- First strike
In
nuclear strategy , a first strike is a preemptive surprise attack employing overwhelming force. First strike capability is a country's ability to defeat anothernuclear power by destroying its arsenal to the point where the attacking country can survive the weakened retaliation while the opposing side is left unable to continue war. The preferred methodology is to attack the opponent's launch facilities and storage depots first. The strategy is calledcounterforce .Overview
During the
Cold War , bothsuperpowers , theU.S. , and theUSSR , built massive nuclear arsenals, aimed, to a large extent, at each other. However, they were never used, as after a time, leaders on both sides of theIron Curtain realized that global thermonuclear war would not be in either power's national interest, as it would probably lead to the destruction of both nations, and possiblynuclear winter or otherextinction level event s. Therefore, at times, both sides refrained from deploying systems capable of unanswerable nuclear strikes against either side. However, in both nations, there were interests that benefited from the development and maintenance of first-strike weapons systems—whatDwight Eisenhower termed themilitary-industrial complex ; these forces encouraged the constant development of weapons systems of greater accuracy, power, and destruction. In addition, each side doubted the other side's commitment to not deploy first-strike weapons, or even in the event of their deployment, to not strike first. Some first-strike weapons were deployed; however, they were never used.Of the nuclear powers, only the
People's Republic of China and theRepublic of India have declarative, unqualified, unconditional no-first-use policies. In 1982, at a special session of General Assembly ofUnited Nations , the USSR pledged not to use nuclear weapons first, regardless of whether its opponents possessed nuclear weapons or not. This pledge was later abandoned by post-Soviet Russia. The United States has a partial, qualified no-first-use policy, stating that they will not use nuclear weapons against states without nuclear weapons or otherweapons of mass destruction .Large scale missile defense systems are not first-strike weapons, however, critics view them as first-strike enabling weapons.
Ronald Reagan 's proposedStrategic Defense Initiative , if it had ever been deployed (and proven successful), would have undermined the fundamental premise ofmutual assured destruction (the inevitable outcome of equal and unacceptable destruction for both sides in the event of nuclear war), removing the incentive for the U.S. not to strike first. These proposed defense systems, intended to lessen the risk of devastating nuclear war, would lead to it, according to critics. Indeed, according togame theory , the side not building a large-scale missile defense, seeing that a nation was building a defense against a first strike and believing that the other could launch a first strike if it dared, would then launch apre-emptive first strike while they were still assured that such a strike would get through.Historical background
"First-strike attack", the use of a nuclear first strike capability, was greatly feared during the Cold War between the United States and the Soviet Union. At various points, fear of a first strike attack existed on both sides. Misunderstood changes in posture and well understood changes in technology used by either side were usually fuel on the fire of speculation regarding the enemy's intentions.
In the immediate aftermath of the
Great Patriotic War , the Soviet Union feared the United States would use its nuclear superiority to devastate the SocialistMotherland , as from 1945-1948, the U.S. was the only state possessing nuclear weapons. The USSR countered by rapid development of their own nuclear weapons, with a test first occurring in 1949., and the U.S. was taken by surprise. In turn, the U.S. countered by developing the vastly more powerful thermonuclear weapon, testing their first hydrogen bomb in 1952 atIvy Mike , but the USSR quickly countered by testing their own thermonuclear weapons, with a test in 1953 of a semi-thermonuclear weapon of theSloika design, and in 1956, with the testing ofSakharov's Third Idea - equivalent to theCastle Bravo device. Meanwhile, tensions between the two nations rose as 1956 saw the brutal suppression of Hungary by the Red Army; the U.S. and European nations drew certain obvious and inevitable conclusions from that event, while in the U.S., full scale hysteria was afoot, prompted byJoseph McCarthy ,HUAC , and Julius andEthel Rosenberg , two atomic spies. This atmosphere was further inflamed by the 1957 launch ofSputnik , which led