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Defense Primer: Strategic Nuclear Forces


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Since the early 1960s the United States has maintained a
triad of strategic nuclear delivery vehicles. These include
long-range land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles
(ICBMs),  long-range submarine-launched ballistic missiles
(SLBMs),  and long-range heavy bombers equipped to carry
nuclear-armed cruise missiles and nuclear-armed gravity
bombs. The number  of nuclear warheads carried on these
delivery vehicles peaked in the late 1980s, at around 14,000
warheads. It has been declining ever since, both as the
United States complies with limits in U.S.-Russian arms
control agreements and as it has changed requirements after
the Cold War. As of February 2018, the United States had
reduced its forces to comply with the New START Treaty,
which entered into force in early 2011. Table 1 displays the
U.S. forces that count under the treaty limits, as of
September  1, 2020. These forces fall below the treaty limits
of 1,550 deployed warheads on 700 deployed missiles due
to maintenance schedules and operational requirements.

Table  I. U.S. Strategic Nuclear Forces Under  New
START
                 Total         Deployed
  System       Launchers      Launchers     Warheads
Minuteman         454             397           397
III ICBM
Trident (D-        280            230          1,012
5) SLBM
B-52               46             36            36a
bombers
B-2 bombers        20             12            12a
Total              800            675          1,467
Source: U.S. Department of State. New START Treaty Aggregate
Numbers of Strategic Offensive Arms, December I, 2020.
a.  The treaty attributes only one warhead to each deployed
    bomber, although they could carry up to 20 bombs or cruise
    missiles.


Early in the Cold War, the United States developed these
three types of nuclear delivery vehicles, in large part
because each of the military services wanted to play a role
in the U.S. nuclear arsenal. However, during the 1960s and
1970s, analysts developed a more reasoned rationale for the
nuclear triad. They argued that these different basing
modes  had complementary strengths and weaknesses that
would enhance deterrence and discourage a Soviet first
strike. For example, ICBMs were believed to have the
accuracy and prompt responsiveness needed to attack
hardened targets such as Soviet command posts and ICBM
silos, SLBMs had the survivability needed to complicate
Soviet efforts to launch a disarming first strike and to
retaliate if such an attack were attempted, and heavy


Updated December  3, 2020


bombers  could be dispersed quickly and launched to
enhance their survivability, and they could be recalled to
their bases if a crisis did not escalate into conflict.

The United States has reaffirmed the value of the nuclear
triad. The Obama Administration noted, in the 2010
Nuclear Posture Review (NPR), that the unique
characteristics of each leg of the triad were important to the
goal of maintaining strategic stability at reduced numbers of
warheads. It pointed out that strategic nuclear submarines
(SSBNs)  are the most survivable leg of the triad, that
single-warhead ICBMs  contribute to stability and are not
vulnerable to air defenses, and that bombers can be
deployed as a signal in crisis, to strengthen deterrence and
provide assurances to allies and partners. It also noted that
retaining sufficient force structure in each leg to allow the
ability to hedge effectively by shifting weight from one
Triad leg to another if necessary due to unexpected
technological problems or operational vulnerabilities.

The Trump  Administration, in the 2018 Nuclear Posture
Review, also reaffirmed the U.S. commitment to the
nuclear triad and to the modernization programs for each of
the components of that force structure. It noted that the
triad's synergy and overlapping attributes help ensure the
enduring survivability of our deterrence capabilities against
attack and our capacity to hold a range of adversary targets
at risk throughout a crisis or conflict. Eliminating any leg of
the triad would greatly ease adversary attack planning and
allow an adversary to concentrate resources and attention
on defeating the remaining two legs.

Current Forces and       ModriainPans
The United States is currently recapitalizing each leg of its
nuclear triad and refurbishing many of the warheads carried
by those systems.


Before implementing the New START   Treaty, the United
States deployed 450 Minuteman III ICBMs at three Air
Force bases: F.E. Warren AFB in Wyoming, Malmstrom
AFB  in Montana, and Minot AFB  in North Dakota. Under
New  START,  the number has declined to 400 deployed
missiles, although the Air Force has retained all 450 silo
launchers. While each Minuteman III missile originally
carried three warheads, each now carries a single warhead,
both to reduce U.S. forces to New START levels and to
adopt what is considered a more stabilizing posture.

Over the past 20 years, the Air Force pursued several
programs designed to improve the accuracy and reliability
of the Minuteman fleet and to, according to the Air Force,
support the operational capability of the Minuteman ICBM
through 2030. In addition, the Air Force is developing the
Ground-based  Strategic Deterrent (GBSD) which will retain


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