Visit At The Kremlin (D8)
"This," explained Colonel Nevskij to the Druggar of Bongo
Ghango - chief of a large country by River Ghango - "is the Buttons Room."
"I've seen a room like this in Washington," replied the big Chief,
smiling with satisfaction, "there too, you couldn't see a single button.
The only ones I can see here are, uh.. hehe, the ones on your uniform, Colonel!"
"Ahah, comrade Druggar likes joking. But the buttons are here,"
replied the Soviet, pointing at a large panel at the end of the room, "they
are behind that panel."
"A very large panel," observed the Chief, "much larger than
the one at the White House: I presume there are more buttons here."
"Of course, comrade Druggar: in America, only a bunch of opportunistic
capitalists has a saying in the big decisions, while here, uh, here is different:
the entire Soviet community, through its representatives, takes part in the
decision process of the Union."
"Any citizen could then come here and press the buttons?"
"Err, no, not exactly. If I tried to do it, the room would fill up with
narcotic gas, an alarm would set off, and... Well, no need to talk about that.
For each button there is a slot, into which a magnetic card must be inserted,
to activate the corresponding button. Therefore, no card, no button. To launch
the missiles, every button must be activated and pressed, and only a handful
of comrades holds the magnetic cards, which of course, each of them has a different
code from the others. The personalities holding the cards are the Secretary
of the Communist Party, the President of the Praesidium, the Chief of the KGB,
and five comrades, Heroes of the Soviet Union. The distribution - and here is
the originality of our system - is such that the Secretary of the Party holds
the complete set of codes, and so he can launch the missiles by himself; if
the Secretary is not available, the missiles can be launched by the President
of the Praesidium together with the Chief of the KGB, or by anyone of these
two, together with any two of the five Heroes of the Union. If - Marx forbid
- the Secretary, the President, and the Chief have all been victimised by an
imperialistic attack, our nuclear response can be initiated by any four of the
five Heroes of the Soviet Union; any four of them would be sufficient to have
the entire set of magnetic cards to activate the buttons."
"So, how many buttons are there?" asked the Chief.
What is the minimum number of buttons, and how are they distributed?
[Solution]
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