The 2020 Commission Report on the North Korean Nuclear Attacks Against the United States

2020 Commission Report on the North Korean Nuclear Attacks Against the United States
Author Jeffrey Lewis
Publisher Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Publication date
2018
ISBN 9781328573919

The 2020 Commission Report on the North Korean Nuclear Attacks Against the United States is a speculative fiction novel by Jeffrey Lewis describing a hypothetical nuclear attack by North Korea against the United States of America, published by Mariner Books. It is written in the style of a government report written in the aftermath of the conflict, in 2023, and uses many real-world figures.

Plot

The conflict begins unintentionally, with a North Korean KN-06 unit in Ongjin, near the Korean Demilitarized Zone shooting down a civilian Air Busan Airbus A320, which was flying off-course and without a transponder due to a brief loss of power in the cockpit, having mistaken it for a U.S. stealth aircraft. South Korean President Moon Jae-in orders a retaliatory attack on North Korea without the approval of the United States, firing six missiles at the Headquarters of the Korean People's Army Air and Anti-Air Force near Pyongyang and a residence of Kim Jong-un.

Following the missile attack, North Korea's leadership, lacking communications infrastructure, misinterprets Tweets from U.S. President Donald Trump so as to believe that a decapitation strike is in-progress.[1] North Korea launches nuclear missiles in the hopes of staving off further U.S.-South Korean attacks, with nuclear bombs detonating over Seoul, Busan, Pyeongtaek and Daegu in South Korea and Tokyo and Yokohama in Japan. Missiles launched at Guam and Okinawa fail to reach their targets. Negotiations in New York City fail to resolve the conflict.

The United States launches a retaliatory conventional strike on North Korea, but fail to locate the vehicle-mobile intercontinental ballistic missiles in North Korea's arsenal. North Korea proceeds to launch 13 nuclear-tipped missiles at the United States. The Ground-Based Interceptors at Fort Greely fail to intercept the incoming ICBMs, which detonate over Honolulu, Hawaii, Jupiter, Florida, Arlington County, Virginia, and Manhattan, New York. President Trump evacuates from Mar-a-Lago aboard Air Force One, narrowly avoiding the nuclear explosion. Kim Jong-un subsequently commits suicide at a bunker in Myohyangsan, and Mike Pence succeeds Trump as President of the United States.

Characters

American

North Korean

  • Kim Jong-un - The leader of North Korea. Kim misinterprets the South Korean retaliatory attack and Donald Trump's tweets as the beginning of a general war, so he launches an initial strike in the hopes of preventing further attacks on North Korea. When that fails, Kim launching his remaining nuclear arsenal. He commits suicide when U.S. and South Korean special forces attack his bunker.
  • Ja Song-nam - North Korea's Permanent representative to the United Nations. During the crisis, Ja is unable to contact North Korea's leadership due to damage to the telecommunications grid. He and the rest of the North Korean Mission to the United Nations defects in Haskell, New Jersey.

South Korean

Development

Lewis drew inspiration from John Hersey's reporting on the atomic bombing of Hiroshima when depicting the casualties of nuclear war.[4][5]

Reception

The book received positive reviews, with Julian Borger of The Guardian comparing it to nuclear war stories Dr. Strangelove and On the Beach.[6] The Economist observed that "The terrifying thing about “The 2020 Commission Report” is how much of it is real".[7] The Los Angeles Review of Books described it as "the gut punch everyone needs".[4]

References

  1. Williams, John (August 5, 2018). "Tell Us 5 Things About Your Book: Imagining the Unimaginable in a Nuclear-War Novel". The New York Times.
  2. Lewis, Jeffrey. "How Trump Could Trigger Armageddon With a Tweet". Wired. Archived from the original on October 13, 2018.
  3. Burleigh, Michael (July 26, 2018). "Everyone's going nuclear in this fictional future". Evening Standard.
  4. 1 2 Chan, Melissa (September 23, 2018). "The Terrifying Truth in Jeffrey Lewis's Novel on Nuclear War". Los Angeles Review of Books.
  5. Johnson, Jesse (August 31, 2018). "Speculative fiction or prophetic prose? Novel imagines a U.S.-North Korea nuclear conflict". The Japan Times.
  6. Borger, Julian (August 6, 2018). "The 2020 Commission Report on the North Korean Nuclear Attacks Against the United States by Jeffrey Lewis – review". The Guardian.
  7. "Imagining nuclear war with North Korea". The Economist. August 9, 2018. Archived from the original on October 13, 2018.
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