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The "Nuclear Football," otherwise known as the '''President's Emergency Satchel''', is a specially-outfitted, black-colored Briefcase used by the President Of The United States to authorize the use of Nuclear Weapons . Adopted to permit the President to make a nuclear attack order while away from fixed command centers, such as the White House Situation Room , it functions as a mobile node in the strategic defense system of the United States. While exact details about the Football are highly classified, several sources have provided information regarding the bag, its contents, and operation. CONTENTS It is presumed to hold a secure SATCOM radio and handset for communication, the daily nuclear launch codes (known as the "Gold Codes"), and any other materials that the President would rely on should a decision to use nuclear weapons be made. These include summaries of various pre-determined attack options as well as plans to handle the national emergency that a nuclear attack, or possible nuclear retaliation, would provoke. These materials are generated by, respectively, the National Security Agency (Gold Codes), the United States Strategic Command (attack options), and the United States National Security Council (emergency plans). The case itself is a metallic, possibly bullet-proof, modified Zero-Halliburton briefcase which is carried inside a leather "jacket". The entire package weights approximately 40 pounds (18 kg). A small antenna, presumably for the SATCOM radio, protrudes from the bag near the handle. Contrary to popular belief, the Football is not handcuffed to its carrier. Rather, a black cable is employed that loops around the handle of the bag and the wrist of the aide. OPERATION According to experts, in the event the President elects to deploy nuclear arms, the commander-in-chief would be taken aside, where the aide would open the briefcase. At that point, the aide and the President would review the attack options and decide upon a particular plan, whether that be a single Cruise Missile , or a large-scale ICBM launch. Next, using the SATCOM radio, the aide would make contact with the National Military Command Center or in a post first-strike situation, an airborne command post plane (likely a Boeing E-4B ). Before the order is processed by the military, the President must positively identify himself using a special code issued to him on a plastic card, nicknamed the biscuit. Once all the codes have been verified, the military will issue attack orders to the proper units. The Football is carried by one of the rotating Presidential Military Aides (one from each of the five service branches), who occasionally is physically attached to the Briefcase . This person is a Commissioned Officer in the U.S. Military , pay-grade O-4 or above, who has undergone the nation's most rigorous Background Check ( Yankee White ). These officers, who are armed, are required to keep the Football within ready access of the President at all times. Consequently, an aide, Football in hand, is always either standing/walking near the President or riding in Air Force One/Marine One/Motorcade with him. TRIVIA It has been suggested that the nickname Football was derived from an attack plan codenamed Drop-Kick. Several presidents have had politically embarrassing episodes where the Football was left behind at an unsecure location. This has happened to Presidents on April 24 , 1999 {Link without Title} . In none of these cases was the integrity of the football breached. It has been speculated that the emergency plans in the Football were consulted by President Bush aboard Air Force One on 11 September 2001 . The Football played a major role in the plot of the fourth season of the Television Program 24 . The Football was one of the key plot points in the video game, Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Advanced Warfighter . In this work of Fiction , a ''General Carlos Ontiveros'' stole it from the American president while he was in Mexico City. A fictional Captain ''Scott Mitchell'' shot Ontiveros and captured the football back. The Football features heavily in the novel ''Area 7'', by Matthew Reilly . REFERENCES
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