The
United States of America was the first country in the world to successfully develop
nuclear weapons, and is the only country to have used them in
war against another nation. During the
Cold War it conducted over a thousand
nuclear tests and developed many long-range weapon delivery systems. It maintains an arsenal of about ten thousand warheads to this day
(External Link
), as well as facilities for their construction and
design, though many of the Cold War facilities have since been deactivated and are sites for
environmental remediation.
Development history
Manhattan Project
The United States of America first began developing nuclear weapons during
World War II under the order of
President Franklin Roosevelt in
1939, motivated by a fear that they were engaged in a potential race with
Nazi Germany to develop such a weapon. After a slow start under the direction of the
National Bureau of Standards, at the urging of
British scientists and American administrators the program was put under the
Office of Scientific Research and Development, where in
1942 it was officially transferred under the auspices of the
U.S. Army and became known as the
Manhattan Project. Under the direction of
General Leslie Groves, over thirty different sites were constructed for the research, production, and testing of components related to bomb making. These included the scientific laboratory,
Los Alamos (in
New Mexico), under the direction of physicist
Robert Oppenheimer, a
plutonium production facility,
Hanford (in
Washington), and a
uranium enrichment facility,
Oak Ridge (in
Tennessee).
By investing heavily both in breeding plutonium in early
nuclear reactors, and in both the electromagnetic and gaseous diffusion enrichment processes for the production of
uranium-235, the United States was able by mid-
1945 to develop three usable weapons. A plutonium-
implosion design weapon was tested on
July 16,
1945 ("
Trinity"), with around a 20
kiloton yield. On the orders of President
Harry S. Truman, on
August 6 of the same year a uranium-
gun design bomb ("
Little Boy") was
used against the city of
Hiroshima, Japan, and on
August 9 a plutonium-implosion design bomb ("
Fat Man") was used against the city of
Nagasaki,
Japan. The two weapons killed approximately 250,000 Japanese citizens outright, and many more thousands have died over the years from
radiation sickness and related
cancers.
Cold War
In the postwar period, the United States was soon engaged in a
nuclear arms race against the
Soviet Union, who it feared had strong territorial ambitions in postwar
Europe and potential ideological ambitions to wage war against the United States. The U.S. invested heavily in a continued program of weapons research, development, and production, under the auspices of the civilian-run
Atomic Energy Commission. Research also commenced in delivery systems, including the improvement of bomber aircraft and the development of
rocketry for use with nuclear systems.
In
1950, in response to the detonation of the USSR's first fission weapon in
1949 ("
Joe 1"), Truman ordered a crash research program towards developing thermonuclear weapons. At that point the weapons were still purely theoretical, with no method known for successfully igniting a
nuclear fusion reaction. After a theoretical breakthrough by the mathematician
Stanislaw Ulam and physicist
Edward Teller, however, workable method was developed and tested in the "
Ivy Mike" shot in November
1952, with a yield of 10
megatons. A deployable version of the
Teller–Ulam design was tested in the "
Castle Bravo" shot of February
1954, with a yield of 15 megatons, over twice the projected expectations. Because of this error in calculation and unfortunate changes in weather conditions, the "Bravo" shot resulted in the depositing of large amounts of
nuclear fallout onto the
Marshall Islands at the test site in the Pacific. An evacuation ensued, but many of the natives exposed suffered from cancers and a high incidence of
birth defects. A
Japanese fishing boat was additionally exposed and resulted in one death from
radiation sickness, which gained considerable international attention.
Throughout the
1950s and
1960s the United States continued on its path, developing
intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs) and
submarine launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs), with which to hold a credible
deterrence against the USSR. In this period the U.S. stockpile of weapons increased exponentially to its maximum point of over 32,000 warheads in
1966. The generally agreed upon point at which the U.S. came closest to nuclear war with the USSR occurred during the
Cuban Missile Crisis in
1962.
In the 1970s and 1980s, warhead production slowed somewhat though innovation in warhead design allowed for new generations of delivery systems such as
multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs) to be produced. Since this advance in the miniaturization of thermonuclear weapons in the mid-1970s, most experts and weapons scientists have said that most nuclear weapons design was focused on small improvements and modifications rather than any radical changes.
