Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Main / ItsTheOnlyWayToBeSure

Go To

1%%%
2%%
3%% This page has been alphabetized. Please add new examples in the correct order. Thanks!
4%%
5%%%
6[[quoteright:350:[[Film/ResidentEvilApocalypse https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/resident_evil_apocalypse.jpg]]]]
7[[caption-width-right:350:[[SaltTheEarth Cleanse]].[[note]][[ZombieApocalypse It failed]].[[/note]]]]
8
9->'''Pi:''' There are so many possibilities... I'd have to requisition some ordnance, sir.\
10'''Tagon:''' You are ''not'' allowed to ''nuke Northport'' "just to be sure."\
11'''Pi:''' I'd have to nuke a lot more than just Northport to be ''really'' sure.
12-->-- ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary'', on defending Northport
13
14%% One quote is sufficient. Please place additional entries on the quotes tab.
15
16It appears that TheVirus, ThePlague, or some similar infestation has gotten out of containment and threatens to spread uncontrollably. If any [[QuarantineWithExtremePrejudice conventional means]] have been deployed to try and control it, they were grossly inadequate. [[GodzillaThreshold The danger is now severe enough]] that [[TimeForPlanB Plan B]] -- or possibly even Plan A -- is sheer [[ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill Overkill]]: a localized Armageddon which will destroy the facility, city, or entire region in one blast, ensuring that not a single trace will remain to [[HereWeGoAgain kick off the epidemic all over again]]. It could be [[NukeEm a nuke]], it could be a [[KillItWithFire thermobaric explosive]], it could be {{orbital bombardment}} -- but whatever it is, high civilian or friendly casualties are almost certain and are chalked off as "acceptable losses".
17
18Possibly justified in that if the situation is bad enough to warrant this level of action, anyone within the affected radius not heavily coated in PlotArmor is likely either dead or soon to die anyway, and if the plan works it can at least result in a PyrrhicVictory. Will often be a ShootTheDog moment, sometimes followed by a WhatTheHellHero moment. Rarely it can be a HellYeah moment if collateral damage isn't an issue[[note]]or is left to be FridgeHorror[[/note]] and it [[NoOneCouldSurviveThat at least seems to work]].
19
20Sometimes this strategy works, [[FailsafeFailure sometimes it doesn't]], and sometimes it ''[[InfernalRetaliation really]]'' doesn't work. See FeedItABomb for similar philosophy of pest control on a smaller scale, HurlItIntoTheSun when you bring the ''target'' to the cleansing fires instead of the other way around, and FieryCoverup for when the bombardment is intended to cover up the evidence as much or more than it is to destroy the threat. Compare GodzillaThreshold.
21
22----
23!!Examples:
24
25[[foldercontrol]]
26
27[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
28* ''Anime/BloodPlus'': The American government's primary method of dealing with [[OurVampiresAreDifferent chiropteran]] outbreaks is "Option D," in which the area in question is bombed until there's nothing left but a smoking crater.
29* In ''Anime/FafnerInTheAzureDeadAggressor'', the Neo United Nations' last resort when [[AlienInvasion a battle against the Festum]] goes pear-shaped is to nuke the entire battlefield, human soldiers and civilians included. Why do they do this? Because Festum are a {{Hivemind}} [[TheAssimilator species that learns by assimilating other creatures]], but they can't assimilate corpses. By killing their wounded or cornered comrades before the Festum get a chance to assimilate them, humans prevent the aliens from learning more about Humanity in general (e.g. if they don't know people need food to survive, they won't bother damaging crops or cattle) and about the weapons and tactics they plan to use against the Festum in particular.
30* In ''Manga/OnePiece'', the Buster Call is the Marine answer to a threat deemed so dangerous that no trace of it can be allowed to escape. Ten incredibly powerful warships are summoned and bombard the targeted island until it is completely wiped clean of life. Any ships in the vicinity are destroyed without hesitation as they may harbor the targeted criminals. If one of the warships is boarded by a possible target, it will be destroyed by the other warships to ensure there is no chance of escape. In addition, a Buster Call cannot be cancelled once ordered.
31[[/folder]]
32
33[[folder:Comic Books]]
34* ''ComicBook/{{Dreadstar}}'': In ''The Metamorphosis Odyssey'', the alien villains Zygoteans are bent on conquering the Milky Way; once they are done, they'll go to the next galaxy. ByronicHero Aknaton understands he cannot save the Milky Way from this horrible fate. His plan is to obliterate the Milky Way before the Zygoteans are done with it, so he can at least save other galaxies. As Akenaton is very long-lived, he thinks in a very long term.
35* In ''ComicBook/ElEternauta'', some world power(s) has(ve) been sending [[NuclearOption ICBMs]] towards the center of the [[AlienInvasion invasion]]; luckily for our heroes, the bad guys have machinery that renders the nukes void. [[spoiler:Even after the heroes disable said machinery and the city is leveled, it doesn't help a bit because [[TheCavalry reinforcements shortly arrive]] and in the end [[HopelessWar we learn the Earth was promptly defeated]].]]
36* ''ComicBook/JudgeDredd'': During the ZombieApocalypse in the "Judgment Day" arc, five Mega-Cities, including Mega-City Two (U.S. west coast), are already hopelessly overrun by zombies by the time the world's governments can coordinate their efforts. They agree that they have no other option but to write off the survivors and launch their nuclear arsenals at the cities to deny [[{{Necromancer}} Sabbat]] another two billion soldiers for his undead army.
37* In ''ComicBook/KnightsOfTheOldRepublic'', Zayne warns the Mandalorians that their base on Jebble has been overrun by [[ZombieApocalypse rakghouls]], thinking that they'll quarantine the planet. [[TheDragon Cassus Fett]] opts to sterilize the site with a massive nuclear strike instead.
38* In ''ComicBook/MarvelZombies'', a nuclear strike was considered to contain the superhero zombie infection. Then Quicksilver caught it, and "containment" was no longer an option.
39* ''ComicBook/XMen'':
40** During ''ComicBook/SecretWarsII'', Phoenix (Rachel Summers) considers destroying the whole universe in an attempt to stop the Beyonder: He is too powerful to be affected by any "common" attack, but Ray theorizes he may (only may) be unable to survive if the universe around him ceased existing. At that point in the plot the Beyonder, while clearly a PersonOfMassDestruction, was only arguably a villain -- Who's the OmnicidalManiac now, Ray?
41** She decided to do this after the Beyonder had seemingly caused the ComicBook/NewMutants to be [[RetGone erased from existence]], with only Kitty Pryde (due to her magical connection to one of their members) even remembering that they ever existed. But Rachel had also become somewhat obsessed with eliminating the Beyonder, and he went out of his way to provoke her to keep trying. When she backs down without destroying the universe, he says that he would've survived it anyway. And expresses disappointment that she didn't go through with it.
