Across the United States, the illusion of blanket safety has evaporated. Analysts point to obvious bullseyes: major coastal cities, nuclear bases, command centers, ports, and dense industrial corridors. Yet away from those hubs—deep in the interior, far from strategic infrastructure—there are quieter zones where risk sharply drops, not to zero, but to something survivable. These places are defined less by mythology and more by distance, wind patterns, and cold logistics.
Inland regions of the upper Midwest, parts of the rural Rockies, and scattered pockets across the interior South and Appalachia often sit outside primary blast and high-priority secondary target maps. They tend to lack major military headquarters, global financial centers, or critical tech nodes. For some, that knowledge becomes a blueprint for relocation. For others, it’s a painful reminder: safety is no longer a promise, only a spectrum—and everyone must choose where on it they’re willing to stand.