In the 1980s, under President
Ronald Reagan, a reinvigoration of the arms race took place, and also introduced the extensive advocacy of the use of nuclear and non-nuclear approaches to missile defense through the
Strategic Defense Initiative. For technical and political reasons, however, funding was eventually cut back heavily on this program.
Post-Cold War
After the end of the
Cold War following the
dissolution of the
Soviet Union in
1991, the U.S. nuclear program was heavily curtailed, halting its program of nuclear testing, ceasing in the production of new nuclear weapons, and reducing its stockpile by half by the mid-
1990s under President
Bill Clinton. Many of its former nuclear facilities were shut down, and their sites became targets of extensive environmental remediation. Much of the former efforts towards the production of weapons became involved in the program of
stockpile stewardship, attempting to predict the behavior of aging weapons without using full-scale nuclear testing. Increased funding also was put into anti-
nuclear proliferation programs, such as helping the states of the former Soviet Union eliminate their former nuclear sites, and assist
Russia in their efforts to inventory and secure their inherited nuclear stockpile. As of February
2006, over
$1.2 billion were paid under the
Radiation Exposure Compensation Act of
1990 to U.S. citizens exposed to nuclear hazards as a result of the U.S. nuclear weapons program, and by
1998 at least $759 million was paid to the
Marshallese Islanders in compensation for their exposure to U.S. nuclear testing, and over $15 million was paid to the
Japanese government following the exposure of its citizens and food supply to
nuclear fallout from the
1954 "Bravo" test.
During the presidency of
George W. Bush, and especially after the
September 11 terrorist attacks of
2001, rumors have circulated in major news sources that the U.S. has been considering design of new nuclear weapons ("bunker-busting nukes"), and potentially the resumption of nuclear testing for reasons of stockpile stewardship, and non-nuclear missile defense has received additional funding as well. Statements by the U.S. government in 2004, however, imply that by 2012 the arsenal will drop to around 5,500 total warheads, around half of its size by the 1990s.
Between
1940 and
1996, the U.S. spent at least $5.8 trillion (in 1996 dollars) on nuclear weapons development. Over half of this was spent on building delivery mechanisms for the weapons, around 0.02% of it (the lowest category of expenditure) was spent on
Congressional oversight. $365 billion was spent on
nuclear waste management and environmental remediation. Between
1945 and
1990, more than 70,000 total warheads were developed, in over 65 different varieties, ranging in yield from around .01 kilotons (such as the man-portable
Davy Crockett shell) to the 25 megaton
B41 bomb.
Nuclear testing
Between
July 16,
1945, and
September 23,
1992, the United States maintained a program of vigorous
nuclear testing, with the exception of a moratorium between November
1958 and September
1961. A total of (by official count) 1,054 nuclear tests and two nuclear attacks were conducted, with over 100 of them taking place at sites in the
Pacific Ocean, over 900 of them at the
Nevada Test Site, and ten on miscellaneous sites in the United States (
Alaska,
Colorado,
Mississippi, and
New Mexico). Until November
1962, the vast majority of the U.S. tests were atmospheric (that is, above-ground); after the acceptance of the
Partial Test Ban Treaty all testing was regulated underground, in order to prevent the dispersion of
nuclear fallout.
The U.S. program of atmospheric nuclear testing exposed a number of the population to the hazards of fallout. Estimating exact numbers, and the exact consequences, of people exposed has been medically very difficult, with the exception of the high exposures of Marshallese Islanders and Japanese fisherman in the case of the "
Castle Bravo" incident in 1954. A number of groups of U.S. citizens — especially farmers and inhabitants of cities downwind of the Nevada Test Site and U.S. military workers at various tests — have sued for compensation and recognition of their exposure, many successfully. The passing of the
Radiation Exposure Compensation Act of
1990 allowed for a systematic filing of compensation claims in relation to testing as well as those employed at nuclear weapons facilities. As of March
2006 over a billion dollars total has been given in compensation, with over $485 million going to "downwinders".
A few notable U.S. nuclear tests include:
- The "Trinity" test on July 16, 1945, was the first-ever test of a nuclear weapon (yield of around 20 kt).
- The Operation Crossroads series in July 1946, was the first postwar test series and one of the largest military operations in U.S. history.
- The Operation Greenhouse shots of May 1951 included the first boosted fission weapon test ("Item") and a scientific test which proved the feasibility of thermonuclear weapons ("George").
