Greetings to you too!
When a coal power plant or chemical plant is bombed or otherwise attacked during a war, the results are bad. But I think you would accept that they're not as bad for the surrounding area as a devastated nuclear plant.
Of course, some other sorts of power plant, such as hydro electric dams, may be very dangerous when bombed in a war - though the dangers are probably more acute. The nuclear contamination is more of a chronic problem - it may kill more people, but probably over a much greater time period.
Yes, and no, and maybe.
For one, no one can say how many people would instantly die in each case. Then, for many things we don't really know what the long-term results will be at all. What we do know, however, is that coal plants, for example, have devastating implications for the area they are in. Ground and water contaminations, etc. No one can say what the implications will be of the BP oil disaster. Just because we don't see much of the spilled oil anymore does not mean that it isn't there.
And then, i'm generally very reluctant to accept any argument just based on the number of deaths, health implications, environmental impact, etc. in case of a disaster. That is just way too noarrowly focused.
By that argument we should get rid of all air planes immediatly, because in the case of a disaster, almost all of the people involved will die. This is just too short-sighted.
One must take into account the impacts and implications during the whole life-time of a plant or installation or whatever, even if that lifetime ends with a disaster. It may be nice to say "Well, duh, if a coal plant blows up, it's only a very limited impact from that". While this is true, it would neglect the impact it has during operation. Coal mining is dangerous and devestates a lot of land. Burning coal is extremely dirty, with a lot of poisons released.
While a nuke blowing up will have a big impact, it is still better off than a coal plant, all things considered.
That's one of the things i'm sorely missing in the whole debate, especially here in Germany. Yes, nukes are not without risks. Yes, a nuke gone mad can cause a lot of fatalities. Yes, radioactive materials released into the atmosphere isn't a good thing. But that's only a little part of the whole equation, but unfortunately it is only that part that gets the most attention.
Finally, one would be wrongly guided to judge nuclear technology only by the old, existing reactor designs. There are much safer design available now, even ones where a core meltdown simply can not happen. As an added extra, these designs also use up to 98% of their fuel, compared to a measily 0.6% of the older and current ones. And to make it even better, the fuel they use is much more abundant too. Much much more.
But thanks to the anti-nuke lobby, the efforts to develop and deploy these technologies are heavily crippled, and even stopped completely in some countries.
Greetings,
Chris
Edit: From what i understand, these new kinds of reactors (LFTR's, to be exact) can also be manufactured in smaller sizes and still be economical from a business perspective. This would allow for building many smaller reactors, in case of a few big ones, which would further reduce the overall risk and implications in case something goes awfully bad.