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British Trident Subs to Field Enhanced U.S.-Made Warheads
Monday, April 4, 2011
The United Kingdom's nuclear-armed ballistic missile submarines are to receive an enhanced version of a U.S.-manufactured nuclear warhead, the Federation of American Scientists said on Friday (see GSN, Feb. 7). There has been a long-held belief that the present nuclear warhead deployed on British Trident missile vessels is very much like the U.S. W-76 warhead used by the U.S. fleet of ballistic missile submarines, according to nuclear-weapon expert Hans Kristensen. "The first W-76-1 United Kingdom trials test was performed at WETL (Weapon Evaluation Test Laboratory), providing qualification data critical to the U.K. implementation of the W-76-1," according to a report last month from the Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico. Formal reports typically do not provide U.S. warhead names for the counterpart system carried by British vessels, instead using different descriptions. The Sandia document, though, breaks with tradition by using the U.S. warhead classification for the nuclear weapon deployed on British submarines.
Roughly 1,200 W-76-1 warheads are being built at the Pantex Plant near Amarillo, Texas. The warhead is an enhanced model of the W-76, which was built from 1978 until 1987. The government in London has acknowledged that the a re-entry body capable of carrying the W-76-1 is being attached to its submarine-launched ballistic missiles. However, it was not apparent until now which version of the warhead the submarines would carry -- the current model or the upgraded W-76-1. The Sandia document suggests the latter. The warhead enhancement increases the system's shelf-life by an additional three decades, until the end of the 2040s, for deployment on the the U.K. and U.S. nuclear-armed ballistic submarines. The extension coincides with the 2010 determination by the British Strategic Defense Review that "a replacement warhead is not required until at least the 2030s."
The integration of U.S.-developed W-76-1 warheads into the British nuclear deterrent brings additional skepticism to London's assertions that it fields an "independent" nuclear force, according to Kristensen. British submarine-deployed ballistic missiles are on loan from the U.S. Navy, the United States will provide the missile tubes for the country's planned replacement submarines, and the new reactors that will power the successor vessels indicate significant U.S. atomic input (Hans Kristensen, Federation of American Scientists, April 1). The enhanced W-76-1 warhead would not constitute a new system that would represent a breach of Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty rules, according to the London Guardian. However, the changes could exacerbate international friction as London and Washington have vowed to reduce the importance they place on their strategic deterrents, the newspaper reported.
"It is not a new weapon, but it gives an existing weapon a distinctive new capability -- hard target kill capability -- that will influence Russian and Chinese thinking on U.S. intentions, increasing concern about a possible first strike," stated Union of Concerned Scientists arms control expert Stephen Young. "It is a destabilizing move." The seeming integration of the W-76-1 into the British nuclear fleet produces questions on how many significant determinations on modernizing the nation's deterrent have already been made despite plans to delay the final decision on implementing the project until around 2016, according to the Guardian. The plan would replace each of the nation's four Vanguard-class submarines at an estimated cost of more than $30 billion (see GSN, March 15; Julian Borger, London Guardian, April 2). Meanwhile, British Armed Forces Minister Nick Harvey last week suggested that France and the United Kingdom develop a shared nuclear deterrent, Agence France-Presse reported on Saturday.
Harvey's suggested received positive feedback from a group of French experts, according to the Guardian. Late last year, the two European powers signed an agreement that calls for them to test their respective nuclear arsenals at a simulation facility to be constructed in eastern France. Each side would still maintain separate strategic codes and would not share their nuclear information (see GSN, Jan. 10). "The U.K. needs to revisit the case in the long term for the U.K. maintaining a permanent 24-7 at-sea capability," Harvey said. "We pay an enormous premium to maintain this." The United Kingdom's current nuclear force posture calls for at least one nuclear-armed submarine to be on patrol at all times (see GSN, July 28, 2010). "It is quite feasible that we could continue with a permanent at-sea submarine patrol in conjunction with the French either with three British submarines as proposed to the current four," Harvey said.
Such a move could result in significant cost efficiencies for the United Kingdom while still allowing the country to preserve its independent command operations, the official said. "It is unlikely we would face circumstances in which Britain would be faced with an external nuclear threat that would not apply to the French national interest at the same time," he said. "It is quite possible for the French and British to work together on research and development of replacement submarines, so nearly halving the development costs." Harvey estimated that over 25 to 30 years the possible cost savings could amount to billions of dollars (Agence France-Presse/Spacewar.com, April 2). Elsewhere, one of the British nuclear-armed submarines last week experienced technical troubles that forced it to cut short a training drill and head back to its base of operations in Scotland, the Press Association reported on Sunday.
The HMS Vengeance "has suffered a mechanical defect resulting in a reduction in propulsion," a British Defense Ministry spokesman said. "She is returning to Faslane under her own power. She is still at sea." The official said the situation is "not nuclear related" (Matthew Holehouse, Press Association, April 3). The vessel came into contact with seaborne junk on Thursday near Ireland, according to the Scottish Daily Record. "Something was sucked into her propulsion system," according to a spokesman. The submarine reached the Faslane naval base on Sunday (Ben Spencer, Daily Record, April 4).
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Bolding mine - Really, China and Russia will think the US/Britain are developing a first strike capability? Did this guys watch stop in 1983 or so? .
