Why analysts talk about “strategic locations”
When experts discuss potential impacts of a large-scale conflict, they’re not predicting a target list. They’re identifying types of infrastructure that are central to national defense. These typically fall into a few categories:
- Nuclear deterrent systems (missile fields, submarines, bomber bases)
- Command and control centers (decision-making and coordination hubs)
- Naval and air force power projection bases
- Defense industry and logistics networks
- Space and cyber infrastructure
The reason these come up is simple: in theory, disrupting them could weaken a country’s ability to respond or coordinate.
The commonly mentioned states—what actually makes them significant
Instead of thinking of these as “targets,” it’s more accurate to see them as examples of where key systems are located:
- North Dakota, Montana, Wyoming
These states are associated with land-based intercontinental ballistic missile systems—part of the U.S. nuclear deterrent. Their importance comes from deterrence, not vulnerability. The whole point of these systems is to make conflict less likely. - California
A mix of major naval bases, ports, and technology sectors. Its significance lies in logistics, naval operations, and innovation, not just military presence. - Virginia
Contains a dense concentration of military leadership and naval infrastructure, including major command structures. Its role is about coordination and command, not just physical assets. - Washington (state)
Linked to submarine-based deterrence and aerospace industries. This reflects the sea-based leg of nuclear deterrence and advanced manufacturing. - Colorado
Important for space, missile warning, and aerospace defense systems. Modern warfare depends heavily on satellites and early-warning capabilities. - Texas
A combination of training bases, logistics hubs, energy infrastructure, and defense contractors. Its importance is scale and versatility, not a single system.
The bigger reality: modern conflict isn’t location-bound
One of the most important corrections to make is this:
A major conflict today would not be defined primarily by geographic strike zones.
Modern risks include:
- Cyberattacks affecting banking, energy grids, and communications nationwide
- Space-based disruptions impacting GPS, internet, and navigation
- Economic warfare disrupting supply chains and markets
- Information warfare shaping public perception and decision-making
This means someone in a small town far from any military base could still experience major disruptions.
Why “target lists” are misleading
There are a few reasons analysts are cautious about naming specific places:
- Uncertainty
Real-world conflicts don’t follow fixed сценарios. Plans change rapidly. - Deterrence strategy
Much of military infrastructure exists specifically to prevent attacks, not invite them. - Redundancy and distribution
Critical systems are intentionally spread out to avoid single points of failure. - Escalation risks
In a nuclear scenario, outcomes would be catastrophic far beyond any initial locations.
What actually matters for civilians
From a practical standpoint, the more relevant questions are:
- How resilient are infrastructure systems (power, water, internet)?
- How prepared are emergency response systems?
- How quickly can supply chains adapt?
- How informed is the public?
These factors affect daily life far more than proximity to a military installation.
The key takeaway
The presence of military bases or strategic systems in certain states does not mean those places are “first targets.” It means they play roles in a broader system designed—above all—to prevent war through deterrence.
If anything, the strongest consensus among experts is this:
The impacts of a major global conflict would be widespread, interconnected, and not confined to specific locations.
That’s why most serious policy effort goes into diplomacy, risk reduction, and avoiding escalation altogether—not preparing for a fixed map of strikes.