42** Her first attempt to kill the Beyonder involved [[http://img201.imageshack.us/img201/3976/phoenixnukeii5.jpg something resembling an actual nuclear attack.]] It caused absolutely no damage either to him or the surroundings. [[TheOmnipotent Because he wouldn't let it cause any damage]].
43[[/folder]]
44
45[[folder:Fan Works]]
46* ''Fanfic/MikesNewGhostlyFamily'': As Mike Schmidt and his ghost children snuck into CBEAR to burn down the last traces of [[{{Unobtainium}} Remnant]], a substance that can trap a human's soul inside, they realize that the Scooper might not be the only place where William Afton could've hidden the Remnant. To completely ensure that no traces of Remnant would be left in the world, Mike Schmidt decides that the best course of action would be to burn down the entire facility. Eventually, the building was set ablaze and was [[StuffBlowingUp destroyed in a huge explosion]], permanently destroying the last remains of Remnant in the world.
47* In ''Fanfic/OrderInChaos'' a Centauri patrol reacts with lethal force when an Orieni scout flotilla admits the ships are infested with Na'kaleen Feeders, and only spare some people to find out how many ships the flotilla lost to hunt those down too. Considering that [[NightmareFuel Feeders are extremely silent predators, feed on sentients' intelligence, and any survivor of an attack may actually be infected and sprout another Feeder at any time]], they probably saved the galaxy that way.
48* The Assurance faction from ''Fanfic/APeccatis'', which has arisen in the decade since the end of the Second Wizarding War. According to Draco, they want to see everyone who was associated with Voldemort -- along with their families -- killed. They feel it's the only way to stamp out the lineage of Dark Wizards for good.
49* ''Fanfic/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtlesOutOfTheShadows'': The Newtralizer declares that New York is infested with Krang and his minions, and the only way to be sure they completely destroy them is to level the entire city. Hisako, who initially sided with him and supported his more active, brutal approach to dealing with Krang, balks at going that far.
50* In ''Fanfic/TheWeaverOption'', during the War in Heaven the Old Gods created Project Oblivion, also known as the [[spoiler:Tyranids]], only for it to go out of control and turn on the beings it was supposed to protect. The C'Tan decided the best approach was to simultaneously detonate several hundred stars in supernovas to wipe out the bulk of Oblivion, with both sides of the war hunting the remnants.
51* In ''Fanfic/WilhuffTarkinHeroOfTheRebellion'' the Republic, and later the Empire, have a number of options to deal with the most horrific events:
52** Base Delta Zero, the orbital bombardment to annihilate an entire planet's surface, is ''supposed'' to be used only if the situation on the ground is that bad - and Tarkin mentions that one occasion the Republic ordered it was when a planet was being overrun by a horde of {{Kaiju}} [[ItMakesSenseInContext born out of mutated biscuits]], and it was called off at the last moment when an alternative solution. Tarkin himself orders one, and carries it out, when he finds out about [[Literature/GalaxyOfFear the planet D'vouran]] - after all, a ''people-eating planet'' is considered harsh enough an emergency for it.
53** General Order 1 states "1) In case of a sudden outbreak of deadly disease, command of the interested area and an exclusion zone will pass to the highest ranking medical officer in the area until the crisis is over and the disease controlled. 2) The commanding medical officer will have full authority to take any necessary measure, up to including complete sterilization of the area and exclusion zone." The order is invoked when [[Literature/ShadowsOfTheEmpire a flesh-eating bacteria is accidentally released in a city on Falleen]], and the commanding medical officer orders the immediate sterilization of the exclusion zone via OrbitalBombardment [[HeroicSacrifice fully knowing he'll be killed as well]] and being glad that weather condition prevented the spread of the bacteria to a much larger area. [[BigDamnVillain Darth Vader carries out the order when the local governor tries to stop it]].
54*** Enforcement of the exclusion zone is detailed, and includes Imperial Army troops setting up road blocks enforced with [[MoreDakka repeating blasters]] and even ''artillery''.
55** Official bioweapon research facilities have plasma bombs to incinerate any bug that escapes they don't already know how to cure. The situation on Falleen only happened because Lost Prince Memorial hospital doubled as an ''illegal'' bioweapon research facility and they were trying to dispose of the evidence after learning [[TheDreaded Darth Vader]] was coming to inspect, with an orderly dropping a vial of the flesh-eating bacteria in the hurry.
56[[/folder]]
57
58[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
59* In ''Film/TwentyEightWeeksLater'', the Rage virus escapes containment. The US Army panics and napalms most of the Isle of Dogs. It doesn't help.
60* ''Franchise/{{Alien}}'':
61** ''Film/{{Aliens}}'' is the TropeNamer: this method is suggested by Ripley for dealing with the alien infestation of Acheron, but is never executed for reasons beyond the Marines' control. "I say we take off and nuke the entire site from orbit. It's the only way to be sure."
62*** After Ripley's suggestion is dismissed by [[TokenEvilTeammate Burke]], she points out that it's not up to him since this is a military operation, and since [[OnlySaneMan Hicks]] is the highest ranking soldier still alive/conscious, ''he'' is the one with authority, to which Hicks begrudgingly concurs. Ultimately, despite Burke's insistence that it's not a decision he's equipped to make, Hicks calls for the dropship and [[MeaningfulEcho drily repeats Ripley's sentiment, while making eye contact with her.]]
63** This was also intended in the first ''Film/{{Alien}}''. The Nostromo was self-destructed by the crew in an attempt to ensure the alien would be destroyed along with it. Things didn't turn out that way.
64** In ''Film/AVPAlienVsPredator'', one Predator detonates an explosive device in the alien hive, destroying the entire pyramid. Flashbacks reveal that this is pretty much their standard way of dealing with alien infestations.
65** In ''Film/AliensVsPredatorRequiem'', the U.S. Army drops a nuclear bomb on the town of Gunnison, CO, to contain an infestation of Xenomorphs.
66** Continued in ''VideoGame/AliensDarkDescent'', where Weyland-Yutani has made this official protocol for an outbreak of xenomorphs. Unfortunately, our heroes are on the wrong side of the bombardment and have to get out.
67* In ''Film/TheAndromedaStrain'', this trope was averted when the protagonists realized a nuke would actually spread the contagion much, much further.
68* In ''Film/{{The Avengers|2012}}'', the World Security Council decides to simply [[NukeEm nuke Manhattan]] to contain the invading Chitauri forces, despite the fact that the Avengers are still continuing their efforts to stop the Chitauri and that there's still civilians evacuating the area. S.H.I.E.L.D. Director Nick Fury declares the idea a "stupid-ass" strategy for dealing with the invasion and takes down the nuke-carrying plane with a rocket launcher. [[spoiler:It's a pity that someone on the WSC was smart enough to launch a second plane. Thankfully, Iron Man is smarter, redirecting the nuke through a portal to space, making it hit the Chitauri's mother-ship without affecting Manhattan.]]