- The "Ivy Mike" shot of November 1, 1952, was the first full test of a Teller-Ulam design "staged" hydrogen bomb, with a yield of 10 megatons. It wasn't a deployable weapon, however — with its full cryogenic equipment it weighed some 82 tons.
- The aforementioned "Castle Bravo" shot of October 31, 1954, was the first test of a deployable (solid fuel) thermonuclear weapon, and also (accidentally) the largest weapon ever tested by the United States (15 megatons). It was also the single largest U.S. radiological accident in connection with nuclear testing. The unanticipated yield, and a change in the weather, resulted in nuclear fallout spreading eastward onto the inhabited Rongelap and Rongerik atolls, which were soon evacuated. Many of the Marshall Islands natives have since suffered from birth defects and have received some compensation from the federal government. A Japanese fishing boat, the Fifth Lucky Dragon, also came into contact with the fallout, which caused many of the crew to grow ill; one eventually died.
- Shot "Argus I" of Operation Argus, on August 27, 1958, was the first detonation of a nuclear weapon in outer space when a 1.7-kiloton warhead was detonated at 200 kilometers' altitude during a series of high altitude nuclear explosions.
- Shot "Frigate Bird" of Operation Dominic I on May 6, 1962, was the first and only U.S. test of an operational ballistic missile with a live nuclear warhead (yield of 600 kilotons), at Christmas Island. In general, missile systems were tested without live warheads and warheads were tested separately for safety concerns. In the early 1960s, however, there mounted technical questions about how the systems would behave under combat conditions (when they were "mated", in military parlance), and this test was meant to dispel these concerns. However, the warhead had to be somewhat modified before its use, and the missile was only a SLBM (and not an ICBM), so by itself it didn't satisfy all concerns. (Mackenzie 1990)
- Shot "Sedan" of Operation Storax on July 6, 1962 (yield of 104 kilotons), was an attempt at showing the feasibility of using nuclear weapons for "civilian" and "peaceful" purposes as part of Operation Plowshare. In this instance, a 1280-feet-in-diameter and 320-feet-deep crater was created at the Nevada Test Site.
Delivery systems
The original weapons ("
Little Boy" and "
Fat Man") developed by the United States during the
Manhattan Project were relatively large (the latter had a diameter of 5 feet) and heavy (around 5 tons each) weapons which required specially modified bomber planes to be adapted for their bombing missions against Japan, each of which could only carry one such weapon and only within a limited range. After these initial weapons, a considerable amount of money and research was conducted towards the goal of standardizing ("G.I. proofing") nuclear warheads (so that they didn't require highly specialized experts to assemble them before use, as in the case with the idiosyncratic wartime devices) and miniaturization of the warheads for use in more variable delivery systems.
Through the aid of brainpower acquired through
Operation Paperclip at the tail end of the European branch of
World War II, the United States was able to embark on an ambitious program in
rocketry. One of the first products of this was the development of rockets capable of holding nuclear warheads. The
MGR-1 Honest John was the first of such weapons, developed in
1953 as a surface-to-surface missile with a 15 mile/25 kilometer maximum range. Because of their limited range, their potential use was heavily constrained (they could not, for example, threaten
Moscow with an immediate strike).
Development of long-range bombers, such as the
B-29 Superfortress, during World War II was continued during the
Cold War period. The development of the
B-52 Stratofortress in particular was able by the mid-1950s to carry a wide arsenal of nuclear bombs, each with different capabilities and potential use situations. Starting in
1946, the U.S. based its initial deterrence threat around the
Strategic Air Command, which maintained a number of nuclear-armed bombers in the sky at all times, prepared to receive orders to attack the USSR whenever needed. This system was, however, tremendously expensive, both in natural resources and human resources, and raised the possibility of accidental or purposeful beginning of nuclear war, parodied famously in the
1964 film by
Stanley Kubrick, .
