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Russia's Nuclear Weapons

Russia presents an acute threat to the United States and
its allies, according to the 2022 National Defense Strategy.
The 2022 Nuclear Posture Review, a Biden Administration
review of U.S. nuclear policy, states,
    Russia remains the U.S. rival with the most capable
    and diverse nuclear forces. Today it is unique in the
    combination  of strategic and non-strategic nuclear
    forces it fields that enables nuclear employment
    ranging  from  large-scale attacks on the [U.S.]
    homeland  to limited strikes in support of a regional
    military campaign [in the Euro-Atlantic region].
Since Russia's February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Russian
President Vladimir Putin has threatened to use nuclear
weapons, stated that Russia has deployed nonstrategic
nuclear weapons to its ally Belarus, and declared the
suspension of certain Russian obligations under the 2010
New  START   Treaty that limits U.S. and Russian strategic
nuclear forces. Congress may choose to examine U.S.
deterrence and risk reduction policy toward Russia.

Force Structure
According to a recent nongovernmental estimate, Russia
has around 1,710 deployed nuclear warheads based on a
triad of strategic delivery vehicles roughly consisting of 326
intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), 12 ballistic-
missile submarines (SSBNs) with 192 submarine-launched
ballistic missiles (SLBMs), and 58 strategic bombers.
Russia has not exchanged official data with the United
States about the structure of its strategic nuclear forces
since 2023. Russian officials have stated, however, that
Russia continues to abide by New START  limits, thus
maintaining rough parity with U.S. strategic nuclear forces.
According to one nongovernmental  estimate, the United
States has around 1,770 deployed nuclear warheads.

Russia is concluding a modernization of its strategic nuclear
forces that focuses in particular on the development of the
SS-X-29  (Sarmat) heavy ICBM,  the SS-27 Mod 2 (Yars)
ICBM,  and the Dolgorukiy (Borei) class SSBN, according
to a 2024 Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) assessment.
Russia deploys the majority of its strategic nuclear
warheads on ICBMs.  A  separate Russian military service,
the Strategic Rocket Forces, commands these silo-based
and mobile ICBMs.  Russia can field most of its ICBMs and
all of its SLBMs with multiple warheads on each missile,
according to a nongovernmental source.

Russia also has a variety of dual-capable systems (which
are able to use conventional or nuclear warheads), including
precision strike missiles, of various ranges and modes of
launch, that are not limited by any arms control agreements.
The Russian military could deploy these systems with
nuclear warheads, enabling their use as nonstrategic nuclear
weapons. Russia has rejected U.S. efforts to negotiate limits


Updated January 22, 2025


on Russian nonstrategic nuclear weapons, describing these
weapons  as an offset to U.S. and NATO conventional
superiority. The State Department estimated in 2024 that
the Russian military has between 1,000 to 2,000 nuclear
warheads for nonstrategic weapons; nongovernmental
organizations attribute 1,558 warheads to these systems.

Russian officials have expressed concerns about the
survivability of Russian strategic nuclear forces, given
advances in U.S. long-range conventional strike and missile
defenses. In 2018, President Putin announced that Russia
was developing new  delivery vehicles, including an ICBM-
mounted  hypersonic glide vehicle, a nuclear-powered cruise
missile, and a nuclear-capable autonomous underwater
system. According to 2024 testimony of NORTHCOM
Commander   General Gregory Guillot, Russia intends for
these systems to challenge U.S. defenses and guarantee
Russia's ability to retaliate after a first strike.

  Doctrne and     mpoyment P ans
According to a November  2024 revision of Russia's nuclear
declaratory policy document, Russian nuclear deterrence
policy seeks to maintain nuclear forces at a sufficient
level, guarantees protection of national sovereignty and
territorial integrity, deters aggression, and enables
escalation management, as well as the termination of
adversary military actions on conditions acceptable to
Russia. The document adds that the Russian President could
authorize nuclear weapons employment in the following
scenarios: (1) the receipt of reliable data about a ballistic
missile attack against Russian or allied territory, (2) the use
by an adversary of nuclear and other weapons of mass
destruction against Russia or an ally, (3) adversary
actions on government or military targets that could
affect Russia's ability to retaliate with nuclear weapons, (4)
a conventional aggression against Russia and (or) Belarus
that poses a critical threat to their sovereignty and (or)
territorial integrity, and (5) the receipt of reliable data
about a mass start of aerospace attack means and their
crossing of [Russia's] state border. The document also
states that Russia considers an aggression by any
nonnuclear state, but with participation or with support
from a nuclear state, a joint attack against Russia.

Russian political and military leaders have articulated a
strategic deterrence concept that combines nonmilitary
means, nonnuclear capabilities, and nuclear weapons into a
spectrum of continuous actions aimed at deterrence,
escalation management, and warfighting. According to the
U.S. intelligence community's 2024 Annual Threat
Assessment  (ATA), Russia is expanding and modernizing
its dual-capable systems because Moscow believes [they]
offer options to deter adversaries, control the escalation of
potential hostilities, and counter U.S. and Allied
conventional forces. Western studies of authoritative

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