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The strange tale of the Norden bombsight

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    Thank you.
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    It's a real pleasure to be here.
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    I last did a TEDTalk
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    I think about seven years ago or so.
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    I talked about spaghetti sauce.
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    And so many people, I guess, watch those videos.
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    People have been coming up to me ever since
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    to ask me questions about spaghetti sauce,
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    which is a wonderful thing in the short term --
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    (Laughter)
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    but it's proven to be less than ideal
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    over seven years.
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    And so I though I would come
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    and try and put spaghetti sauce behind me.
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    (Laughter)
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    The theme of this morning's session is Things We Make.
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    And so I thought I would tell a story
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    about someone
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    who made one of the most precious objects
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    of his era.
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    And the man's name is Carl Norden.
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    Carl Norden was born in 1880.
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    And he was Swiss.
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    And of course, the Swiss can be divided
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    into two general categories:
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    those who make small, exquisite,
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    expensive objects
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    and those who handle the money
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    of those who buy small, exquisite,
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    expensive objects.
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    And Carl Norden is very firmly in the former camp.
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    He's an engineer.
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    He goes to the Federal Polytech in Zurich.
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    In fact, one of his classmates is a young man named Lenin
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    who would go on
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    to break small, expensive, exquisite objects.
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    And he's a Swiss engineer, Carl.
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    And I mean that in its fullest sense of the word.
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    He wears three-piece suits;
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    and he has a very, very small, important mustache;
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    and he is domineering
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    and narcissistic
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    and driven
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    and has an extraordinary ego;
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    and he works 16-hour days;
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    and he has very strong feelings about alternating current;
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    and he feels like a suntan is a sign of moral weakness;
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    and he drinks lots of coffee;
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    and he does his best work
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    sitting in his mother's kitchen in Zurich for hours
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    in complete silence
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    with nothing but a slide rule.
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    In any case,
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    Carl Norden emigrates to the United States
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    just before the First World War
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    and sets up shop on Lafayette Street
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    in downtown Manhattan.
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    And he becomes obsessed with the question
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    of how to drop bombs from an airplane.
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    Now if you think about it,
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    in the age before GPS and radar,
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    that was obviously a really difficult problem.
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    It's a complicated physics problem.
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    You've got a plane that's thousands of feet up in the air,
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    going at hundreds of miles an hour,
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    and you're trying to drop an object, a bomb,
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    towards some stationary target
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    in the face of all kinds of winds and cloud cover
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    and all kinds of other impediments.
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    And all sorts of people,
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    moving up to the First World War and between the wars,
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    tried to solve this problem,
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    and nearly everybody came up short.
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    The bombsights that were available
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    were incredibly crude.
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    But Carl Norden is really the one who cracks the code.
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    And he comes up with this incredibly complicated device.
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    It weighs about 50 lbs.
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    It's called the Norden Mark 15 bombsight.
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    And it has all kinds of levers and ball-bearings
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    and gadgets and gauges.
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    And he makes this complicated thing.
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    And what he allows people to do
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    is he makes the bombardier take this particular object,
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    visually sight the target,
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    because they're in the Plexiglas cone of the bomber,
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    and then they plug in the altitude of the plane,
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    the speed of the plane, the speed of the wind
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    and the coordinates
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    of the target.
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    And the bombsight will tell him when to drop the bomb.
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    And as Norden famously says,
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    "Before that bombsight came along,
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    bombs would routinely miss their target
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    by a mile or more."
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    But he said, with the Mark 15 Norden bombsight,
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    he could drop a bomb into a pickle barrel
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    at 20,000 ft.
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    Now I cannot tell you
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    how incredibly excited
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    the U.S. military was
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    by the news of the Norden bombsight.
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    It was like manna from heaven.
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    Here was an army
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    that had just had experience in the First World War,
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    where millions of men
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    fought each other in the trenches,
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    getting nowhere, making no progress,
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    and here someone had come up with a device
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    that allowed them to fly up in the skies
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    high above enemy territory
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    and destroy whatever they wanted
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    with pinpoint accuracy.
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    And the U.S. military
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    spends 1.5 billion dollars --
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    billion dollars in 1940 dollars --
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    developing the Norden bombsight.
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    And to put that in perspective,
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    the total cost of the Manhattan project
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    was three billion dollars.
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    Half as much money was spent on this Norden bombsight
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    as was spent on the most famous military-industrial project
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    of the modern era.
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    And there were people, strategists, within the U.S. military
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    who genuinely thought that this single device
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    was going to spell the difference
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    between defeat and victory
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    when it came to the battle against the Nazis
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    and against the Japanese.
