Sec. 6602. Sense of Senate on support for a robust and modern ICBM force to maximize the value of the nuclear triad of the United States
716 words·~3 min read·
/bill/116/s/1790/es/section-6602·A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
The Senate makes the following findings: Land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles (in this section referred to as ICBMs ) have been a critical part of the strategic deterrent of the United States for 6 decades in conjunction with air and sea-based strategic delivery systems. President John F. Kennedy referred to the deployment of the first Minuteman missile during the Cuban Missile Crisis as his ace in the hole . The Minuteman III missile entered service in 1970 and is still deployed in 2019, well beyond its originally intended service life.
The ICBM force of the United States peaked at more than 1,200 deployed missiles during the Cold War. The ICBM force of the United States currently consists of approximately 400 Minuteman III missiles deployed across 450 operational missile silos, each carrying a single warhead. The Russian Federation currently deploys at least 300 ICBMs with multiple warheads loaded on each missile and has announced plans to replace its Soviet-era systems with modernized ICBMs. The People’s Republic of China currently deploys at least 75 ICBMs and plans to grow its ICBM force through the deployment of modernized, road-mobile ICBMs that carry multiple warheads.
The Russian Federation and the People’s Republic of China deploy nuclear weapons across a variety of platforms in addition to their ICBM forces. Numerous countries possess or are seeking to develop nuclear weapons capabilities that pose challenges to the nuclear deterrence of the United States. The nuclear deterrent of the United States is comprised of a triad of delivery systems for nuclear weapons, including submarine-launched ballistic missiles (in this subsection referred to as SLBMs ), air-delivered gravity bombs and cruise missiles, and land-based ballistic missiles that provide interlocking and mutually reinforcing attributes that enhance strategic deterrence.
Weakening one leg of the triad limits the deterrent value of the other legs of the triad. In the nuclear deterrent of the United States, ICBMs provide commanders with the most prompt response capability, SLBMs provide stealth and survivability, and aircraft armed with nuclear weapons provide flexibility. The ICBM force of the United States forces any would-be attacker to confront more than 400 discrete targets, thus creating an effectively insurmountable targeting problem for a potential adversary.
The size, dispersal, and global reach of the ICBM force of the United States ensures that no adversary can escalate a crisis beyond the ability of the United States to respond. A potential attacker would be forced to expend far more warheads to destroy the ICBMs of the United States than the United States would lose in an attack, because of the deployment of a single warhead on each ICBM of the United States. The ICBM force provides a persistent deterrent capability that reinforces strategic stability.
ICBMs are the cheapest delivery system for nuclear weapons for the United States to operate and maintain. United States Strategic Command has validated military requirements for the unique capabilities of ICBMs. In a 2014 analysis of alternatives, the Air Force concluded that replacing the Minuteman III missile would provide upgraded capabilities at lower cost when compared with extending the service life of the Minuteman III missile. The Minuteman III replacement program, known as the ground-based strategic deterrent, is expected to provide a land-based strategic deterrent capability for 5 decades after the program enters service.
It is the sense of the Senate that— land-based ICBMs have certain characteristics, including responsiveness, persistence, and dispersal, that enhance strategic stability and magnify the deterrent value of the air and sea-based legs of the nuclear triad of the United States; ICBMs have played and continue to play a role in deterring attacks on the United States and its allies; while arms control agreements have reduced the size of the ICBM force of the United States, adversaries of the United States continue to enhance, enlarge, and modernize their ICBM forces; the modernization of the ICBM force of the United States through the ground-based strategic deterrent program should be supported;
ICBMs have the lowest operation, maintenance, and modernization costs of any part of the nuclear deterrent of the United States; and unilaterally reducing the size of the ICBM force of the United States or delaying the implementation of the ground-based strategic deterrent program would degrade the deterrent capabilities of a fully operational and modernized nuclear triad and should not take place at the present time.