Current Nuclear Weapons Development


Why solely tying our arsenal to that of Russia’s alone was short sighted. I still predict we will face a situation where the US is possibly opposed by two powers with similar or larger arsenals than our own.
 
I could be wrong but I believe this is the first test in awhile with three warheads. Potentially re-uploading after the NST expires?
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The article give no indication of warhead load - and in any case as it was a test firing it would be carrying at most a test warhead and/ or ballast.....
“The missile blasted off at 12:21 a.m. from Vandenberg Air Force Base and its three reentry vehicles traveled 4,200 miles (6,759 kilometers) to the Kwajalein Atoll“
 
Well, the China definitely can use more warheads. I wonder why they didnt start earlier. Plus considering they are not bound by any treaty, they can and would build any numbers they want.
 
Well, the China definitely can use more warheads. I wonder why they didnt start earlier. Plus considering they are not bound by any treaty, they can and would build any numbers they want.

Exactly why it would be foolish for the US to allow itself to be bound by any treaties once they expire.
 
China's military/political strategy is heavily reliant on deception, of course one shouldn't take them for face value.
 
One thing is clear however is that there is nothing to stop them from actually make more nukes. Not even any diplomatic pressure as China doesnt even have any treaty to comply with.
 
Very short sighted, I fear.

"The Air Force did not respond to a query about whether it plans to develop additional low-yield weapons as part of its new “conventional-nuclear integration” strategy, which looks at both types of weapons on the same spectrum of conflict instead of in separate categories altogether. That document aims to prepare the service to fight battles where nukes may be used to seize a city or in other, typically non-nuclear scenarios."
 
I saw that, but for the moment I'm reading it as an attempt to try and preserve some ambiguity about the USAFs near future plans.
 
I saw that, but for the moment I'm reading it as an attempt to try and preserve some ambiguity about the USAFs near future plans.

Agreed, and I know the public deserves disclosure of destabilizing weapons and such, but I think we're going to see DOD as a whole become much more opaque with the future, especially given how fast information can be disseminated. Not to mention China's general opaqueness and them viewing the US's military establishment's openness as a large weakness.

China's full steam ahead right now, they know their window for capitalizing on the post-GWOT/2008 lull in US dominance is closing.
 
I suspect, as the article mentions, it was W-76-2, which depending on the time frame of the interview wasn’t public knowledge. It’s already been deployed on SSBNs, which points to development efforts that predate its announcement. Not that the modification seems that extreme. I’m guessing it just replaces the fusion fuel with ballast. The Brits have long been rumored to do the same thing, since they lack any tactical/low yield system like B-61.
 
Couple that with the comments he made during the period of increased tension with NK and you may think there's a new destructive weapons concept we may not be aware of.
 
I doubt it. I think the US is just responding to the fact that the Russians have publicly envisioned using low yield nukes as a demonstration of will and intent, and the US is responding by making it clear that low yield will be met by low yield. The USAF is also talking about integrating tactical nukes with conventional planning, so there's a doctrine to match the modified weapons being introduced (the other being B-61 mod 12). So I think it isn't a secret concept, it's a new publicized doctrine aimed specifically at deterring Russia.
 
The cost of recapitalizing the nuclear force is gong to be along the lines of a trillion. Even the new ICBM force is apparently going to be astronomical. I suspect the planned forces ultimately suffer deep cuts - possibly entire boats or the entire land based force. I'd thought the GBSD would be a relatively easy and cheap program with no new tech that could slot into existing infrastructure but the numbers being thrown out there don't seem to jive with that assessment.
 
The cost of recapitalizing the nuclear force is gong to be along the lines of a trillion. Even the new ICBM force is apparently going to be astronomical. I suspect the planned forces ultimately suffer deep cuts - possibly entire boats or the entire land based force. I'd thought the GBSD would be a relatively easy and cheap program with no new tech that could slot into existing infrastructure but the numbers being thrown out there don't seem to jive with that assessment.

Do you think GBSD will include new capabilities to evade future ABM threats?
 
The only thing that I've seen regarding details is that the warhead will be based on the W87. I don't believe any of the requirements are public. I would think that it would have to incorporate some kind of maneuvering capability given the time frame they expect it to be operation (2075!), but on the other hand they may start with a conventional RV and later upgrade to something else as a new program. Avangarde for instance had its initial deployment on a Soviet vintage booster. So long as there is enough diameter and throw weight, presumably other RVs could be substituted after the fact. I assume that existing silos limit the dimensions and weight of the system. I haven't heard anything concerning a mobile launcher.

Concerning price, while I thought the initial cost was extreme I then remembered that the B-61 mod 12 program ballooned into like 7 billions dollars and counting for ~400 free bombs that were rebuilds, so 13 billion would be a relative bargain if it were achievable.
 
The cost of recapitalizing the nuclear force is gong to be along the lines of a trillion. Even the new ICBM force is apparently going to be astronomical. I suspect the planned forces ultimately suffer deep cuts - possibly entire boats or the entire land based force. I'd thought the GBSD would be a relatively easy and cheap program with no new tech that could slot into existing infrastructure but the numbers being thrown out there don't seem to jive with that assessment.
The trillion figure is the cost of the entire existing triad, warhead infrastructure and modernization over the next 30 years. Modernization itself is around $400 billion.
 
Very hard to know what exactly he’s referring to here, but I guess that’s the point.

If you read the whole transcript and take into account how Trump speaks, he's not talking about nuclear weapons that china and Russia can't even imagine, he's talking about other weapon systems they can't imagine which actually clears up the confusion over his statements. When it comes to nukes there isn't a lot of variety in possibilities for weapons that other nations "can't imagine". Nukes go boom, that's it. He is clearly talking about other things. Maybe we have supersonic stealth helicopters piloted by terminator 101s with phased plasma rifles... Who knows. I like the guy but he talks too much.
 
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If you read the whole transcript and take into account how Trump speaks, he's not talking about nuclear weapons that china and Russia can't even imagine, he's talking about other weapon systems they can't imagine which actually clears up the confusion over his statements. When it comes to nukes there isn't a lot of variety in possibilities for weapons that other nations "can't imagine". Nukes go boom, that's it. He is clearly talking about other things. Maybe we have supersonic stealth helicopters piloted by terminator 101s with phased plasma rifles... Who knows. I like the guy but he talks too much.

Or a nuclear-powered particle beam hanging out in orbit.
 
If you read the whole transcript and take into account how Trump speaks, he's not talking about nuclear weapons that china and Russia can't even imagine, he's talking about other weapon systems they can't imagine which actually clears up the confusion over his statements. When it comes to nukes there isn't a lot of variety in possibilities for weapons that other nations "can't imagine". Nukes go boom, that's it. He is clearly talking about other things. Maybe we have supersonic stealth helicopters piloted by terminator 101s with phased plasma rifles... Who knows. I like the guy but he talks too much.

Or a nuclear-powered particle beam hanging out in orbit.
Zero residual radiation pure fusion weapons ;)
 
Zero residual radiation pure fusion weapons ;)

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