69* In ''Film/{{Cloverfield}}'', the exact nature of the [[NukeEm Hammerdown Protocol]] is never explained, but it clearly involves a WeaponOfMassDestruction or maybe several. The fact that the US Army was willing to do this on [[BigApplesauce Manhattan Island]] is meant to indicate how desperate the situation had become.
70* In ''Film/TheCrazies2010'' remake, the U.S. Army incinerates a small Iowa town to contain a leaked biological weapon.
71* In the original version of ''Film/TheCrazies1973'', a nuclear strike was discussed, but not used.
72* Captain Miller's plan once he sees what the ''Film/EventHorizon'' has done to its crew is to not only get his crew the hell off the ship but take the ''Lewis and Clark'' to a safe distance before bombarding the ''Event Horizon'' with enough TAC missiles to vaporize it. Unfortunately, both Weir and [[GeniusLoci the ship itself]] have other plans.
73* The option was suggested in ''Film/DawnOfTheDead1978'' by the eyepatch-wearing Dr. Rausch in a television interview. He was not taken seriously.
74* In ''Film/{{Outbreak}}'', a fuel-air bomb was used in the beginning to purge an isolated outbreak of the Motaba virus. Later, an American town was saved from a similar fate when a cure was devised from the original host. Subverted in that [[spoiler:[[GeneralRipper McLintock]] orders the firebombing in both cases not to destroy the virus but so he can use the virus as a biological weapon, and the firebombing would cover his tracks.]]
75* The first few {{Kaiju}} in ''Film/PacificRim'' had to be brought down by [[NuclearOption nuclear weapons]], as all other attempts to destroy the creatures simply had no effect at all. However, the sheer level of collateral damage that ensued made this an increasingly non-viable option, leading to the development of the [[GiantMecha Jaegers]].
76%%* In ''Film/{{Pontypool}}'', the Canadian government eventually bombs the hell out of the titular city.
77* In ''Film/ResidentEvilApocalypse'', the Umbrella Corporation fires a nuclear missile at Raccoon City to cover up an outbreak of the T-Virus, which is also what happened at the end of the third game of the series, though they've been [[NuclearWeaponsTaboo rather vague]] about whether it was actually a nuke or not. They manage to cover up the outbreak, but as revealed in ''Film/ResidentEvilExtinction'', the virus survives and causes TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt.
78* In ''Film/TheReturnOfTheLivingDead'', the Army nukes Louisville, KY, to destroy a horde of zombies created by the chemical agent 2,4,5-Trioxin. This actually spreads the gas further.
79* The goofball Thai film ''Film/SARSWarsBangkokZombieCrisis'' shows the Thai government destroying an apartment complex to halt the spread of a strain of SARS virus which turns people into zombies.
80[[/folder]]
81
82[[folder:Literature]]
83* {{Subverted|Trope}} in ''Literature/TheAndromedaStrain''. The facility in which the titular virus (sort of) is being studied has a built-in nuclear self-destruct in case something breaks containment. It's only after the self-destruct is triggered that the protagonists realize the nuke will actually [[FeedItWithFire fuel the contagion's bizarre mutations]], allowing it to turn into God-knows-what ''and'' spread across a massive region. Fortunately for the world, they manage to stop the self-destruct in time.
84* In ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'', [[spoiler:the Andalite military plans not only to sterilize Earth to kill the Yeerks on it, but to sabotage Earth's own resistance to lure in ''more'' Yeerks before they sterilize it. The plan comes crashing down thanks to an EngineeredPublicConfession]].
85* ''Literature/CiaphasCain'':
86** Used [[ShoutOut word-for-word]] by Ciaphas Cain when describing [[EarthShatteringKaboom the correct way to deal with]] [[spoiler:a Necron tomb under a refinery]]. Unfortunately for Cain, the [[HyperspaceIsAScaryPlace nature of FTL travel in the Warp]] means the Navy is ''too slow'', so he has to resort to a giant bomb augmented by several hundred thousand gallons of raw promethium.
87** Also used word-for-word by Lord General Zyvan regarding orbital bombardment of Tyranid swarms and their so-to-speak bases.
88* In ''Literature/DayByDayArmageddon'', by J.L. Bourne, the government nukes several large cities to contain a zombie plague. This only leads to [[NiceJobBreakingItHero fast, twitchy, radioactive zombies]].
89* In ''Dead of Night'', by Jonathan Maberry, the government intends to firebomb the town of Stebbins, Pennsylvania, to contain (and cover up) a zombie outbreak. [[spoiler:They change their minds when footage of the outbreak ends up on [=YouTube=].]] In the sequel, ''Fall of Night'', the outbreak spreads beyond Stebbins. The President orders the afflicted area sterilized by thermobaric bombs, never mind the civilians still in the area. [[spoiler:[[FromBadToWorse This causes a cloud of airborne infectious particulates to drift all over the region, allowing it to reach airports and spread worldwide]].]]
90* Non-plague example: In Creator/JohnChristopher's ''The Death of Grass'' (US title: ''No Blade of Grass'') the British government decides to nuke cities to minimize the number of starving refugees that would otherwise roam across the countryside. However, everything falls apart before they can actually execute the plan.
91* ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'':
92** One of the only effective strategies a human has ever come up with to take down a Naagloshii EldritchAbomination was to lure it onto ground zero of a nuclear test.
93** The Demonreach GeniusLoci has a failsafe that it would discharge if necessary to prevent [[spoiler:the myriad {{Eldritch Abomination}}s [[SealedEvilInACan imprisoned beneath it]] from escaping]]: a "Banefire" spell that would annihilate it and its surroundings -- which is to say, most of the American midwest.
94* ''Literature/{{Fragment}}'':
95** When the sheer ferocity and potential danger that the organisms of [[DeathWorld Hender's Island]] could potentially unleash upon the world should they somehow get to the mainland is realized (the most conservative computer simulations suggest at [[ApocalypseHow the extinction of all other life on five continents within sixty years]]), the personnel involved (up to and including the President of the United States) decides the sterilize the island with a nuclear bomb to prevent any chance that anyone could use them as a WMD. A few of the characters grimly note that had they not discovered the island in the first place, this wouldn't have been necessary, as the organisms had survived in isolation for more than seven hundred million years up to this point.