to wild fears ofCommunists attacking fromspace , as well as very real fears about the fact that if the Soviets could launch something over one's head, they could launch something else that could hit one's head. John F. Kennedy capitalized on this situation by emphasizing theBomber Gap and theMissile Gap , areas which the Soviets were (inaccurately) perceived as leading the United States in, while heated Soviet rhetoric, includingNikita Khruschev 's famous threat that "We will bury you !" to Western ambassadors didn't help to cool tensions. The1960 U-2 incident , involvingFrancis Gary Powers , as well as theBerlin Crisis , along with the test of theTzar Bomba , escalated tensions to unheard of levels.This escalating situation came to a head with the
Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962. The arrival of Soviet missiles inCuba was conducted by the Soviets on the basis that the US already had nuclear missiles stationed in Turkey, as well as the desire by Fidel Castro to increase his power, his freedom of action, and to protect his government from US-initiated prejudicial resolution of ideological disputes through the use of military force, such as had been attempted at theBay of Pigs during the previous year. During the crisis,Fidel Castro wrote Khrushchev a letter about the prospect that the "imperialists" would be "extremely dangerous" if they responded militarily to the Soviet stationing of nuclear missiles aimed at US territory, less than 90 miles away from Cuba. The following quotation from the letter suggests that Castro was calling for a Soviet first strike against the US if it responded militarily to the placement of nuclear missiles in Cuba::"If the second variant takes place and the imperialists invade Cuba with the aim of occupying it, the dangers of their aggressive policy are so great that after such an invasion the Soviet Union must never allow circumstances in which the imperialists could carry out a nuclear first strike against it. I tell you this because I believe that the imperialists' aggressiveness makes them extremely dangerous, and that if they manage to carry out an invasion of Cuba--a brutal act in violation of universal and moral law--then that would be the moment to eliminate this danger forever, in an act of the most legitimate self-defense. However harsh and terrible the solution, there would be no other." [cite web
url=http://www.jfklibrary.org/jfkl/cmc/cmc_castro_khrushchev.html
title=Letter to Nikita Khrushchev from Fidel Castro regarding defending Cuban air space
accessdate=2008-07-10
author=Castro, Fidel
authorlink=
coauthors=
date=1962-10-26
format=Orig. paper, converted to HTML
work=The World On the Brink: John F. Kennedy and the Cuban Missile Crisis
publisher=John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum]Luckily, rational minds prevailed. The Cuban Missile Crisis resulted in Khrushchev publicly agreeing to remove the missiles from Cuba, while Kennedy secretly agreed to remove the missiles from Turkey. Both sides in the Cold War realized how close they came to nuclear war over Cuba, and decided to seek a reduction of tensions, resulting in US-Soviet
détente for most of the 1960s and 1970s.However, tensions were inflamed again in the late 1970s and early 1980s, with the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, and the decision of NATO to deploy the new
Pershing II IRBM as well as the TomahawkGround-Launched Cruise Missile , along withRonald Reagan 's talk of 'limited' nuclear war. This increased Soviet fears that NATO was planning an attack. NATO's deployment of these missiles was a response to the Soviet deployment of the SS-20 Pioneer, which could hit most European NATO bases within minutes of launch. These mutual deployments led to a destabilizing strategic situation, which was exacerbated by malfunctioning U.S. and Soviet missile launch early warning systems, a Soviet intelligence gap that prevented the Soviets from getting a "read" on the strategic intentions of U.S. leaders, as well as overheated U.S. rightist rhetoric combined with classical Soviet paranoia. This culminated in a war scare that occurred during 1983 due to the inopportune timing of a NATO exercise calledAble Archer , which was a simulation of a NATO nuclear attack on the Soviet Union; this exercise happened to occur during a massive Soviet intelligence mobilization calledVRYAN , that was designed to discover intentions of NATO to initiate a nuclear first-strike. This poor timing drove the world very close to nuclear war, possibly even closer than the Cuban Missile Crisis over 20 years before.But rational minds once again prevailed, and both sides retreated from the brink of the abyss of nuclear war.