During the
1950s and
1960s, elaborate computerized
early warning systems were developed to detect incoming Soviet attacks and to coordinate response strategies. During this same period,
intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) systems were developed which could deliver a nuclear payload across vast distances, allowing the U.S. to house nuclear forces capable of hitting the Soviet Union in the
American Midwest. Shorter-range weapons, including small "tactical" weapons, were fielded in
Europe as well, including
nuclear artillery and man-portable
Special Atomic Demolition Munition. The development of
submarine launched ballistic missile (SLBM) systems allowed for hidden
nuclear submarines to covertly launch missiles at distant targets as well, making it virtually impossible for the Soviet Union to successfully launch a
first strike attack against the United States which wouldn't guarantee a deadly response.
Improvements in warhead miniaturization in the
1970s and
1980s allowed for the development of MIRVs — missiles which could carry multiple warheads, each of which could be separately targetable. The question of whether these missiles should be based on constantly rotating train tracks (so as to avoid being easily targeted by opposing Soviet missiles) or based in heavily fortified silos (to possibly withstand a Soviet attack) was a major political controversy in the 1980s (eventually the silos won out). MIRVed systems allowed the U.S. to make the Soviet missile defense economically unfeasible, as each offensive missile would require between three and ten defensive missiles to counter.
Additional developments in weapons delivery included
cruise missile systems, which allowed a plane to fire a long-distance, low-flying nuclear-tipped missile towards a target from a relatively comfortable distance. This innovation would make missile defense additionally difficult, if not impossible.
The current delivery systems of the U.S. makes virtually any part of the globe within the reach of its nuclear arsenal. Though its land-based missile systems have a maximum range of 10,000 kilometers (less than worldwide), its submarine-based forces extend its reach from a coastline 12,000 kilometers inland. Additionally, the ability to refuel long-range bombers in flight and the use of
aircraft carriers extends the possible range virtually indefinitely.
Public reactions
From the public debut of nuclear weapons during the
atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, they were a highly controversial technology among the citizens of the United States. While it appears that most Americans in the postwar period believed that they had, as claimed by the government, hastened the end of the war with Japan, even at that early period there were questions about the ethics of their use. In the immediate postwar period, much of the public debate was on the question of whether or not the U.S. should attempt to have a monopoly on the weapons — potentially encouraging a
nuclear arms race — or whether or not it should relinquish them to an intergovernmental body (such as the newly created
United Nations) or contribute to some other form of international control or information dispersal. According to the historian of science Spencer Weart, it wasn't until the development of multi-megaton hydrogen bombs in the 1950s that a belief that nuclear weapons could potentially end all life on the planet (especially through means of
nuclear fallout, highlighted by the "
Castle Bravo" accident) became common in American thought or cultural expression. For the most part, however, the vast majority of American citizens believed during this time that nuclear weapons were necessary in order to ward off the apparent threat from the Soviet Union.
During the
1960s, following the rise of political activism in the
civil rights movement, the controversy over the
Vietnam War, and the beginnings of the
environmentalism movement, public anxiety related to nuclear weapons began to rise to the point of direct protest. While there's little evidence that these sentiments were felt or expressed by any more than a minority of the U.S. population, their expression became increasingly amplified, especially in relation to the health hazards of nuclear testing. After the cessation of American atmospheric nuclear testing, however, the sentiment against nuclear weapons in general lost much of its momentum. During the period of
détente in the 1970s, marked by weapons reduction and restriction treaties between the U.S. and the USSR, much of the anxiety over nuclear weapons in the populace and activists was transferred towards protesting civilian
nuclear power plants, according to Spencer Weart's analysis.
During the presidency of
Ronald Reagan in the
1980s, public anti-nuclear weapons sentiment reached its highest point, spurred by the administration's strong anti-Soviet
rhetoric,
Strategic Defense Initiative, and apparent reinvigoration of the arms race. Again, however, the majority of the American populace generally felt the weapons were required for U.S. national security, even though they increasingly became the flashpoints of political controversies and concern. Anti-nuclear activists shifted to a strategy of describing in detail the results of a potential nuclear attack on the United States, and a number of prominent anti-nuclear films were developed during this period, typified by the controversial
The Day After in
1983.
With the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991 and the cessation of the arms race, U.S. public attitudes towards nuclear weapons became less polarized on the whole. Following the
9/11 attacks of
2001, however, concerns over whether the U.S. should develop new weapons have reinvigorated some of the older debates over their practicality, morality, and danger. The debate over the ethical implications of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, begun in private amongst scientists and statesmen during the war, has continued to this day, in the general public as well as amongst historians, military experts, and other scholars.