96** Later in the sequel, it turns out this still wasn't enough to wipe them out, and a handful of Hender's lifeforms end up a small island north of Japan after drifting for several months on an inflatable raft. When one of the characters with personal experience in them hears that the Japanese government firebombed the area and flooded it with poison gas to kill them, he's still not completely convinced that it was enough. But then the person telling him this says they had to do it ''[[NoKillLikeOverKill three times]]'' until it worked.
97* ''Literature/{{Infected}}'': In the second book, ''Contagious'', Detroit is nuked to contain the spread of an airborne plague that puts people under the mental control of a little girl.
98* ''Literature/JoeLedger'':
99** In ''Patient Zero'', a secret bunker uses its geothermal power supply as an emergency self-destruct mechanism.
100** In ''The King of Plagues'', terrorists plot to release a genetically engineered, airborne strain of Ebola from the Scotland-based laboratory which developed it. [[spoiler:The nuclear option would have been employed had Ledger failed to save the day.]]
101* In ''Literature/JurassicPark1990'', the Costa Rican government bombs Isla Nublar -- this didn't make it into [[Film/JurassicPark1993 the film]].
102* ''Literature/TheLastHero'' has a ShoutOut to the ''Film/{{Aliens}}'' example when Leonard de Quirm describes a possible threat to the spaceship he just made. His illustration of the Imaginary Hull Borer ("if such a creature invades the ship, vital crew split up in order to search for it") includes the Latatian "Nucleus situm ex orbita, unus certis maximus". In other words, "Nuke the entire site from orbit, it's the only way to be sure."
103* Possibly the UrExample of this trope, the epilogue paragraphs of "Literature/TheLurkingFear" have the main character hiring a team to dynamite the Martense mansion, a significant portion of the surrounding forest, and any caves or tunnels they can find. He still worries that it won't be enough.
104* ''Literature/MountDragon'' employs this trope twice.
105** It is first described that the Soviets carpet-bombed a biological research facility and the neighboring village to stop an outbreak of a genetically modified organism in the '80s.
106** Later, [[spoiler:the underground laboratory at the Mount Dragon complex itself is pumped full of superheated air from the sterilizing units on the surface, turning the whole facility into a canned inferno]].
107* ''Literature/{{Newsflesh}}'': This is the CDC's go-to method for dealing with a Kellis-Amberlee outbreak.
108* In ''Literature/NightOfTheLivingTrekkies'', the government decides on nuking the greater Houston metropolitan area as the best option for taking out the zombie plague that's broken out all over the city.
109* ''Franchise/StarWarsLegends'':
110** A small-scale example in ''[[Literature/XWingSeries Wraith Squadron]]''. On Storinal, the Wraiths break into a disease-control center that houses small samples of various contagions for lab use. Their security includes a plasma bomb array, capable of leveling several city blocks, in case of leaks. Fortunately, Kell Tainer is able to defuse it (then hooks it back up before they leave, so that no one realizes they were there). Kell points out that this is actually a reasonable precaution, given that some of the contagions studied in the lab are both horrific and highly contagious. It's also noted that the residents of the city are probably completely unaware of both types of threats that the lab contains, and wouldn't be very happy to find out.
111** The consequences of ''not'' having said plasma bomb array are mentioned in ''Literature/ShadowsOfTheEmpire'': Darth Vader had established a bacteriological research outpost in a city on Falleen, and when a flesh-eating bacteria got out, the lack of a plasma bomb array allowed for the city to be quickly infected. Projections showed that without intervention, contagion would have spread to the entire planet and possibly off-world, leading Bolvan, commander of Vader's Star Destroyer ''Devastator'', to suggest the use of ammunition from Project [=X271=] to incinerate the plague. Vader, [[EvenEvilHasStandards considering the use of a weapon that would wipe out all life of the planet to be excessive]], instead ordered the ''Devastator'' to [[OrbitalBombardment incinerate the area within 40 km of the outpost with turbolaser fire from orbit]]. The death toll was of 200,000 people (including the entire family of [[TheDon Prince Xizor]]), but the plague was indeed stopped.
112* ''Literature/WorldWarZ'':
113** {{Averted|Trope}}: nuclear weapons are never used against zombies. However, [[spoiler:Pakistan and Iran engage in a brief nuclear war against one another, and the Chinese politburo are annihilated by a nuke from a rogue Chinese submarine]].
114** In a non-nuclear example, the city of Yonkers is flattened by thermobaric weapons when a poorly planned infantry engagement goes awry. They do take out tens of thousands of zombies, but that's not much when there's a million more behind them, and their effects on respiratory systems are nullified, greatly reducing their effective radius.
115** The Ukranian military resorted to using chemical weapons when a massive group of refugees tried to storm past a checkpoint in a desperate attempt at reaching safety. Without the proper resources or manpower to actually screen the refugees for zombie bites, their only remaining option was mass murder. [[TheExtremistWasRight About one in ten got back up again as undead, revealing just how many were hiding their infection.]]
116[[/folder]]
117
118[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
119* ''Series/TheAndromedaStrain'': Both the government and team Wilfire agree to nuke the town of Piedmont as a way to kill [[ThePlague Andromeda]]. But this is ultimately {{Averted}} as Wildfire ends up discovering at the last moment that a nuke would actually spread the contagion much, much further. They manage to contact the military in time to abort it but [[ItCanThink Andromeda ends up taking control of the plane]] and fire off the nuke in order to spread itself further.
120* ''Series/{{Angel}}'': In "[[Recap/AngelS05E11Damage Damage]]", Dana the Vampire Slayer subscribes to this trope and refers to it by name: "Heart...and head. Don't be scared, stab the heart, cut off the head, keep cutting until dust."
121* An episode of ''Series/TheChampions1968'' involved an island where evil scientists were making a lethal gas for chemical warfare or terrorist attacks. At the end of the episode, the Army has a nuke dropped on it.
122* The ''Series/DoctorWho'' episode "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS33E12NightmareInSilver Nightmare in Silver]]" has a scene when it's mentioned that previously [[spoiler:the Cybermen were only defeated by blowing up an entire galaxy resulting in the death of trillions.]] In the story itself, the standard procedure upon encountering any survivors is to implode the entire planet immediately before any damage is done.
123* ''Series/TheLastOfUs2023'': Ratna recommends bombing Jakarta in order to stop the ZombieApocalypse. FEDRA ends up actually doing so on a lot of cities.
124* In ''Series/{{Nikita}}'', in the episode "Self Destruct", Birkhoff quotes this trope as they contemplate destroying the Division facility.
125* In ''Series/StargateSG1'', the main team drops a massive nuclear weapon to blow up the gate through which the Ori intend to come to the Milky Way galaxy. It fails spectacularly, as all the energy of the warhead is only used by the Ori to collapse a planet into a black hole to power a nearby supergate. But before they realised that, they billed it as the "only way to be sure".