Subsequent events caused the fears of nuclear attack on both sides to diminish significantly, as the tensions between the superpowers decreased, and have remained—at least in nuclear terms—comparatively low. However, the present indicates that this might be changing. Relations between the two have recently fallen to new post-Cold War lows, and events have illustrated that the world may be heading back towards a more tense situation in terms of nuclear armament and use, possibly even to a first strike. Talk that has been characterized as "reckless" has been rife amongst certain U.S. politicians who favor the development of new nuclear weapons (such as through the
Complex 2030 program) or new uses for old weapons, such as by using them asnuclear bunker buster s, even against non-nuclear states. The military invasion of Iraq was seen by Russia as indicating potential U.S. disrespect for what the Russian leadership views as international law, which it allegedly values. The U.S. missile defense program has proven a persistent irritant to better relations with Russia, who views the placement of U.S. missile defense systems in Eastern Europe for defense against "the Iranian threat" similar to how the U.S. would view placement of Russian missile defense systems in, say, Cuba, for Russian defense against "the insidious Kiwi". The assasination of a British citizen by alleged operatives of the Russian government using Polonium-210, a radioactive poison, as well as the poisoning bydioxin of the President of the Ukraine, has raised tensions between Russia and the West, with Western nations regarding the poisonings as an indicator of the character, morality, and true intentions of the Kremlin. On top of that, Russian bellicosity and belligerence has recently increased, with tests of new nuclear-capable missiles occurring on a regular basis, military conflicts with neighboring states, claims of a Russian "sphere of influence " on the perimiter of the old Soviet Union, the rise of neo-fascist "Putin Youth" groups, aggressive politicization of and threats of withdrawal of natural gas supplies to Europe, should the Europeans not dance to the Kremlin beat, and even threats of a nuclear first strike against Poland have been heard to be made by certain Russian generals.Other nations have engaged in other policies that are regarded as potentially destabilizing. Officials in the People's Republic of China recently tested an antisatellite missile, leading to widespread international concern, as antisatellite missiles are viewed as threats to nuclear-launch warning systems, which could easily result in a first strike; in addition, tensions amid the Chinese governments over Taiwan have been rife in recent years; in addition, the PRC is reportedly pursuing modernization of their nuclear forces. Israel has made threats of the use of weapons, including those of a non-conventional character, while the U.S. has refused to "take options off the table" (including the "nuclear option"), in the nuclear dispute with Iran, who is widely viewed as pursuing a clandestine nuclear weapons program, and well known for their desire for the destruction of Israel (c.f. "The World Without Israel") and extreme dislike for the United States (c.f. regular political rallies in Tehran calling for "Death to America!"). The unpredictable North Korean government recently tested (or, more likely, partially fizzled) a nuclear device, and has historically threatened to turn Seoul into a "sea of fire", or most recently, "ashes", in response to unspecified, but always imminent, U.S. or South Korean "aggression" against the Worker's Paradise. The foreign relations of Pakistan and India, as always, remain a powder-keg, but are now exaggerated by the nuclear arsenals of both states, as well as the rise of Hindu fascism in India, and the rise of al-Qaeda Islamism in Pakistan, and intercommunal strife--ranging from the demolition of a historic mosque by communal hooligans with worshippers inside--to a terrorist assault on Hindu shrines could be the spark igniting a nuclear war.