Accidents
The United States nuclear program has, since its inception, suffered from a number of accidents of varying forms, ranging from single-casualty research experiments (such as that of
Louis Slotin during the
Manhattan Project), to the
nuclear fallout dispersion of the "
Castle Bravo" shot in 1954, to the accidental dropping of nuclear weapons from aircraft ("
broken arrows"). How close any of these accidents came to being "major" nuclear disasters is a matter of technical and scholarly debate and interpretation.
Weapons accidentally dropped by the United States include incidents near
Atlantic City,
New Jersey (
1957),
Savannah,
Georgia (
1958) (see
Tybee Bomb),
Goldsboro,
North Carolina (
1961), off the coast of
Okinawa (
1965),
in the sea near Palomares,
Spain (
1966), and near
Thule,
Greenland (
1968). In some of these cases (such as near Palomares), the explosive system of the fission weapon discharged, but didn't trigger a
nuclear chain reaction (safety features prevent this from easily happening), but did disperse hazardous nuclear materials across wide areas, necessitating expensive cleanup endeavors. Eleven American nuclear warheads are thought to be lost and unrecovered, primarily in
submarine accidents.
The nuclear testing program resulted in a number of cases of fallout dispersion onto populated areas. The most significant of these was the aforementioned
Castle Bravo test, which spread radioactive ash over an area of over one hundred miles, including a number of populated islands. The populations of the islands were evacuated but not before suffering radiation burns. They would later suffer long-term effects, such as birth defects and increased cancer risk. There were also instances during the nuclear testing program in which soldiers were exposed to overly high levels of radiation, which grew into a major scandal in the
1970s and
1980s, as many soldiers later suffered from what were claimed to be diseases caused by their exposures.
Many of the former nuclear facilities (see next section) produced significant environmental damages during their years of activity, and since the
1990s have been
Superfund sites of cleanup and environmental remediation. The
Radiation Exposure Compensation Act of
1990 allows for U.S. citizens exposed to radiation or other health risks through the U.S. nuclear program to file for compensation and damages.
Development agencies
The initial U.S. nuclear program was run by the
National Bureau of Standards starting in
1939 under the edict of
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Its primary purpose was to delegate research and dispense of funds. In
1940 the
National Defense Research Committee (NDRC) was established, coordinating work under the Committee on Uranium among its other wartime efforts. In June
1941, the
Office of Scientific Research and Development (OSRD) was established, with the NDRC as one of its subordinate agencies, which enlarged and renamed the Uranium Committee as the
Section on Uranium. In 1941, NDRC research was placed under direct control of
Vannevar Bush as the OSRD S-1 Section, which attempted to increase the pace of weapons research. In June
1942, the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers took over the project to develop atomic weapons, while the OSRD retained responsibility for scientific research.
(External Link
)
This was the beginning of the
Manhattan Project, run as the Manhattan Engineering District (MED), an agency under military control which was in charge of developing the first atomic weapons. After
World War II, the MED maintained control over the U.S. arsenal and production facilities and coordinated the
Operation Crossroads tests. In
1946, after a long and protracted debate, the
Atomic Energy Act was passed, creating the
Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) as a civilian agency which would be in charge of the production of nuclear weapons and research facilities, funded through Congress, with oversight provided by the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy. The AEC was given vast powers of control over secrecy, research, and money, and could seize lands with suspected uranium deposits. Along with its duties towards the production and regulation of nuclear weapons, it additionally was in charge of stimulating development in civilian nuclear power while also regulating its safety uses. The full transference of activities was finalized in January
1947.
(External Link
)
In
1975, following the "energy crisis" of the early
1970s and public and congressional discontent with the AEC (in part because of the impossibility to be both a producer and a regulator), it was disassembled into component parts as the Energy Research and Development Administration (ERDA), which assumed most of the AEC's former production, coordination, and research roles, and the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, which assumed its civilian regulation activities.
(External Link
)
ERDA was short-lived, however, and in
1977 the U.S. nuclear weapons activities were reorganized under the
Department of Energy (External Link
), which currently maintains such responsibilities through the semi-autonamous
National Nuclear Security Administration today.
(External Link
) Some functions have also been taken over or shared by the
Department of Homeland Security in
2002. The already-built weapons themselves are in the control of the
Strategic Command, which is part of the
Department of Defense.
