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Originally posted by Enkidu
Back in the 1980s, when I was co-commander of a Minuteman III flight, I pretty much understood that the basic philosophy behind having nuclear weapons handy was not so much Mutually Assured Destruction, but rather Global Suicide. Very few nuclear scenarios involved dropping one triple-warhead missle on somebody and having them give up. Most escalated to the point of world destruction, with the message you're sending to your enemy being, "You'll never invade us, because we'll turn the whole world into a smoking cinder before then." That's a pretty effective deterrent.
Originally posted by RedMatt
Ballistic Missile Submarines are the most effective nuclear deterent we have: they're just about impossible to find, and their missiles can bypass most defenses. The downside: they're far and away the most expensive way to deliver nuclear warheads.
So do we really need our SSBNs? Or would we be better off relying on more cost-effective delivery systems, and using all those resources in other areas?
As for maintaining our nuclear deterent:
The only country that could threaten our ICBMs right now is Russia, and with the array of sensors we've got in place, the chances they could execute an effective "first strike" before we spotted it and retaliated is somewhere around zero: with today's communications we'd likely have our ICBMs in the air before the incoming missiles hit.
And we've got other choices for nuclear dlivery: Cruise missiles, bombs, standard missiles... even without SLBMs (or ICBMs) we can almost certainly get enough weapons through anyone's defense to "ruin their day."
Quick Math: delivery systems costs.
Producuring an SSBN w/24 tridents costs $2,750,000,000,* and can carry up to 192 warheads. At full capacity, that's $14,300,000 per warhead delivered (in a nuclear exchange, we probably only get to fire once...).
* I included the cost of the submarine because it's not intended for anything but launching its SLBMs, unlike most systems which can also be used in conventional wars.
Minuteman missiles are priced at $7,000,000 each (again, according to globalsecurity) and cary 3 warheads = $2,300,000 per shot.
Cruise Missiles cost ~$1,300,000 (Tomahawk) or $720,000 (Harpoon/SLAM). Because the launch platform (ship or aircraft) is also going to be used for conventional warfare, I'm leaving that part of the cost out (that, and it would be darn hard to calculate).
Standard Missile (proposed as a nuclear-armed weapon at one point): $400,000.
JDAM Kit = ~$20,000.
Originally posted by RedMatt
Quick Math: delivery systems costs.
Producuring an SSBN w/24 tridents costs $2,750,000,000,* and can carry up to 192 warheads. At full capacity, that's $14,300,000 per warhead delivered (in a nuclear exchange, we probably only get to fire once...).
* I included the cost of the submarine because it's not intended for anything but launching its SLBMs, unlike most systems which can also be used in conventional wars.
Minuteman missiles are priced at $7,000,000 each (again, according to globalsecurity) and cary 3 warheads = $2,300,000 per shot.
Originally posted by JIMC5499
Originally posted by RedMatt
Quick Math: delivery systems costs.
Producuring an SSBN w/24 tridents costs $2,750,000,000,* and can carry up to 192 warheads. At full capacity, that's $14,300,000 per warhead delivered (in a nuclear exchange, we probably only get to fire once...).
* I included the cost of the submarine because it's not intended for anything but launching its SLBMs, unlike most systems which can also be used in conventional wars.
Minuteman missiles are priced at $7,000,000 each (again, according to globalsecurity) and cary 3 warheads = $2,300,000 per shot.
Why don't you include the cost of the Minuteman launch facility, because that's all it is good for and would probably be used once as well?
Originally posted by planeman
Although I think you are raising a very legitimate question and raising some good points, I think you have made a wrong assumption; Russia is not the only country that can threaten the US. UK, France and China are equally untouchable
even a single incoming ICBM getting through is more than enough to make USA hell on earth - nuclear war really isn't something anyone can win - having better/more ICBMs is a moot point.