Source:Reuters Published: 2014-4-10 0:28:01
The United States will scale back its nuclear bombers, submarine launchers and ballistic missiles in the first cuts to its nuclear arsenal since ratifying a landmark treaty with Russia in 2011, officials said on Tuesday.
Under the treaty, known as New Start, the US military will disable four missile launch tubes on each of the 14 US nuclear submarines, convert 30 B-52 nuclear bombers to conventional use and empty 50 intercontinental ballistic missile silos, senior administration officials said.
The treaty caps deployed strategic nuclear warheads, those meant to travel long distances, in Russia and the United States at 1,550 each by 2018, down from the previous ceiling of 2,200. It also resumes inspections of US and Russian nuclear weapons facilities that ended in 2009 when the original Start lapsed.
The New START treaty, agreed in 2010 and ratified in 2011, also calls for each side to reduce its total number of nuclear weapons delivery systems to no more than 800, with only 700 deployed at any given time.
The US has 886 deployed and non-deployed delivery systems, officials said, comprising 454 Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missiles, 336 Trident II submarine-launched ballistic missiles and 96 B-2 and B-52 bombers.
To eliminate the 86 excess launchers and reach the total 800 deployed and non-deployed systems, the Pentagon will alter four launch tubes on each of the 14 Trident submarines to render them unusable, eliminating 56 delivery systems. It also will convert 30 B-52 bombers to conventional use, the officials said.
To ensure the number of total deployed launchers is no more than 700, the Defense Department will have two Trident ballistic missile submarines in overhaul at any given time, which would mean their 40 missiles no longer be deployed.
It would maintain six nuclear bombers in non-deployed status, including three test aircraft.
The air force has four missile silos for testing that would be considered non-deployed, the officials said.
Reuters