In general, these agencies served to coordinate research and build sites. They generally operated their sites through contractors, however, both private and public (for example,
Union Carbide, a private company, ran
Oak Ridge National Laboratory for many decades; the
University of California, a public educational institution, has run the
Los Alamos and
Lawrence Livermore laboratories since their inception, and will joint-manage Los Alamos with the private company
Bechtel as of its next contract). Funding was received both through these agencies directly, but also from additional outside agencies, such as the Department of Defense. Each branch of the military also maintained its own nuclear-related research agencies (generally related to delivery systems).
Weapons production complex
This table isn't comprehensive, as numerous facilities throughout the United States have contributed to its nuclear weapons program. It includes the major sites related
primarily to the U.S. weapons program (past and present), their basic site functions, and their current status of activity. Not listed are the many bases and facilities at which nuclear weapons have been deployed. In addition to deploying weapons on its own soil, during the
Cold War the United States also stationed nuclear weapons in 27 foreign countries and territories, including
Japan,
Greenland,
Germany,
Taiwan, and
Morocco.
| Site name |
Location |
Function |
Status |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Proliferation
Early on in the development of its nuclear weapons, the United States relied in part on information-sharing with both the
United Kingdom and
Canada, as codified in the
Quebec Agreement of
1943. These three parties agreed not to share nuclear weapons information with other countries without the consent of the others, an early attempt at
nonproliferation. After the development of the first nuclear weapons during
World War II, though, there was much debate within the political circles and public sphere of the United States about whether or not the country should attempt to maintain a
monopoly on
nuclear technology, or whether it should undertake a program of information sharing with other nations (especially its former ally and likely competitor, the
Soviet Union), or submit control of its weapons to some sort of international organization (such as the
United Nations) who would use them to attempt to maintain
world peace. Though fear of a
nuclear arms race spurred many politicians and scientists to advocate some degree of international control or sharing of nuclear weapons and information, many politicians and members of the military believed that it was better in the short term to maintain high standards of nuclear
secrecy and to forestall a Soviet bomb as long as possible (and they didn't believe the USSR would actually submit to international controls in good faith).
Since this path was chosen, the United States was, in its early days, essentially an advocate for the prevention of
nuclear proliferation, though primarily for the reason originally of self-preservation. A few years after the USSR detonated its first weapon in
1949, though, the U.S. under President
Dwight D. Eisenhower sought to encourage a program of sharing nuclear information related to civilian
nuclear power and
nuclear physics in general. The
Atoms for Peace program, begun in
1953, was also in part political: the U.S. was better poised to commit various scarce resources, such as
enriched uranium, towards this peaceful effort, and to request a similar contribution from the Soviet Union, who had far fewer resources along these lines; thus the program had a strategic justification as well, as was later revealed by internal memos. This overall goal of promoting civilian use of nuclear energy in other countries, while also preventing weapons dissemination, has been labeled by many critics as contradictory and having led to lax standards for a number of decades which allowed a number of other nations, such as
India, to profit from
dual-use technology (purchased from other nations other than the U.S.).
The United States is one of the five "nuclear weapons states" permitted to maintain a nuclear arsenal under the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, of which it was an original signatory on
July 1,
1968 (ratified
March 5,
1970).
The
Cooperative Threat Reduction program of the
Defense Threat Reduction Agency was established after the breakup of the Soviet Union in
1991 to aid former Soviet bloc countries in the inventory and destruction of their sites for developing nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons, and their methods of delivering them (ICBM silos, long range bombers, etc.). Over $4.4 billion has been spent on this endeavor to prevent purposeful or accidental proliferation of weapons from the former Soviet arsenal.
(External Link
)
After India and
Pakistan tested nuclear weapons in
1998, President
Bill Clinton imposed
economic sanctions on the countries. In
1999, however, the sanctions against India were lifted; those against Pakistan were kept in place as a result of the military government which had taken over. Shortly after the
September 11 attacks in
2001, President
George W. Bush lifted the sanctions against Pakistan as well.