Historical analysis
Both sides never sought nuclear conflict, even though it threatened to break out on multiple occasions. What both sides had, however, was a deep and continuing fear—one might even call it a paranoia—that the other nation was seeking to start a nuclear conflict, or, at least, thought such a conflict was "winnable" and would not be deterred by the threat of nuclear war. This led to both sides adopting aggressive, confrontational military and nuclear strategies that were misinterpreted and countered by the other side, furthering distrust. These strategies led to destabilization of the strategic situation to the point where the two major war scares of the Cold War occurred: the Cuban Missile Crisis and the Able Archer/VRYAN crisis. Though neither side intended to start a
nuclear war , and, in fact, were mortally terrified of the possibility of it, neither side adopted strategies to calm things down, so sure were they of their adversaries'bad faith .U.S. military strategy (at least in Europe) was confined to responses to potential Soviet aggression against NATO countries. Soviet military theory was dominated by the theory of the "
deep operation " - a large scalecombined-arms offensive into enemy-held territory - rather than a nuclear offensive. Soviet conventional superiority, shown by the fact that the Soviet Union certainly was prepared for war in Europe, having massed armored, mechanized, artillery, and air forces poised along the Inner German and Czech borders, led by the dread Third Shock Army of the Soviet Union, caused NATO to consider the use oftactical nuclear weapons to stop the "steamroller" of the Red Army if they decided to take a drive through theFulda Gap or an amble through theNorth German Plain . NATO's position changed in the 1970s and 80s, in favor of trying to stop a Soviet offensive through the employment, at least initially, of a doctrine involving non-nuclearAirLand Battle to try to buy time to either throw back the invader or work out the issues at hand through diplomacy. Both sides, however, were willing to use nuclear weapons, if necessary, to not lose the war at hand. Although neither side was actively pursuing a first-strike policy—since the time of Khrushchev, the leaders of orthodoxcommunism believed that "peaceful coexistence " with the "imperialist " powers was possible—both sides relied on military strategies that could have still caused a general nuclear war.Ideological determinism also played a role. President
Ronald Reagan of the United States, at least before the Able Archer/VRYAN crisis, believed that everybody, including the Soviet Union, was completely aware of the United States' good intentions, even when he bellicosely declared that the USSR was an "evil empire" and (more jokingly) that the "bombing begins in 5 minutes" while encouraging the military to conduct threatening exercises, such as sneaking aCarrier Battle Group through theGIUK Gap and sending nuclear-capable bombers towards the territory of the USSR. Chairman Andropov of the Soviet Union had similar, distorted views; he believed that the Western Allies, and the U.S., in particular, werefascist states, whose leaders had territorial designs against the SovietMotherland on the scale ofNapoleon , at the least, andHitler , at the worst; in addition, to counter the "fascists", he incited hismilitary-industrial complex to build weapons such as theSS-20 MIRV IRBM and the SS-18 Satan MIRVICBM , which the NATO countries reasonably viewed as a Soviet sword against their throats, and caused reaction through development of equivalent or superior weapons systems.Luckily for the world, when the superpowers drew close to the edge of the nuclear abyss during both the Cuban Missile Crisis and the Able Archer/VRYAN Crisis, they took the time to stare intently into its depths, and came away knowing that the abyss stared back into them. They learned and grew from their mistakes and miscalculations that led them to be within view of
mutual assured destruction . Andropov was followed byGorbachev , and Gorbachev brought a far less hostile, ideological, and reflexively skeptical approach to the relations between the superpowers, helping to build an atmosphere of trust between the two. Reagan had a figurative conversion on the road to Damascus regarding nuclear weapons and (especially) ICBMs following this crisis, discarding his preconcieved notions of general Soviet bad faith, leading him to come full circle and famously declare that "Nuclear war cannot be won and must not be fought". These new attitudes on both sides nearly brought about the disarmament and destruction of ICBMs, long-range SLBMs, and, possibly even nuclear weapons themselves at a groundbreaking disarmament summit between Gorbachev and Reagan atReykjavik in 1986. (The sticking point causing agreement to be unreachable was the SDI Program, just asmissile defense continues to be a thorn in the side of the Russians today.) However, progress was made; theINF Treaty , theConventional Forces in Europe Treaty , and theSTART Treaty could be said to be the result of the change in leaders and leaders' attitudes that the Able Archer/VRYAN crisis facilitated, just as theNon-Proliferation Treaty and thePartial Test Ban Treaty , as well as U.S.-Sovietdétente , could be considered to be the sons and daughters of theCuban Missile Crisis . Still, both crises were dangerous times catalyzed by dangerous political and military mistakes caused by dangerous policies instituted by leaders who let their fear get the better of their judgment and reasoning. Thankfully for those who lived, and those who now live, these mistakes never caused a first strike to come to pass.Terms used
*CEP -
circular error probable ; the radius within which a weapon aimed at a given point will land with a 50% confidence; for example, a CEP of 150 m indicates that 50% of the time, the weapon will impact within 150 m of the target. This measure of accuracy assumes that everything up to the point of impact works correctly.
