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Strategic Nuclear
Forces: STRATCOM's View U.S. Strategic Command, 1992
Shortly after the Washington
Summit Agreement between the United States and Russia in June 1992, and only
a few months before the START II Treaty was signed in January 1993,
representatives for U.S. Strategic Command (STRATCOM) went to Washington,
D.C., to brief then Defense Secretary Dick Cheney and Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff Colin Powell on the implications of the Washington Summit
Agreement.
U.S. nuclear planning was in
turmoil following dramatic international changes and sweeping unilateral
arms cuts ordered by President Bush in September 1991 and January 1992. The
Office of the Secretary of Defense wanted an in-depth study of the strategic
nuclear forces, and both the Joint Staff and U.S. Air Force considered this
to be STRATCOM's responsibility. In a number of conferences held with the
Joint, Air and OPNAV Staff, Air Combat Command (ACC), and the commanders of
the surface and submarine fleets in the Atlantic and Pacific, STRATCOM
developed what it called "a preferred USSTRATCOM force structure" for what
the U.S. nuclear posture should look like after START II.
The preferred force structure
STRATCOM presented to Cheney and Powell attempted to create order and some
predictability in the U.S. arms control process by defining a number of
principles for what could be done and what should not be done:
Flexibility is key to war
planning, i.e. retain weapon platforms;
New nuclear certification
schedule for the B-2;
Transition B-1 to
conventional role;
Modification of B-52Hs by
removing internal ALCM capability from 47 aircraft and removing the
external ALCM capability from 47 B-52Hs scheduled to receive heavy
conventional upgrade by the fall of 1996 (the latter delayed until the
FY96 POM);
Assignment of Air Reserve
Component to nuclear bomber functions;
Modernization and
life-extension of Minuteman III ICBMs;
Maintain Peacekeeper ICBM
until 2001;
Transfer some W87 warheads
from retired Peacekeepers to Minuteman III ICBMs;
Maintain two-ocean SSBN
force with full target coverage in both oceans, large operating areas,
and maximum reconstitution capability;
Less than 18 SSBNs is
undesirable;
Protect MIRV on SLBMs
since START prohibits uploading.
The briefing was also a
warning, of sort, which cautioned against cutting too deep too quickly and
emphasized the need to protect and retain key programs and planning
capabilities. In hindsight, the briefing also presented several projects --
such as the transformation of the B-1 to a conventional role, the retirement
of the Peacekeeper ICBM, and the transfer of some W87 warheads from retired
Peacekeepers onto Minuteman missiles -- that a decade later would be central
components of the "new" cuts of the Bush administration's 2001 nuclear
posture review.
In preparing for the briefing,
the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense (International Security
Policy) stressed to the Secretary of Defense that the study "highlights the
importance of identifying, in the near term, the force structure with which
we will want to move into the 21st century."
The study was STRATCOM's first
chance to prove its worth after replacing the split Air Force-Navy nuclear
planning structure from the Cold War. By centralizing all nuclear command
and control in a single command, the hope was to ensure a more impartial and
realistic nuclear planning. Indeed, in undertaking the study, ASD(ISP) said
after visiting Offutt Air Force Base prior to the briefing, STRATCOM had
"filled the void that we sought to eliminate through the establishment of
the Command: provide a single voice which could (1) analyze impartially the
full range strategic force issues, integrating force structure, targeting,
operational, and arms control considerations; and (2) speak to these
national requirements in programmatic and budgetary fora, and bring them
forward for your review."
Yet the status of STRATCOM as
a nuclear super-command also monopolized somewhat the analysis of the
nuclear posture. A change in structure did not necessarily mean a change in
mindset so a central principle in STRATCOM's efforts was that the preferred
force structure should meet the needs of the "warfighter" by maintaining
highly survivable, flexible, and modern offensive forces. These principles
inevitably limited the changes that could be made, and were deeply rooted in
the Cold War nuclear planning culture. The same principles became the basis
for the 1993
Sun City
study.
A copy of the STRATCOM's View
study can be downloaded from the right-hand column.
(An earlier description of
this document was first published by the Nautilus Institute
Nuclear Strategy Project)