Monday, April 4, 2011
The United Kingdom's nuclear-armed ballistic missile submarines are to receive an enhanced version of a U.S.-manufactured nuclear warhead, the Federation of American Scientists said on Friday (see GSN, Feb. 7). There has been a long-held belief that the present nuclear warhead deployed on British Trident missile vessels is very much like the U.S. W-76 warhead used by the U.S. fleet of ballistic missile submarines, according to nuclear-weapon expert Hans Kristensen. "The first W-76-1 United Kingdom trials test was performed at WETL (Weapon Evaluation Test Laboratory), providing qualification data critical to the U.K. implementation of the W-76-1," according to a report last month from the Sandia National Laboratories in New Mexico. Formal reports typically do not provide U.S. warhead names for the counterpart system carried by British vessels, instead using different descriptions. The Sandia document, though, breaks with tradition by using the U.S. warhead classification for the nuclear weapon deployed on British submarines.
Roughly 1,200 W-76-1 warheads are being built at the Pantex Plant near Amarillo, Texas. The warhead is an enhanced model of the W-76, which was built from 1978 until 1987. The government in London has acknowledged that the a re-entry body capable of carrying the W-76-1 is being attached to its submarine-launched ballistic missiles. However, it was not apparent until now which version of the warhead the submarines would carry -- the current model or the upgraded W-76-1. The Sandia document suggests the latter. The warhead enhancement increases the system's shelf-life by an additional three decades, until the end of the 2040s, for deployment on the the U.K. and U.S. nuclear-armed ballistic submarines. The extension coincides with the 2010 determination by the British Strategic Defense Review that "a replacement warhead is not required until at least the 2030s."
The integration of U.S.-developed W-76-1 warheads into the British nuclear deterrent brings additional skepticism to London's assertions that it fields an "independent" nuclear force, according to Kristensen. British submarine-deployed ballistic missiles are on loan from the U.S. Navy, the United States will provide the missile tubes for the country's planned replacement submarines, and the new reactors that will power the successor vessels indicate significant U.S. atomic input (Hans Kristensen, Federation of American Scientists, April 1). The enhanced W-76-1 warhead would not constitute a new system that would represent a breach of Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty rules, according to the London Guardian. However, the changes could exacerbate international friction as London and Washington have vowed to reduce the importance they place on their strategic deterrents, the newspaper reported.
"It is not a new weapon, but it gives an existing weapon a distinctive new capability -- hard target kill capability -- that will influence Russian and Chinese thinking on U.S. intentions, increasing concern about a possible first strike," stated Union of Concerned Scientists arms control expert Stephen Young. "It is a destabilizing move." The seeming integration of the W-76-1 into the British nuclear fleet produces questions on how many significant determinations on modernizing the nation's deterrent have already been made despite plans to delay the final decision on implementing the project until around 2016, according to the Guardian. The plan would replace each of the nation's four Vanguard-class submarines at an estimated cost of more than $30 billion (see GSN, March 15; Julian Borger, London Guardian, April 2). Meanwhile, British Armed Forces Minister Nick Harvey last week suggested that France and the United Kingdom develop a shared nuclear deterrent, Agence France-Presse reported on Saturday.
Harvey's suggested received positive feedback from a group of French experts, according to the Guardian. Late last year, the two European powers signed an agreement that calls for them to test their respective nuclear arsenals at a simulation facility to be constructed in eastern France. Each side would still maintain separate strategic codes and would not share their nuclear information (see GSN, Jan. 10). "The U.K. needs to revisit the case in the long term for the U.K. maintaining a permanent 24-7 at-sea capability," Harvey said. "We pay an enormous premium to maintain this." The United Kingdom's current nuclear force posture calls for at least one nuclear-armed submarine to be on patrol at all times (see GSN, July 28, 2010). "It is quite feasible that we could continue with a permanent at-sea submarine patrol in conjunction with the French either with three British submarines as proposed to the current four," Harvey said.
Such a move could result in significant cost efficiencies for the United Kingdom while still allowing the country to preserve its independent command operations, the official said. "It is unlikely we would face circumstances in which Britain would be faced with an external nuclear threat that would not apply to the French national interest at the same time," he said. "It is quite possible for the French and British to work together on research and development of replacement submarines, so nearly halving the development costs." Harvey estimated that over 25 to 30 years the possible cost savings could amount to billions of dollars (Agence France-Presse/Spacewar.com, April 2). Elsewhere, one of the British nuclear-armed submarines last week experienced technical troubles that forced it to cut short a training drill and head back to its base of operations in Scotland, the Press Association reported on Sunday.
The HMS Vengeance "has suffered a mechanical defect resulting in a reduction in propulsion," a British Defense Ministry spokesman said. "She is returning to Faslane under her own power. She is still at sea." The official said the situation is "not nuclear related" (Matthew Holehouse, Press Association, April 3). The vessel came into contact with seaborne junk on Thursday near Ireland, according to the Scottish Daily Record. "Something was sucked into her propulsion system," according to a spokesman. The submarine reached the Faslane naval base on Sunday (Ben Spencer, Daily Record, April 4).
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Bolding mine - Really, China and Russia will think the US/Britain are developing a first strike capability? Did this guys watch stop in 1983 or so? .