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    And for Norden as well,
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    this device had incredible moral importance,
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    because Norden was a committed Christian.
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    In fact, he would always get upset
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    when people referred to the bombsight as his invention,
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    because in his eyes,
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    only God could invent things.
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    He was simply
    the instrument of God's will.
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    And what was God's will?
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    Well God's will was that the amount of suffering in any kind of war
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    be reduced to as small an amount as possible.
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    And what did the Norden bombsight do?
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    Well it allowed you to do that.
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    It allowed you to bomb only those things
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    that you absolutely needed and wanted to bomb.
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    So in the years leading up to the Second World War,
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    the U.S. military buys 90,000
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    of these Norden bombsights
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    at a cost of $14,000 each --
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    again, in 1940 dollars, that's a lot of money.
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    And they trained 50,000 bombardiers on how to use them --
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    long extensive, months-long training sessions --
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    because these things are essentially analog computers;
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    they're not easy to use.
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    And they make everyone of those bombardiers take an oath,
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    to swear that if they're ever captured,
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    they will not divulge a single detail
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    of this particular device to the enemy,
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    because it's imperative the enemy not get their hands
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    on this absolutely essential piece of technology.
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    And whenever the Norden bombsight is taken onto a plane,
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    it's escorted there by a series of armed guards.
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    And it's carried in a box with a canvas shroud over it.
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    And the box is handcuffed to one of the guards.
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    It's never allowed to be photographed.
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    And there's a little incendiary device inside of it,
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    so that, if the plane ever crashes, it will be destroyed
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    and there's no way the enemy can ever get their hands on it.
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    The Norden bombsight
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    is the Holy Grail.
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    So what happens during the Second World War?
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    Well, it turns out it's not the Holy Grail.
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    In practice, the Norden bombsight
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    can drop a bomb into a pickle barrel at 20,000 ft.,
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    but that's under perfect conditions.
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    And of course, in wartime,
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    conditions aren't perfect.
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    First of all, it's really hard to use -- really hard to use.
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    And not all of the people
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    who are of those 50,000 men who are bombardiers
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    have the ability to properly program an analog computer.
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    Secondly, it breaks down a lot.
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    It's full of all kinds of gyroscopes and pulleys
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    and gadgets and ball-bearings,
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    and they don't work as well as they ought to
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    in the heat of battle.
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    Thirdly, when Norden was making his calculations,
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    he assumed that a plane would be flying
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    at a relatively slow speed at low altitudes.
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    Well in a real war, you can't do that;
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    you'll get shot down.
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    So they started flying them at high altitudes at incredibly high speeds.
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    And the Norden bombsight doesn't work as well
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    under those conditions.
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    But most of all,
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    the Norden bombsight required the bombardier
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    to make visual contact with the target.
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    But of course, what happens in real life?
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    There are clouds, right.
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    It needs cloudless sky to be really accurate.
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    Well how many cloudless skies
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    do you think there were above Central Europe
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    between 1940 and 1945?
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    Not a lot.
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    And then to give you a sense
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    of just how inaccurate the Norden bombsight was,
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    there was a famous case in 1944
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    where the Allies bombed a chemical plant in Leuna, Germany.
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    And the chemical plant comprised
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    757 acres.
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    And over the course of 22 bombing missions,
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    the Allies dropped 85,000 bombs
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    on this 757 acre chemical plant,
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    using the Norden bombsight.
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    Well what percentage of those bombs
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    do you think actually landed
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    inside the 700-acre perimeter of the plant?
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    10 percent. 10 percent.
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    And of those 10 percent that landed,
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    16 percent didn't even go off; they were duds.
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    The Leuna chemical plant,
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    after one of the most extensive bombings in the history of the war,
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    was up and running within weeks.
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    And by the way, all those precautions
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    to keep the Norden bombsight out of the hands of the Nazis?
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    Well it turns out
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    that Carl Norden, as a proper Swiss,
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    was very enamored of German engineers.
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    So in the 1930s, he hired a whole bunch of them,
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    including a man named Hermann Long
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    who, in 1938,
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    gave a complete set of the plans for the Norden bombsight to the Nazis.
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    So they had their own Norden bombsight throughout the entire war --
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    which also, by the way, didn't work very well.
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    (Laughter)
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    So why do we talk about the Norden bombsight?
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    Well because we live in an age
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    where there are lots and lots
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    of Norden bombsights.
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    We live in a time where there are all kinds
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    of really, really smart people
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    running around, saying that they've invented gadgets
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    that will forever change our world.