126* Applied by the Borg Queen in ''Series/StarTrekVoyager'', in the episode "Unimatrix Zero," in which she blows up entire cubes to destroy only a handful of rogue Borg.
127* ''Series/TheWalkingDead'':
128** The Season One finale has Rick and the other survivors seeking shelter in the CDC in Atlanta, only to find it completely abandoned except for Dr. Jenner, who reveals that the facility will be destroyed by a thermonuclear device once the fuel for the generators runs out, to prevent the virus samples stored inside from reaching the outside world.
129** Later on, in the second season, we are treated to a flashback of military helicopters trying to contain the zombie outbreak by [[KillItWithFire dropping napalm in the streets of Atlanta.]] Judging by the fact that [[YouCantThwartStageOne the rest of the series exists]], it probably didn't work.
130** ''Series/FearTheWalkingDead'' shows all of this unfolding in it's first few episodes, revealing that the army first attempted QuarantineWithExtremePrejudice in a futile effort at curing or stopping the ZombieApocalypse. When this failed, they enacted "Operation Cobalt", which involved "humanely" terminating all uninfected civilians in the safe zones, before pulling out and firebombing Los Angeles, along with every other major city on the West Coast. [[DoomedByCanon It barely put a dent in the zombie hordes.]]
131[[/folder]]
132
133[[folder:Mythology and Religion]]
134* In ''Literature/TheBible'', God does this after finding that except for Lot's family, there aren't even ten people in [[WretchedHive Sodom and Gomorrah]] who are innocent. We're not told exactly what God did, but even ''looking'' at the destruction of these cities from a distance was fatal.
135[[/folder]]
136
137[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
138* ''TabletopGame/{{Battletech}}'': It's happened at least twice in the lore:
139** During the [=FedCom=] Civil War, fighting on Galedon accidentally released [[SealedEvilInACan a deadly bioweapon dating from the Star League]]. In the end, everyone involved realized that the plague leaving the planet was an unacceptable risk, and so both Clan Snow Raven and the Draconis Combine subjected the entirety of the planet to a two-weeks-long orbital [[NukeEm thermonuclear bombardment]] that essentially killed every single living thing on the planet from microbes up.
140** After the Word of Blake Jihad opened the Pandora's box on use of nuclear weapons (later in the conflict, the Word of Blake became quite nuke-happy and everyone else retaliated in return), the Principality of Regulus tracked The Master from Gibson to Circinus. ''Every.'' ''Single.'' ''Planet.'' In Regulus' flight plan was thoroughly nuked to cinders to try and kill The Master. They finally cornered him on Circinus, and the planet was bombed (including using dirty bombs laced with cobalt -- Regulus was through screwing around) not just to the Stone Age, but all the way to the ''Hadean'' era, essentially sterilizing the planet making it a rock that would never support life again. But they got The Master.
141* A common policy among the more hardline Firewall members in ''TabletopGame/EclipsePhase'' is "sometimes, blasting the habitat into radioactive dust is the only way to... well, you know". Sometimes it works wonders; when applied by Earth's power blocs against the [=TITANs=], during the Fall, it was about as effective as a rubber hammer.
142* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'':
143** Occurs with depressing regularity, usually from the Imperial method of Exterminatus, either by Virus Bomb or Cyclonic Torpedo or good ol' fashioned "shoot the planet until it breaks apart" trick. Ironically, it's also always justified. (Would you rather a quick, relatively painless death or millennia of torment as your soul is flayed from you along with your skin inch by inch?) [[note]] 40k being the [[CrapsackWorld setting]] it is, there have been occasions where Exterminatus orders have been issued (and carried out) for reasons as petty as a communications specialist not being allowed to retire and return home. Poor, poor Stalinvast... [[/note]]
144** For instance, one of the major reasons for Exterminatus is the fear of a planet imminently becoming a Daemon World (it can't be used on one that's ''already'' a Daemon World since they don't completely exist in normal reality anymore). Or the discovery of a Necron presence on the world -- although unless the Imperials are very lucky, they probably won't discover the tomb until the Necrons awaken and kill everything. Or perhaps its invasion by [[BugWar Tyranids]], [[AxCrazy Orks]], or [[FateWorseThanDeath Chaos cultists]] -- there are ''many'' worse things in 40k than a quick death by lance cannon.
145** And of course, as per usual with 40K, sometimes TheOnlyWayToBeSure ''isn't'' 100% sure. The Imperium has stopped using Virus Bombs once they discovered that making an entire planet's population with viruses was strengthening Nurgle, the Chaos god of disease. As Literature/CiaphasCain ('''HERO OF THE IMPERIUM!''') once put it, sometimes Exterminatus just gives them ideas.
146[[/folder]]
147
148[[folder:Video Games]]
149* ''VideoGame/AgeOfWondersPlanetfall'': The Promethean Division was created to stop Xenoplague infection. Any planet they were deployed to was essentially written off as a loss by the Star Union, and the Prometheans' only objective was to prevent plague from getting off-world and spreading further. They stopped the infection by setting the planet's atmosphere on fire using [[AppliedPhlebotinum PyrX]] and essentially burning it down to the crust before having the planet terraformed and re-settled from the ashes.
150* ''VideoGame/AliensDarkDescent'' has the famous line from Aliens become actual policy. The core of the game makes this a problem since you are on the planet that is going to be nuked from orbit, and you have to find a way to get off it in time.
151* In ''VideoGame/AlienVsPredatorCapcom'', Linn Kurosawa reprograms a nuclear-powered warship to crash into San Dread, California. Sure the town is completely destroyed, but the ship and town were full of Xenomorphs, anyway.
152* In ''VideoGame/TheColony'', [[spoiler:this is your goal after rescuing the survivors of a trans-dimensional alien invasion]].
153* In ''VideoGame/DawnOfWarII: Retribution'', the Inquisition executes the Exterminatus (explained in Tabletop section) to prevent a planet from being seized by an emerging Demon Prince. [[spoiler:They are a bit too late and not so thorough]].
154* ''VideoGame/DeadIsland'' averts this trope. Ryder White intends to call in a nuclear strike on the island of Banoi to burn out the infection. [[spoiler:White fails to carry out his plan due to mutation and death.]]
155* ''VideoGame/DeadRising'':
156** Inverted in the first game: Carlito (the villain) wants to blow up the mall to ''spread'' the virus rather than contain it, and you have to stop him.
157** In ''VideoGame/DeadRising2'', the military plans to destroy Fortune City by firebombing [[spoiler:when a team sent in to rescue the survivors is wiped out]]. It's never shown in the best ending.
158* In ''VideoGame/DyingLight'', there comes a point where the powers that be decide zombie-infested Harran is too dangerous to keep quarantined indefinitely and ought to be destroyed completely. [[spoiler:Kyle Crane, the player, manages first to stall them and then to back off more or less for good. It's implied that, if they ever get what they want out of Crane's possession, the city is toast.]]
