I'm not sure of the purpose of the above analysis, but it is quite flawed.
It is, but the flaws are instructive, precisely because of the types of flaws.
Basically, you're doing the math using "acceptable" risk levels; he's specifically aiming at zero risk. You're also assuming that the population is renewing "fast enough," an assumption that has already bitten the Japanese in the ass -- but he's assuming that there's no population renewal at all.
What's a "reasonable" assumption for the rate of population growth?
