'''Deterrence''' is a low-budget
1999 movie by director
Rod Lurie depicting fictional events about nuclear
brinksmanship. The movie marks the feature directorial debut of Lurie, who was previously a prominent film critic for
The New York Daily News,
Premiere Magazine,
Entertainment Weekly and Movieline, among others.
'Tagline:'
★ ''Every President has a defining moment. Walter Emerson is about to have his.''
Plot
The movie opens with a series of historical clips of various
United States Presidents making speeches before beginning the story. President Walter Emerson, newly elevated from the role of Vice-President by a sudden vacancy, is crossing the country on a campaign tour when a freak snowstorm traps him in remote
Colorado diner with a bunch of ordinary citizens.
Suddenly, word arrives that
Uday Hussein, leader of
Iraq, has invaded
Kuwait. With U.S. troops already committed to other countries, specifically
Korea, Emerson informs the world that unless Hussein orders an immediate retreat and surrenders himself, he will bomb Baghdad with a nuclear weapon, to the dismay of the customers in the diner. Hussein's UN envoy refuses to back down and cuts off the telephone talks, citing the facts that Emerson is an unelected leader and a
Jew; he also threatens to fire Iraq's black-market atomic bombs at several world locations including Emerson's own, near
NORAD.
It transpires that these weapons were purchased from
France. Despite this, the
French President appears to be
cavalier in making this revelation to Emerson and his entourage, while Emerson appears to be uncritical. The sites of the missile launchers include
Libya and
North Korea.
Emerson seems as eager as Hussein to begin a nuclear war. He orders a B-2 bomber to cross Iraq's borders despite the threats of the Iraqi ambassador that this would constitute an act of war. In retaliation the Iraqis launch 23 nuclear
ICBMs to various parts of the world, including
NORAD in
Colorado USA,
Australia,
France and other targets.
Nonetheless, President Emerson appears to show little emotion. Emerson orders the dropping of a 100
megaton bomb on
Baghdad in retaliation, leading to the complete destruction of the city. This order is slightly complicated by the diner's owner shooting the officer carrying the
launch codes.
Once news arrives of the first Iraqi bomb landing in
Athens, it transpires that all is not as it seems, because the bomb did not detonate. Neither did a device which landed in
Hiroshima. The majority of the other missiles were intercepted.
The scene cuts to a short time later where the President is addressing his country. He reveals that in order to prevent the Iraqi regime from obtaining their own active nuclear devices and delivery methods by other channels, the USA sold nuclear weapons via the French to Iraq and others in the late
1990s, whilst ensuring that the devices would never be able to function properly.
It appears that this was a tactic developed over several administrations to counteract the possibility that the US nuclear deterrent would be neutralized by other powers possessing nuclear weapons. This tactic will lead to a new phase of international relations showing that the USA had struck using nuclear weapons to protect their "...national security" and would do so again. This transfers the global
balance of power back towards the US and away from enemy countries and terrorists.
The President announces to his team that he will no longer be contesting the elections later in the year. As he leaves the diner, he advises one of a couple playing
chess to "
resign the
king". Another person refuses to acknowledge his presence, perhaps due to what she perceives as the meaningless loss of life by the bombing of Baghdad when he knew all along that the Iraqi missiles would be ineffective.
Cast
★ '
Kevin Pollak' as 'President Walter Emerson'
★ '
Sean Astin' as 'Ralph'
★ '
Timothy Hutton' as 'Marshall Thompson'
★ 'Sheryl Lee Ralph' as 'Gayle Redford'
★ 'Clotilde Courau' as 'Katie'
★ 'Badja Djola' as 'Harvey'
★ 'Mark Thompson' as 'Gerald Irvin'
★ 'Michael Mantell' as 'Taylor Woods'
★ 'Kathryn Morris' as 'Lizzie Woods'
★ 'Ryan Cutrona' as 'Agent Dexter'
★ 'Joe McCrackin' as 'Agent Williams'
★ 'Scoot Powell' as 'Noah'
★ 'J. Scott Shonka' as 'Captain Coddington'
★ '
Rigg Kennedy' as 'Howard'
External links
★
IMDb page for ''Deterrence''
★
official homepage