*Range - the maximum distance from a target a weapon can be fired to successfully hit the point where it is targeted at. (When range is used without qualifiers, like maximum or minimum, it is assumed that it refers to maximum; however, many of these described weapons have minimum ranges as well, though they are not mentioned, or, in all likelihood, even known to the public.)
*kt/mt - This is an approximate measure of how much energy is released by thedetonation of a nuclear weapon; kt stands forkilotons TNT, mt stands formegatons TNT. Conventional science of the period contemporary to theManhattan project came up with these measures so as to reasonably analogize the incredible energy of a nuclear detonation in a form that would be understandable to the military, politicians, or civilians.Trinitrotoluene (TNT) was and is ahigh explosive with industrial and military uses, and is around 40% more powerfully explosive than an equivalent weight ofgunpowder . A ton is equivalent to a mass of 2000 American pounds, or approximately 907 kg. A 20 kt nuclear device, therefore, liberates as muchenergy as does theexplosion of 20,000 tons of TNT. This is a large quantity of energy. In addition, unlike TNT, the detonation of a nuclear device also emitsionizing radiation that can harm living organisms, including humans; the prompt radiation from the blast itself and thefallout can persist for a long period of time, though within hours to weeks, the radiation from a single nuclear detonation will drop enough to permit humans to remain at the site of the blast indefinitely without incurring acute fatal exposure to radiation.Likely first strike weapons systems
* Pershing II
IRBM . Single warhead, variable yield 5-50 Kt, CEP 50 m with active radar terminal guidance. Short, 7-minute flight-time and range of 1,800 km, designed to strike C4ISTAR installations, bunkers, air fields, air defense sites, and ICBM silos in the European part of the Soviet Union. Decommissioned.
*SS-18 Satan MIRV --Believed to be a first-strike weapon by some in the West, due to high accuracy, and high throw-weight; could deliver at least 10 warheads of at least 500 Kt to independent, separate targets. Each warhead could probably take out even hardened nuclear silos, such as those used by theMinuteman III . Deployed in 1976, aimed atCONUS . Still in service.
* MX Missile (Peacekeeper)--Similar in capability to the SS-18 Satan, the Peacekeeper boasted 10 MIRVed warheads of 300 kt each, as well as a CEP of 120 meters. Deployed in the mid-1980s. Decommissioned; however, guidance systems and re-entry vehicles moved toMinuteman III missiles.
*SS-20 Saber MIRV IRBM--Deployed by the Soviet Union in the late 1970s, this MIRVed IRBM could hide out behind the Urals in Asian Russia and strikeNATO C4ISTAR facilities in Europe with scarcely any warning, due to very short flight time, high accuracy, and MIRV payload (rare on an intermediate-range missile). Decommissioned.First-strike enabling weapons systems
* Any
missile defense system capable of wide-area (e.g. continental) coverage, and especially those enabling destruction of missiles in the boost phase, are first-strike-enabling weapons. The reason for this is that they allow for a nuclear strike to be launched with reduced fear ofmutual assured destruction . Such a system has never been deployed, although a limited continental missile defense capability has been deployed by the U.S., but is only capable of defending against a handful of missiles.
