Nuclear Deterrence Agency

Should the US Create a Nuclear Deterrence Agency to Oversee All Things Nuclear Weapons Related

  • Yes - The mission has been ignored too long and needs more prominance

    Votes: 5 35.7%
  • No - The Dept. of Energy and National Nuclear Security Agency does that already

    Votes: 5 35.7%
  • No - get rid of all nukes don't need any agency

    Votes: 4 28.6%

  • Total voters
    14

bobbymike

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As many of you know, or suspect from my sometimes repetitive posts (sorry), I have been a critic of the neglect of the nuclear deterrent mission since shortly after 1991 when Bush 41 cancelled all nuclear modernization of warheads and delivery systems - in the post Cold War euphoria - and the entire nuclear enterprise began to 'whither on the vine' and also my personal belief that any disarmament after START II was unnecessary.

Now my NDA would encompass every detail from the nuke labs (new warheads and lots of advanced concept research) to the electronics on advanced guidance sets to re-entry vehicles to solid rocket motors for prompt global/Strategic strike to SSBNs to Next Gen Bombers to possibly studying super hard silos, other/alternate basing etc., etc. :D

Like the Missile Defense Agency its main purpose would be to direct funding, in this case to needed modernization programs, to all industrial base skills and technologies needed to insure a robust Triad now and 50 years from now.
 
Come on vote people ;D I have been in an email discussion with a congressman who sits on the strategic forces subcommittee about this would like to see where people stand!
 
Haven't voted yet, but I was wondering whether it might be a better idea to return most such R&D to the various services, with a revival of the old Defense Nuclear Agency to handle any projects and activities that wouldn't easily fit under a single service's purview?
 
bobbymike said:
As many of you know, or suspect from my sometimes repetitive posts (sorry), I have been a critic of the neglect of the nuclear deterrent mission since shortly after 1991 when Bush 41 cancelled all nuclear modernization of warheads and delivery systems - in the post Cold War euphoria - and the entire nuclear enterprise began to 'whither on the vine' and also my personal belief that any disarmament after START II was unnecessary.

Now my NDA would encompass every detail from the nuke labs (new warheads and lots of advanced concept research) to the electronics on advanced guidance sets to re-entry vehicles to solid rocket motors for prompt global/Strategic strike to SSBNs to Next Gen Bombers to possibly studying super hard silos, other/alternate basing etc., etc. :D

Too all encompassing. Don't need to cover RV's, SRM's, boomers, and bombers in one agency. You are proposing the Homeland Security Agency equivalent for nukes. MDA doesn't work either.
 
Nuclear seat at Air Force budgeting table pays off
By Michael Hoffman Friday, September 21st, 2012 1:26 pm Posted in Air

The Air Force added an assistant chief of staff in charge of nuclear weapons in 2008 in response to a host of nuclear embarrassments to include a B-52 mistakenly flying six nuclear warheads from North Dakota to Louisiana. Four years later the new position is paying dividends. Maj. Gen. Donald Alston, since retired, took over the position on Nov. 1, 2008 after internal reports blasted the service for not having a headquarters position dedicated solely to nuclear weapons. Alston’s first job was cleaning up the mess left by so many years of nuclear negligence on the part of Air Force leadership following the end of the Cold War. Fast forward four years and the discourse inside the Pentagon is dominated by defense spending cuts and the threat of sequestration. Establishing an assistant chief of staff dedicated to nuclear issues has given the nuclear community a seat at the table when it comes time to discuss the budget. Nuclear issues previously got folded under other portfolios. "What it has done for headquarters Air Force is given a guy a seat at the table in corporate discussions where dollars are at stake, advocacy is required, and there is somebody there who speaks on behalf of this mission set,” said Maj. Gen. Maj. Gen. William Chambers, who took over for Alston in June as the assistant chief of staff for strategic deterrence and nuclear integration. Chambers must work with the other Defense Department agencies attached to the nuclear enterprise to include U.S. Strategic Command, the Defense Threat Reduction Agency and the Navy. Otherwise, the Air Force nuclear units could miss out on potential funding. Dedicating a two-star flag officer to the job shows the importance the Air Force places on the nuclear enterprise, said Lt. Gen. James Kowalski, head of Global Strike Command.


“If we didn’t have an A10 that would create another layer of management or bureaucracy between those organizations, and we in fact might not get the attention of having a two-star general officer who is watching it all the time,” Kowalski said. It’s not just about immediate term funding issues. Chambers said he’s had the opportunity to start looking long term for the Air Force’s nuclear force — a privilege Alston didn’t have as he tried to fix many of the immediate problems plaguing Air Force nuclear squadrons. “We are stronger and we have moved to a phase of this campaign in strengthening to the longer look that General Alston wasn’t able to have because of the immediate problems at hand. A longer look at the long term fixes the enterprise needs,” Chambers said.
 

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