159** The DLC forces Crane to decide if Harran can still be saved, or if it has to be nuked off the map to prevent the spread; [[spoiler:Crane found the cure, but it just turns zombies into ''sentient were-super-zombies''. It's in the same bunker as a primed nuclear warhead]].
160* ''VideoGame/EXTRAPOWERAttackOfDarkforce'': At some point a meteor has crashed into Germany, bringing with it the Bem - a parasitic space parasite that has already reduced several towns into ghost towns. The heroes help SPICA mercenaries combat the Bem in one town, but it is too late: according to the team empath's readings, by that point, no human remains who is free from infestation. Soon after, missiles are dropped on the town to eradicate the remaining Bems, though this fails to destroy the infestation.
161* ''[[VideoGame/FirstEncounterAssaultRecon F.E.A.R.]]'' has this happen at the end of the first game, [[spoiler:in a desperate attempt to kill the now-freed Alma. To everyone's horror, it completely fails to affect her]].
162* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'':
163** The plot of ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIII'' starts with an ancient being awakening in a tomb that was assumed to be empty, and immediately starting to force locals into its service. To contain the curse, the entire population is to be deported to the main planet their world is orbiting and which is the home of the ancient beings, but it soon becomes obvious that the people in charge don't really intend to let anyone remain alive.
164** In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyX'', upon fleeing their home on a CoolAirship, the Al Bhed feel that the best way prevent the enemy occupiers from getting their hands on their technology is to [[ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill blow the entire facility up with nuclear missiles]].
165* In ''VideoGame/HalfLifeOpposingForce'' Black Ops assassins trying to blow up an alien-infested facility and cover up the whole Black Mesa incident use a [[http://half-life.wikia.com/wiki/Mark_IV_Thermonuclear_Device fusion warhead]] they removed from a nearby missile. [[PlayerCharacter Shephard]] kills them and deactivates the device, but later the G-Man sets up its timer again.
166-->'''The G-Man:''' The biggest embarrassment has been Black Mesa facility, but I think that's finally taken care of itself... quite so.
167* ''Franchise/{{Halo}}'':
168** The Covenant doesn't stop at nukes when it comes to [[spoiler:Flood outbreaks]]. They bombard the entire planet with plasma until rock and sand start to melt and are transformed into volcanic glass. Earth gets spared this treatment in ''VideoGame/Halo3'' due to the Arbiter advising Half-Jaw against it... so Half-Jaw ''only'' glasses half of Africa instead.
169** The Halo Arrays themselves are the Forerunners' execution of this trope, killing all sentient life in the galaxy to [[spoiler:ensure the Flood has no potential hosts.]]
170** Even after Cortana acquires Halo Installation 04's Activation Index in ''VideoGame/HaloCombatEvolved'', she and Master Chief still destroy Halo's phase pulse generators and ultimately the Halo itself just to be sure it won't be activated. [[spoiler:It also serves as reassurance that the Flood aboard won't manage to leave the ring.]]
171* One of the possible methods by which you defeat the [[BigBad Naughty Sorceress]] in ''VideoGame/KingdomOfLoathing''. After you counter her first two attacks with [[spoiler:the Wand of Nagamar]], [[OneWingedAngel her final form]] attacks you with a [[SignificantAnagram HEARTBREAKING TOFU MOUSSE]]. You counter ''[[RuleOfThree again]]'' with the same thing, and [[spoiler:[[SignificantAnagram NUKE THE SAUSAGE FROM ORBIT]]]]. [[ShoutOut After all, it's the only way to be sure.]] Referencing the TropeNamer is a bit of a RunningGag in that game.
172* It is mentioned several times in ''Videogame/TheLastOfUs'' that the military killed as many people as they could to prevent the Cordyceps infectees from spreading the disease, and that includes people who weren't infected because corpses can't catch it. The downtown area of Boston, for example, is a giant wasteland after they bombed the hell out of it hoping to kill as many infected as possible.
173* ''Franchise/MassEffect'':
174** ''VideoGame/MassEffect1'': The research facility on Noveria includes a safety mechanism in the so-called "hot labs" that initiates a NeutronBomb explosion and sterilizes the labs, to contain outbreaks. There's also a more comprehensive system that shuts down environmental control throughout the facility and sinks it deeper into the ice shelf, letting the conditions kill off anything hazardous. Similarly, this approach is also taken with Saren's facility in Virmire with the Salarians converting their ship's drive core to a makeshift nuclear device.
175** In the sequel ''VideoGame/MassEffect2'', everyone except the Illusive Man thinks blowing up [[spoiler:the Collector Base]] is the only practical solution to prevent the mind-controlling effects of Reaper technology from creating new minions that serve them, as well as the heinous nature of the technology within. [[spoiler:Which turned out to be futile, since the Illusive Man already had implanted himself with reaper technology years before (putting the remains of the Human Reaper directly behind his office didn't help), but at least it significantly slowed the Reapers down.]]
176** Depending on what you make of the ending in ''VideoGame/MassEffect3'', the "Destroy" option is just that. Even though it will also [[spoiler:destroy all AI such as the Geth and [=EDI=]]], it's the only chance to permanently put an end to the Reaper threat. Depending on your actions in the previous game and your EMS rating, this gets even worse and [[GoneHorriblyRight destroys almost all sentient life in the galaxy]], not just the Reapers!
177** In addition to the above, this method is suggested in Mass Effect 3 by Joker after completing a mission that is one big reference to ''Film/{{Aliens}}'', the TropeNamer. He even says the name of the trope word for word!
178** Javik's BackStory has Victory initiating a "neutron bombardment" to wipe out the Prothean husks away on Eden Prime.
179* Threatened in ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid'' and ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolid3SnakeEater''--but it's less a tactic to neutralize a threat and more to [[FieryCoverup dispose of pesky witnesses and incriminating evidence]] (though there is some of the former, too).
180* ''Franchise/{{Metroid}}'':
181** ''VideoGame/MetroidFusion'' double subverts this. When the BSL Station is overrun by the X Parasites, Samus plans to activate the station's self-destruct to kill all of them aboard. However, her ship's AI informs her that this doesn't guarantee she'll kill ''all'' the X Parasites, just the ones aboard the station, so it recommends causing the station to fall out of orbit so that its self-destruct field also destroys the planet, ensuring all the X die. [[spoiler:It fails in the long run since ''VideoGame/MetroidDread'' reveals the [[NotSoExtinct X Parasites have infected another planet]], ZDR, forcing Samus to blow up that planet as well.]] ''Metroid Dread'' also reveals that [[spoiler:the Thoha Chozo tribe wanted to destroy [=SR388=] because both the Metroids and X were too dangerous to leave alive, but [[BigBad Raven Beak]] had other plans]].