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    They've invented websites that will allow people to be free.
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    They've invented some kind of this thing, or this thing, or this thing
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    that will make our world forever better.
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    If you go into the military,
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    you'll find lots of Carl Nordens as well.
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    If you go to the Pentagon, they will say,
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    "You know what, now we really can
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    put a bomb inside a pickle barrel
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    at 20,000 ft."
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    And you know what, it's true; they actually can do that now.
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    But we need to be very clear
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    about how little that means.
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    In the Iraq War, at the beginning of the first Iraq War,
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    the U.S. military, the air force,
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    sent two squadrons of F-15E Fighter Eagles
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    to the Iraqi desert
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    equipped with these five million dollar cameras
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    that allowed them to see the entire desert floor.
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    And their mission was to find and to destroy --
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    remember the Scud missile launchers,
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    those surface-to-air missiles
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    that the Iraqis were launching at the Israelis?
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    The mission of the two squadrons
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    was to get rid of all the Scud missile launchers.
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    And so they flew missions day and night,
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    and they dropped thousands of bombs,
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    and they fired thousands of missiles
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    in an attempt to get rid of this particular scourge.
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    And after the war was over, there was an audit done --
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    as the army always does, the air force always does --
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    and they asked the question:
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    how many Scuds did we actually destroy?
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    You know what the answer was?
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    Zero, not a single one.
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    Now why is that?
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    Is it because their weapons weren't accurate?
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    Oh no, they were brilliantly accurate.
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    They could have destroyed this little thing right here
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    from 25,000 ft.
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    The issue was they didn't know where the Scud launchers were.
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    The problem with bombs and pickle barrels
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    is not getting the bomb inside the pickle barrel,
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    it's knowing how to find the pickle barrel.
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    That's always been the harder problem
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    when it comes to fighting wars.
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    Or take the battle in Afghanistan.
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    What is the signature weapon
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    of the CIA's war in Northwest Pakistan?
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    It's the drone. What is the drone?
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    Well it is the grandson of the Norden Mark 15 bombsight.
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    It is this weapon of devastating accuracy and precision.
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    And over the course of the last six years
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    in Northwest Pakistan,
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    the CIA has flown hundreds of drone missiles,
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    and it's used those drones
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    to kill 2,000 suspected
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    Pakistani and Taliban militants.
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    Now what is the accuracy of those drones?
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    Well it's extraordinary.
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    We think we're now at 95 percent accuracy
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    when it comes to drone strikes.
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    95 percent of the people we kill need to be killed, right?
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    That is one of the most extraordinary records
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    in the history of modern warfare.
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    But do you know what the crucial thing is?
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    In that exact same period
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    that we've been using these drones
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    with devastating accuracy,
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    the number of attacks, of suicide attacks and terrorist attacks,
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    against American forces in Afghanistan
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    has increased tenfold.
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    As we have gotten more and more efficient
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    in killing them,
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    they have become angrier and angrier
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    and more and more motivated to kill us.
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    I have not described to you a success story.
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    I've described to you
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    the opposite of a success story.
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    And this is the problem
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    with our infatuation with the things we make.
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    We think the things we make can solve our problems,
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    but our problems are much more complex than that.
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    The issue isn't the accuracy of the bombs you have,
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    it's how you use the bombs you have,
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    and more importantly,
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    whether you ought to use bombs at all.
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    There's a postscript
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    to the Norden story
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    of Carl Norden and his fabulous bombsight.
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    And that is, on August 6th, 1945,
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    a B-29 bomber called the Enola Gay
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    flew over Japan
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    and, using a Norden bombsight,
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    dropped a very large thermonuclear device
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    on the city of Hiroshima.
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    And as was typical with the Norden bombsight,
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    the bomb actually missed its target by 800 ft.
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    But of course, it didn't matter.
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    And that's the greatest irony of all
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    when it comes to the Norden bombsight.
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    the air force's 1.5 billion dollar bombsight
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    was used to drop its three billion dollar bomb,
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    which didn't need a bombsight at all.
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    Meanwhile, back in New York,
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    no one told Carl Norden
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    that his bombsight was used over Hiroshima.
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    He was a committed Christian.
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    He thought he had designed something
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    that would reduce the toll of suffering in war.
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    It would have broken his heart.
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    (Applause)
Title:
The strange tale of the Norden bombsight
Speaker:
Malcolm Gladwell
Description:

Master storyteller Malcolm Gladwell tells the tale of the Norden bombsight, a groundbreaking piece of World War II technology with a deeply unexpected result.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
14:40

English subtitles

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