of this shit.
I can maybe understand why avg folks get a little uneasy about somebody building an atomic bomb from the internet (I get that most people don't understand anything about fissionable vs. fissile material, and maybe don't get how difficult it really is to get ahold of enough material). But "red mercury"?? Really? This stuff sounds almost as good as unobtanium.
'The most expensive type is called Blood of the Slaves, which is the darkest type. Magicians use it to summon jinni.'
Sweet, sounds like something from a steampunk/fantasy crossover game. Sign me up.
"The most expensive type is called Blood of the Slaves, which is the darkest type. Magicians use it to summon jinni."
No Blood of Orphans?
Many of the slaves ARE orphans.
This guy has clearly visited our underground factories.
So you're serious. People actually think this stuff exists? I thought you were talking about this stuff:
http://memory-alpha.wikia.com/wiki/Red_matter
I'm sure S.H.I.E.L.D will be right on this.
What's really scary is that regular mercury smeared on the aluminum of an airplane would cause it to rust and fall apart in a matter of hours.
http://www.popsci.com/scitech/.....g-aluminum
I was pretty well read in the Cold War stories and spy novels. And after the fall of the Soviet Union, the big scare was nukes (particular from Ukraine) getting sold on the black market. But I have never even heard of this shit.
I can maybe understand why avg folks get a little uneasy about somebody building an atomic bomb from the internet (I get that most people don't understand anything about fissionable vs. fissile material, and maybe don't get how difficult it really is to get ahold of enough material). But "red mercury"?? Really? This stuff sounds almost as good as unobtanium.
Wait - can you score me some unobtainium too?
I've got a line on some Adamantium if you're interested.
It must be slow news day.
'The most expensive type is called Blood of the Slaves, which is the darkest type. Magicians use it to summon jinni.'
Sweet, sounds like something from a steampunk/fantasy crossover game. Sign me up.
Tuco Salamanca would like a word on this whole mercury business.
It was priced accordingly, at hundreds of thousands of dollars a kilogram. With time, the asking price would soar.
Presumably, somebody was buying this.
Which poses the question; What's their email address? Because I have some funds I need to move out of the country . . . .