182* In Creator/{{Bungie}}'s ''VideoGame/{{Myth}}'' series, the forces of light tend to do this whenever they're able to defeat the current incarnation of [[BigBad The Leveller]]. Things done to its host include: Beheading him and throwing the head into a [[BottomlessPits bottomless pit]]; Beheading and cremation; Having him drawn and quartered with the various parts scattered across the continent; Burning the body, mixing the ashes with salt, and then burying it all underneath a mountain. The reason for this seemingly overkill is that certain powerful entities are [[CompleteImmortality practically deathless]], even beheading doesn't always kill them as the intro cinematic shows. These measures are taken to try and maximize the difficulty of reassembling them in their entirety lest doing so restore them to power.
183* In the [[AllThereInTheManual backstory]] of ''VideoGame/{{Nier}}'', the White Chlorination Syndrome epidemic (a disease caused by the magic from the ''VideoGame/{{Drakengard}}'' world, specifically the EldritchAbomination, entering the modern world in Ending E of the first game) is slowly spreading across Japan. A huge wall --the wall of [[MeaningfulName Jericho]]-- is erected to contain the disease and the infected. When it starts creating horrible monsters called Legion, the US military drops a nuclear bomb on it... [[NiceJobBreakingItHero spreading the infection]] [[TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt worldwide]].
184* In ''VideoGame/{{Prototype}}'', Manhattan is set to be destroyed by a nuclear bomb after the Blacklight and Redlight viruses have run amok. [[spoiler:The player character Alex Mercer averts this by personally flying the bomb away from Manhattan, dumping it into the river, and sacrificing himself in the process. [[FromASingleCell He gets better.]] So does New York, despite seemingly the entire city being infected by the end of the game.]]
185** In ''VideoGame/Prototype2'', the government tries again, using [[spoiler:thermobaric rockets fired from helicopters. They fail again.]]
186* Quite a few ''Franchise/ResidentEvil'' games end with this:
187** [[VideoGame/ResidentEvil The original]] had the mansion explode in a self-destruct sequence.
188** The most famous example from the series is the fate of Raccoon City, as detailed in ''[[VideoGame/ResidentEvil3Nemesis Resident Evil 3, Nemesis]]'', and the ''[[VideoGame/ResidentEvilOutbreak Outbreak]]'' games. Starting in May of 1998 with the [[VideoGame/ResidentEvil Mansion Incident]], there were several more outbreaks of the T-virus that slowly started to overwhelm the city. The tipping point occurred on September 22 when Umbrella forces tried to retrieve a new virus sample from one of its reclusive researchers, William Birkin. In the resulting chaos, the virus got into the sewers and infected the city's rat population, which led to a full-scale ZombieApocalypse. The situation quickly got out of control; local police were overwhelmed in days (though some of them put up a valiant, but ill-fated, LastStand at their headquarters), and containment forces that the National Government sent in met similar fates. By September 30th the city was deemed a lost cause; almost the entire population was either dead or infected and military barriers around the city were starting to fail. Faced with the threat of the infection spreading to the rest of the country, the U.S Government ordered Raccoon City sterilized by missile strike.[[note]] In ''[[VideoGame/ResidentEvil3Nemesis RE 3]]'' it was single nuke, in ''[[VideoGame/ResidentEvilOutbreak Outbreak]]'' there were 3 to 4 missiles, in other depictions, it's a new type of non-nuclear weapon, volley of cruise missiles, or a combination of all of the above. It seems to be officially nuclear now.[[/note]] The end result was that the city was ''completely wiped off the map''. All that remains of Raccoon City are [[http://projectumbrella.net/files/images/RaccoonCity_Destroyed.png a few craters]] and a government research faculty/Quarantine Zone.
189** ''[[VideoGame/ResidentEvilGunSurvivor Resident Evil: Dead Aim]]'' had the cruise liner that served as the setting for the game blown up by a KillSat by the Chinese government.
190** TheMovie spin-off ''Anime/ResidentEvilDegeneration'' actually averts this scenario with the main outbreak at an airport, but the [=WilPharma=] pharmaceutical laboratory is destroyed in a ''spectacularly'' elaborate self-destruct sequence.
191* This is the standard, ''human'' way to deal with demonic invasion in ''Franchise/ShinMegamiTensei''.
192** The one that started it all: in ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiI'', the combination of a military coup and the appearance of wild demons in Tokyo (and the former weaponizing the latter) leads to the United States bombarding the city with nuclear weapons. It is revealed, however, that it was actually [[spoiler:a plot by the Law-aligned Ambassador [[MeaningfulName Thorman]] and the CouncilOfAngels to wipe the slate clean in order to start building the Thousand-Year Kingdom of God]], using the demon invasion as the perfect window of opportunity.
193** In ''Shin Megami Tensei: VideoGame/DevilSurvivor'', the wards of Tokyo encircled by the Yamanote train line are sealed off to prevent escape of either the demons or the people in contact with them. [[MultipleEndings If all attempts to save the city fail]], everything inside it is ''fried'' by activating special microchips that emit {{EMP}}s, hidden inside all electronics manufactured in Japan.
194** In ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiStrangeJourney'', when it seems the reconnaissance teams sent to explore the [[NegativeSpaceWedgie Schwarzwelt]] have vanished and failed, the assembled world governments acting under the Schwarzwelt Investigation Project [[spoiler:actually DO this, by bombing the HellGate with nuclear weapons... and it fails. Nothing can stop the Schwarzwelt from expanding]]. However, the teams trapped inside it devise a plan to [[spoiler:use their own nuclear weapons (strapped to {{Cosmic Keystone}}s of world-creating or world-ending power) to nuke the portal from the ''inside'']].
195* ''Franchise/StarCraft'':
196** Right before the first ''VideoGame/StarCraftI'' game, the Protoss incinerate ''a planet'' because it was overrun by the Zerg. The same thing happens another few times (off-screen) during the Terran campaign. The Protoss executor Tassadar abandons this tactic though because he feels bad for all of the Terrans that die in the process.
197** At the beginning of ''VideoGame/StarCraftII'', Raynor states that Tassadar incinerating Mar Sara in the original game apparently ''didn't work'' -- new Zerg dens are still found there all the time. Which might explain Selendis's less-extreme approach.
198** In ''VideoGame/StarCraftIIWingsOfLiberty'', Selendis wants to do this to an infested colony, albeit less drastically than the ones in the original. Instead of incinerating the entire planet, her method is vaporising the (potentially) infested parts.