The U.S. government has officially taken a silent policy towards the nuclear weapons ambitions of the state of
Israel, while being exceedingly vocal against proliferation of such weapons in the countries of
Iran and
North Korea, something which has been called hypocritical by many critics. The same critics point out the fact that not only is the United States sitting on the largest nuclear weapons stockpile in the world, but it's also violating its own non-proliferation treaties in the pursuit of so-called "
nuclear bunker busters". The
2003 invasion of
Iraq by the U.S. was done, in part, on accusations of weapons development, and the
Bush administration has said that its policies on proliferation were responsible for the
Libyan
government's agreement to abandon its nuclear ambitions.
(External Link
)
Current status
The United States is one of the five recognized nuclear powers under the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. It maintains a current arsenal of around 9,960 intact warheads, of which 5,735 are considered active or operational, and of these only a certain number are deployed at any given time. These break down into 5,021 "strategic" warheads, 1,050 of which are deployed on land-based missile systems (all on
Minuteman ICBMs), 1,955 on bombers (
B-52 and
B-2), and 2,016 on submarines (
Ohio class), according to a 2006 report by the
Natural Resources Defense Council. Of 500 "
tactical"/"nonstrategic" weapons, around 100 are
Tomahawk cruise missiles and 400 are
B61 bombs. A few hundred of the B61 bombs are located at seven bases in six European
NATO countries (
Belgium,
Germany,
Italy, the
Netherlands,
Turkey and the
United Kingdom), the only such weapons in forward deployment.
Around 4,225 warheads have been removed from deployment but have remained stockpiled as a "responsible reserve force" on inactive status. Under the May
2002 Treaty on Strategic Offensive Reductions, the U.S. pledged to reduce its stockpile to 2,200 operationally deployed warheads by
2012, and in June
2004 the
Department of Energy announced that "almost half" of these warheads would be retired or dismantlement by then.
The future nuclear stockpile under
SORT will be based on:
450 Minuteman III ICBM with 500 warheads. 400 with a single warhead and 50 with 2 MIRVs. There will be 200 W78 warheads and 300 W87 warheads.
12 operational Ohio class Submarines with another 2 in overhall. Each have 24 Trident II missiles with 4 MIRV warheads of the W76 and W88 warheads, that will be a total of 1152 warheads. There will be 384 W88 and 768 W76 warheads for submarines.
94 B-52 and 21 B-2 strategic bombers with 540 warheads of the AGM-86 and B61 and B83. There will be 528 nuclear AGM-86B cruise Missiles with 300 active and 228 in reserve. Along with the 528 ALCM there will be 120 B61-7, 20 B61-11 and 100 B83 nuclear bombs for the bomber fleet.
The SORT treaty doesn't make the U.S. reduce its Tactical Nuclear weapons arsenal so there will be 500-800 active Tactical nuclear weapons. Also the weapons taken from active states don't have to be destroyed so there will be at least 2400 responsive reserve warheads.
A 2001 nuclear posture review published by the Bush administration called for a reduction in the amount of time needed to test a nuclear weapon, and for discussion on possible development in new nuclear weapons of a low-yield, "bunker-busting" design (the Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator). Work on such a design had been banned by Congress in 1994, but the banning law was repealed in 2003 at the request of the Department of Defense. The Air Force Research Laboratory researched the concept, but the United States Congress canceled funding for the project in October 2005 at the National Nuclear Security Administration's request. According to Fred T. Jane's Information Group, the program may still continue under a new name.
In 2006, the Bush administration also proposed the Reliable Replacement Warhead program, which is now in the process of design and development, to develop an entirely-new family of nuclear ICBMs. The program, intend to produce a simple, reliable, long-lasting, and low-maintenance future nuclear force for the United States, has encountered opposition for the possibility of its violating the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which prohibits any nuclear weapons testing and development of new nuclear weapons.
In 2005 the U.S. revised its nuclear strategy, the Doctrine for Joint Nuclear Operations, to use nuclear weapons preemptively against adversary WMDs or overwhelming conventional forces.
External results
Click here for more details on Nuclear Weapons And The United States
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://nuclear_weapons_and_the_united_states.totallyexplained.com">Nuclear weapons and the United States Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |
We see you're using Internet Explorer. Try Firefox, we think you'll like it better.
· Firefox blocks pop-up windows.
· It stops viruses and spyware.
· It keeps Microsoft from controlling the future of the internet.
Click the button on the right to download Firefox. It's free.