14
Future nuclear weapon policies James M. Acton [email protected]

Future nuclear weapon policies James M. Acton jacton@ceip

  • Upload
    katen

  • View
    70

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Future nuclear weapon policies James M. Acton [email protected]. (Some) elements of nuclear posture. Force size and structure Deployed and reserve systems; readiness status Military Organization Troops; training; procedures; operations Enabling systems - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Future nuclear weapon policies James M. Acton jacton@ceip

Future nuclear weapon policies

James M. [email protected]

Page 2: Future nuclear weapon policies James M. Acton jacton@ceip

(Some) elements of nuclear posture

• Force size and structure• Deployed and reserve systems; readiness status

• Military Organization• Troops; training; procedures; operations

• Enabling systems• Command and control; early warning; ISR; targeting

• Infrastructure• Warhead production/maintenance facilities; industrial base; test facilities

• Declaratory policy• Statements; training and exercises; domestic discourse

• War plans• Treaty obligations

Page 3: Future nuclear weapon policies James M. Acton jacton@ceip

Questions raised by reductions

• Can U.S. fulfill “deterrence” requirements?• Will weapons reach target?

• Reliability; pre- and post-launch survivability • Will weapons destroy target?

• Yield, accuracy and target location error• Can requirements be revised?• How will allies/adversaries view U.S. resolve and capability?• What will the effects on “strategic stability” be?• …

Page 4: Future nuclear weapon policies James M. Acton jacton@ceip

Current U.S. force structure

Platform Missile Warhead

ICBM (Silo based) Minuteman III W78; W87

SLBM Ohio-class SSBN Trident-D5 W76-0/1; W88

Heavy Bombers B-2 (Gravity bombs) B61-7/11; B83-1

B-52H ALCM W80-1(+ gravity bombs)

“Tactical” fighters F-15E; F-16C/D (Gravity bombs) B61-3/4/10

Page 5: Future nuclear weapon policies James M. Acton jacton@ceip

Future of the triad

• Political context crucial; in practice force structure will be determined by politics of the moment as much as nuclear strategy• ICBM replacement will probably be delayed further (beyond

2020); early abandonment very unlikely (jobs!)• Very strong support for SLBMs• Multiple decision points related to heavy bombers and tactical

fighters coming up• Air leg most vulnerable

Page 6: Future nuclear weapon policies James M. Acton jacton@ceip

Arguments for heavy bombers and tactical fighters

• Unique ability to hold buried targets at risk• But, how much do these targets really matter?

• Stealth as alternative to speed for defense penetration• But, how likely is effective BMD?

• Recallable• But, how many war plan options include only aircraft?

• Forward deployment as tool for assurance• But, are there alternatives?

• Signaling as tool for crisis management

Page 7: Future nuclear weapon policies James M. Acton jacton@ceip

A growing role for conventional weapons in strategic war plans?

DoD is directed to conduct deliberate planning for non-nuclear strike options to assess what objectives and effects could be achieved through integrated non-nuclear strike options, and to propose possible means to make these objectives and effects achievable. Although they are not a substitute for nuclear weapons, planning for non-nuclear strike options is a central part of reducing the role of nuclear weapons.

Report on Nuclear Employment Strategy of the United States (2013)

• Probably not about large-scale replacement.

Page 8: Future nuclear weapon policies James M. Acton jacton@ceip

Types of target in a “counterforce” attack against North Korea

• Fixed, soft targets• ICBM sitting on a launch pad

• Fixed, buried targets• Warhead storage facilities; leadership; command and control• Probably tens, potentially hundreds of metres deep

• Mobile, soft targets• Road-mobile missiles

Page 9: Future nuclear weapon policies James M. Acton jacton@ceip

Massive ordnance penetrator

• Total mass: 13,600 kg• HE mass: 2,400 kg• Can reportedly

penetrate to 20 m in reinforced concrete (much less than nuclear weapons)

Page 10: Future nuclear weapon policies James M. Acton jacton@ceip

Physics of conventional penetrators

• From Nelson (2002)

Young Penetration Equation (SI Units)

D: Depth S: Penetrability of targetN: Nose performance coefficientm: Mass A: Cross sectional areaV: Speed

Page 11: Future nuclear weapon policies James M. Acton jacton@ceip

CPGS technological approaches

Page 12: Future nuclear weapon policies James M. Acton jacton@ceip

Comparison of penetrator effectiveness

• Ratio of penetration depths: 1.3-2.1• CPGS penetrator would only contain about 10% of

the HE that MOP does.

MOP CPGS

V (m/s) 500 [?] 1,000-1,200

m/A (kg/m) 27,000 14,000-21,000

Page 13: Future nuclear weapon policies James M. Acton jacton@ceip

Mobile missile hunting

• Need to locate and track missiles• If using standoff weapons need to provide inflight target updates

(or risk waiting until they’re stationary)• North Korea has hundreds of mobile ballistic missiles

• Only a small fraction might contain a nuclear warhead, but very hard to tell which is which

• 1991 Gulf War: 1,460 sorties; 0 confirmed kills• 2006 Israel-Hizbollah war: 80-90% of Hizbollah’s medium- and long-

range rocket launchers destroyed. But, took time and relied on attacking launchers after missiles has fired.

Page 14: Future nuclear weapon policies James M. Acton jacton@ceip

Nuclear v. conventional options

• Lethal radius from flechette weapon: <100 m, possibly much less (my calculation)• TEL can traverse this distance in 10 s

• Lethal radius from 100 kT nuclear weapon: 2,900 m (McKinzie et al. 2001)• TEL can traverse this distance in 260 s

• Hunting mobile missiles with conventional weapons much harder than nuclear weapons