199* The only way in ''VideoGame/{{Stellaris}}'' to deal with an [[HostileTerraforming infected world]] is by way of OrbitalBombardment until ''all traces'' of biosphere and atmosphere are eradicated.
200* In ''VideoGame/Wasteland2'', a certain expansive, incredibly overbuilt underground bunker (even its ''elevator doors'' are said to be impervious to any military explosives and lasers) is brought down by exploding a [[spoiler:Davy Crockett tactical nuclear warhead]] inside of its topmost level. The problem is, this solution is rubbish: the real-life explosive equivalent of this [[spoiler:[[Main/ChekhovsGun Chekhov's Bomb]]]] is a measly 10 to 20 tons of TNT (accompanied by a very sharp radiation spike, with lethal radius of 400 m over open terrain). If anything, that explosion would [[spoiler:''benefit the villain'': sure, it would slightly damage his new front lobby, but would also completely sterilize the installation, destroying all biological life he's fighting against]].
201* In ''[[VideoGame/XComEnemyUnknown XCOM: Enemy Within]]'', there is the Council Mission known as Site Recon. A village in Newfoundland is so badly overrun by Chrysallids that Central decides it best for your field team to mark the site for a saturated bombing run and then get out of there.
202[[/folder]]
203
204[[folder:Web Comics]]
205* ''Webcomic/{{Anthronauts}}'': In the original series, a zombie outbreak succeeded in covering the earth. The president of humanity made the decision to nuke earth and retreat to mars. [[spoiler:Turns out that the zombies were a HordeOfAlienLocusts... with shapeshifting capabilities and near-universal interspecies reproduction. Which would make them the perfect ambassadors if not for their inescapable HorrorHunger and unsustainable instinct to conquer and destroy. They usually hatch on new planets, conquer the other species by assimilating their traits and improving them, and ultimately fight each other until the planet explodes.]] It's unknown whether or not genocide of a near-limitless potential shapeshifting species is justifiable when they destroy planets on a regular basis.
206* ''ComicBook/PS238'': Prospero is willing and ready to blow up the earth to prevent the spread of an extraterrestrial virus.
207* In ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary'', Tagon quickly remembers that encouraging his MadBomber's eager paranoia is a bad idea when he asks for ways to defend Northport.
208-->'''Pi:''' There are so many possibilities... I'd have to requisition some ordnance, sir.\
209'''Tagon:''' You are ''not'' allowed to nuke Northport ''"Just to be sure."''\
210'''Pi:''' I'd have to nuke a lot more than just Northport to be ''really'' sure.
211* Riff from ''Webcomic/SluggyFreelance'' thinks this is an acceptable way to deal with [[http://www.sluggy.com/comics/archives/daily/071017 two women talking to each other about him if they are ex-girlfriends and/or potential girlfriends]].
212[[/folder]]
213
214[[folder:Web Original]]
215* The ''[[https://fiction.homepageofthedead.com/forum.pl?readfiction=943P Alomal-137 Case Study]]'' by Lon Miller briefly describes nuclear annihilation of several east-coast cities in response to a pandemic.
216* In the ''Toys/{{Bionicle}}'' web serials, Toa Helryx contemplates doing a [[FantasticNuke Nova Blast]] while trapped in the [[BigBad Makuta]]-controlled [[HumongousMecha Great Spirit]]'s processor unit, unleashing her ElementalPowers and drowning herself, but also destroying Makuta's brain and killing the entire Matoran Universe contained in the Great Spirit's body, just to make sure Makuta won't conquer other worlds. Thankfully she's stopped.
217* ''Website/SCPFoundation'':
218** Several sites run by the Foundation that house their more dangerous anomalies feature a tactical nuclear warhead or three as part of their structures. This is in case of a break-out, since "these things NOT running amok" is of a higher priority than "Contain, not destroy." In several instances, it's explicitly stated that the nukes wouldn't even destroy the objects, just slow them down enough that re-containment would be possible. Maybe.
219** [[http://www.scp-wiki.net/revised-entry A short story]] explored a scenario in which SCP-173 began multiplying. Exponentially. After North and South America are completely overrun in a matter of days, the Foundation, secrecy breached, decides to carpet nuke the entire landmass to keep them from spreading to other continents. [[spoiler:One is later spotted in the UK. They nuke the area immediately.]]
220* The game ''[[http://www.hardcorepawn.com/zombie3/ Zombie 3]]'' requires the player to bomb entire city blocks to stop a spreading zombie infestation. Depending on the player's skill, it may be easier to protect a small enclave of survivors and carpet-bomb the rest of the city as a precaution.
221[[/folder]]
222
223[[folder:Web Videos]]
224* The short-lived live-action web series ''Dead Patrol'' involved military teams tasked with delivering nuclear warheads to zombie-infested cities -- by truck, [[FridgeLogic for some reason]].
225[[/folder]]
226
227[[folder:Western Animation]]
228* In ''WesternAnimation/ClerksTheAnimatedSeries'', Leonardo Leonardo plans to take over the town. Dante and Randal find a book detailing his master plan, which is full of countermeasures for every possibility. If things spiral completely out of control, the city is to be nuked from orbit. Randal even invokes the trope name.
229* In ''WesternAnimation/ReBoot'' the Guardian Collective takes this approach to dealing with web creatures. They don't even ''try'' conventional methods to get rid of them, opting to destroy the system as soon as one is found. Bob knows about this and is pissed when he sees Mouse tell the guardians about the web creature in Mainframe. Bob manages to stop this, [[FromBadToWorse but makes the situation worse]].
230[[/folder]]
231
232[[folder:Real Life]]
233* Declassified materials from the US Department of Defense seem to indicate this is an official position of last resort on many biological weapons. Apparently, this is one of the few cases where use of nuclear weapons on friendly (or home) soil is both planned for, and expected to be used should the conditions arise. A confirmed smallpox outbreak that can't be contained is one such scenario.
234* While not confirmed, most other nuclear powers are expected to have similar contingency plans, and many non-nuclear nations have either a conventional form of this, or agreements with nuclear powers to perform this action upon request.
235* On a smaller scale: A relatively quick and reliable (if messy) method to dispose of a nuclear weapon is to blow it up. While this scatters the fissile material (hence the mess), it also prevents unauthorised use or accidental nuclear detonation.
236* It is precisely ''because'' of UsefulNotes/SimoHayha's reign of terror during the Winter War as the [[RedBaron White Death]] that suspected sniper nests are justifiable targets for an AlphaStrike: Häyhä had so many kills under his belt (and using a Finnish [[DeathByIrony Mosin-Nagant]] at that) that the Red Army had to resort to calling in [[DeathFromAbove artillery strikes on places they thought he was shooting at them from]]. He survived those attempts and would continue to terrorize the Russians for the duration of the conflict.
237[[/folder]]

Top