** This does not apply, in general, to terminal missile defense systems, such as the former U.S.Safeguard Program or the RussianA-35 /A-135 systems. Limited-area terminal missile defense systems, defending such targets as ICBM fields, or C4ISTAR facilities may, in fact, be stabilizing, because they ensure survivable retaliatory capacity, and/or survivable de-escalation capacity.
** This also might not apply to a "non-discriminatory" space-based missile defense system, even if it is--actually, precisely because it is--of global reach. Such a system would be designed to destroy all weapons launched by any nation in a ballistic trajectory, negating every nation's capability to launch any strike with ballistic missiles, assuming the system was sufficiently robust to repel attacks from all potential threats, and built to open standards openly agreed upon and adhered to. Of course, any such system has never been proposed, never mind built. (But it provides an option for defense against a threat that gives no unilateral advantage to any nation.)Other possible first-strike weapons systems
*Trident II. Up to 14 warheads, 100/475 kt yield each, CEP 90 m (using GPS guidance). Main purpose is second-strike
countervalue retaliation, but the excellent CEP and much shorter flight-time due to submarine launch makes it an ideal first-strike weapon. However, this neglects the probability that GPS would likely be destroyed by orbital nuclear-detonation-induced electromagnetic loading of the ionosphere during any significant nuclear conflict (through high-altitude nuclear explosions—seeStarfish Prime andElectromagnetic pulse for more information), or disabled, so as to avoidOPFOR use, forcing reliance on the significantly-less-accurate inertial guidance systems. In addition, these factors may be exacerbated by the fact thatSSBN s are usually deep underwater for their mission, and can only receive very low rate data communications via VLF or ELF, causing slow reception and verification of strike orders, and the one-missile at a time fire rate of a nuclear missile submarine.*
SS-18 Satan 20 Mt variant. Although it is widely accepted that USSR never had a first-strike strategy (due to its conventional arms superiority in Europe), some experts believed that the single-warhead 20 Mt version of R36-M (SS-18, CEP 250 m.) was a first-strike weapon, targeted against Minuteman III silos. However, a much more logical explanation comes from retired Soviet military officers who report that the 20 Mt SS-18 was targeted against heavily fortified command and control facilities. The reason for this is that a single 20Mt warhead could only take out one hardened missile silo if the silos are sufficiently separated—probably by only 2-4 km, depending on the amount of hardening. This is due to theinverse square law , which predicts that the amount of energy dispersed from a single point release of energy (such as a thermonuclear blast) dissipates by the inverse of the square of distance from the single point of release. The result is that the power of a nuclear explosion to rupture hardened structures is greatly decreased by the distance from the impact point of the nuclear weapon. So a near-direct hit is generally necessary, as only diminishing returns are gained by increasing bomb power. The only purpose for gigantic nuclear weapons, like the SS-18 20 Mt variant, is to take out extremely hardened targets, like command and control facilities, such asNORAD , located atCheyenne Mountain ;FEMA , located atMount Weather ; or Site R, located at Raven Rock. (It should be noted that the amount of energy needed to rupture missile silos is orders of magnitude greater than the amount necessary to destroy cities, making the SS-18 20 Mt variant effective for the destruction of large urban centers, as well.) This could be a useful weapon for a decapitation strike—however, a decapitation strike is a very risky move, and both the U.S. and Russia have extensive countermeasures against such methods.Anti-first-strike countermeasures
For both the U.S. and Russia, as well as the other nuclear powers, full
countervalue retaliation would be the likely fate for anyone who unleashed a first strike. So as to ensure that this is the case, the nuclear-weapons states have taken measures to ensure that their retaliatory strikes will get through.Increasing SSBN (РПКСН) deployment
Nuclear-powered submarines carrying
submarine-launched ballistic missiles , called SSBNs (Russian: РПКСН), and commonly known as "boomers", are widely considered the most survivable component of thenuclear triad . The depths of the ocean are extremely large, and nuclear submarines are highly mobile, very quiet, have virtually unlimited range, and can generate their own oxygen and potable water; in essence, their undersea endurance is limited only by food supply. It is unlikely that any conceivable opponent of any nuclear power deploying SSBNs could locate and neutralize every ballistic missile submarine before it could launch a retaliatory strike, in the event of war. Therefore, to increase the percentage of nuclear forces surviving a first strike, a nation can simply increase SSBN deployment, as well as deployment of reliable communications links with SSBNs.Hardening or mobilizing land-based nuclear assets
In addition, land-based ICBM (МБР) silos (ШПУ) can be hardened. No silo can really defend against a direct nuclear hit, but a sufficiently hardened silo could defend against a near miss. In addition, ICBMs can be placed on road or rail-mobile launchers, which can then be moved around; as an enemy has nothing fixed to aim at, this increases their survivability.
