29.08.2014 Views

Russian Nuclear Weapons: Past, Present, and Future - Strategic ...

Russian Nuclear Weapons: Past, Present, and Future - Strategic ...

Russian Nuclear Weapons: Past, Present, and Future - Strategic ...

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

submarine in the new class, Yuri Dolgoruki, has been<br />

commissioned, two more are being built, <strong>and</strong> the keel<br />

of the fourth was laid in January 2010. It was also decided<br />

to retain one more Typhoon SSBN <strong>and</strong> convert it<br />

for Bulava. Eventually this might mean that, given the<br />

low production capability, Russia will have serious<br />

problems producing the necessary number of SLBMs<br />

to equip all submarines (16 per each new Borey-class<br />

SSBN <strong>and</strong> 20 per each Typhoon; future Borey SSBNs are<br />

expected to carry 20 missiles each).<br />

The sorry state of modernization of the Navy increasingly<br />

causes displeasure of the top echelons of<br />

the government—last year First Deputy Prime Minister<br />

Sergey Ivanov revealed that the Navy consumes<br />

40 percent of the total defense budget, more than the<br />

SRF, Air Force, <strong>and</strong> Space Forces combined, <strong>and</strong> that<br />

the bulk of that spending goes to the nuclear submarine<br />

force. 58 Implicit in the tone of his remarks was recognition<br />

that the yield from that investment remains<br />

unsatisfactory.<br />

In the meantime, the sea leg of the <strong>Russian</strong> triad<br />

consists of Delta III <strong>and</strong> IV SSBNs. These submarines<br />

were given an overhaul to extend their service lives.<br />

The Makeev design bureau, which had lost the contract<br />

for a new SLBM, produced a modernized version<br />

of SS-N-23. In the coming decade, Delta IIIs will be<br />

probably phased out <strong>and</strong> only slightly newer Delta IVs<br />

will remain in service. Thus, early completion of the<br />

Bulava program remains a must—without it, Russia<br />

risks losing the sea leg completely by the end of this or<br />

the beginning of the next decade.<br />

It might be interesting to contemplate the <strong>Russian</strong><br />

strategic triad without the naval component. Proposals<br />

to phase out SSBNs were quite popular in the late<br />

1990s-early 2000s, when investment into moderniza-<br />

226

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!