Increasing alert state and readiness
By adopting a
launch on warning nuclear posture, the possibility of a first-strike can be significantly mitigated. Of course, the possibility of an accidental nuclear war is vastly increased, as early-warning system malfunctions (which have occurred several times), especially in periods of politico-military tension, could easily lead to nuclear war.Maintaining survivable C4ISTAR links
Looking Glass, Nightwatch, and
TACAMO are U.S. airborne nuclear command posts, and represent survivable communication links with U.S. nuclear forces. In the event of significant political-military tensions between the nuclear powers, they would take to the skies, and provide survivable communications in the event of enemy attack. They are capable of the full exercise of all available MAOs (Major Attack Options), as well as the fullSIOP , in the event of a first strike, or the destruction of the NCA. They can directly initiate launch of all U.S. ICBMs via radio and satellite communication, signal SLBMs to launch, and send bombers on their strike missions. In addition to these airborne assets, the U.S. government has several command and controlbunkers , the most famous of which isNORAD , tunneled a few thousand feet into thegranite ofCheyenne Mountain , outside ofColorado Springs ,Colorado , which is believed to be capable of surviving a direct nuclear hit. Other U.S. C4ISTAR bunkers include an installation calledSite R , located atRaven Rock ,Maryland , which is believed to be the Pentagon's relocation site ifWashington, D.C. is destroyed, as well asMount Weather , inVirginia , which is believed to be the relocation site for topExecutive Branch officials. TheGreenbriar inWest Virginia was once the site of theSupreme Court of the United States and Congress' relocation bunker; however, it is no longer a secret and is now a tourist attraction.The Russians also have equivalent or superior capabilities in this area; they have a system called СПРН, which is capable of detecting nuclear launches and providing early warning, so that any such strike would not be undetected until it is too late. But their unique and special capability can be found with their Dead Hand
fail-deadly computerized nuclear release system [cite web
title="МЕРТВАЯ РУКА"
url=http://www.cosmoworld.ru/spaceencyclopedia/publications/index.shtml?zhelez_22.html
accessdate=2008-07-19
author=Железняков, Александр (translit. Zheleznyakov, Alexander)
date=2004-10-01
format=Assumed orig. paper, converted to HTML on website `Энциклопедия «Космонавтика»` (trans. Space Encyclopedia?)
work="Секретные материалы № 22(149)" (trans. Secret Materials?)
pages=pp. 16-17
publisher=Федерации космонавтики России (trans. Russian Federation of Cosmonautics?)] , based atMount Yamantaw in theUrals . Apparently, Dead Hand, named for either theDead Man's Hand in poker, or theDead Man's Switch in dangerous or deadly machinery, can be turned on in the event that the Russian leadership fears a nuclear attack. Allegedly, once Dead Hand is activated, if it detects a loss of communications with Moscow as well as nuclear detonations inside of Russian territory, it can give final authority for the release of nuclear weapons to military officers in a bunker under Mt. Yamantaw, who can then, if they so determine, launch Russia's arsenal. Mt. Yamantaw is believed to be able to withstand multiple direct nuclear detonations.Decreasing tensions by mutual adoption of a minimum credible deterrent posture
Instead of relying on sophisticated communications links and launch-on-warning postures, the French, British, and Chinese have chosen to assume different nuclear postures more suited to minimum credible deterrence, or the capability to inflict of unacceptable losses so as to prevent the use of nuclear weapons against them, rather than pursuing types of nuclear weapons suitable to first-strike use.
The
People's Republic of China is believed to pursue aminimum credible deterrent /second strike strategy with regards to the United States. This may or may not be true with regards to the PRC's stance vis a vis Russia, as the majority of Chinese nuclear platforms are non-intercontinental, and are deployed on the Russian-Chinese border. Unlike the relations of the United States and the PRC, the PRC and Russia have had military conflicts in the past. In recent years, the PRC has improved its early-warning systems and renovated certain of its platforms for intercontinental strike; this may be due to the U.S. missile defense system (it may not be, however). In general, it appears that the PRC's leaders do not greatly fear a first strike (due to their posture of merely inflicting unacceptable losses upon an adversary as opposed to the U.S./Russian policy of trying to "win" a nuclear war); in any event, the Chinese arsenal is considered sufficient to ensure that such a first strike would not go unavenged.France & Great Britain possess sophisticated nuclear weapons platforms; however their nuclear strategies are believed to be minimum credible deterrent-based as well, due to the small number of weapons they possess and lack of major adversaries they have.
Eliminating nuclear weapons
Ultimately, the best countermeasure against a nuclear first-strike, or a nuclear strike of any sort, is to eliminate nuclear weapons, in a universal, comprehensive, verifiable, and irreversible fashion. Of course, this is more easily said then done, but, under the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty , thenuclear weapons states have obligated themselves to at least try.Destabilizing role of land-based MIRVed ICBMs
MIRVed land-based ICBMs are generally considered suitable for a first strike or a counterforce strike, due to:
# Their high accuracy, compared to submarine-launched ballistic missiles which are less accurate, and more prone to defects;
# Their fast response time, compared to bombers which are considered too slow;
# Their ability to carry multiple warheads at once, useful for destroying a whole missile field with one missile.Unlike a
decapitation strike or acountervalue strike , acounterforce strike might result in a potentially more constrained retaliation. Though the Minuteman III of the mid-1960s was MIRVed with 3 warheads, heavily MIRVed vehicles threatened to upset the balance; these included theSS-18 Satan which was deployed in 1976, and was considered to threatenMinuteman III silos, which led someneocons to conclude aSoviet first strike was being prepared for. This led to the development of the aforementionedPershing II , theTrident I andTrident II , as well as theMX missile , and theB-1 Lancer .MIRVed land-based
ICBM s are considered destabilizing because they tend to put a premium on striking first. When a missile is MIRVed, it is able to carry manywarheads (3 to 14 in existing U.S. missiles; 3 to 12 in existing Soviet missiles) and deliver them to separate targets. If it is assumed that each side has 100 missiles, with 5 warheads each, and further that each side has a 95 percent chance of neutralizing the opponent's missiles in their silos by firing 2 warheads at each silo, then the attacking side can reduce the enemy ICBM force from 100 missiles to about 5 by firing 40 missiles with 200 warheads, and keeping the rest of 60 missiles in reserve. As such, this type of weapon was intended to be banned under theSTART II agreement, however the START II agreement was never activated, and neither Russia nor the USA has adhered to the agreement.Movies about first strike
*"
Dr. Strangelove " byStanley Kubrick
*"Miracle Mile"
*"Fail-Safe"
*" [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jlPEBROvR9w "First Strike" (1979 PBS docudrama)]
*" [http://stage6.divx.com/Sd-Kfz-182/video/1804823/First-Strike-(Documentary) "First Strike" (1979 PBS docudrama) (complete)]ee also
*
Counterforce nuclear weapon
*Decapitation strike
*Second strike
*13 Days References
External links
* [http://www.atomicarchive.com/Docs/Deterrence.shtml Robert McNamara's "Mutual Deterrence" speech from 1962]
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