Title: Stockpile Transformation Study
1Office of the Assistant to the Secretary of
Defense Nuclear and Chemical and Biological
Defense Programs
Stockpile Planning for the FutureMr. Steve
HenryDeputy Assistant to the Secretary of
Defense for Nuclear Matters
2Stockpile PlanningThe Historical Approach
- Largely target based
- Heavy reliance on a large stockpile to manage
geo-political and technical risk - Infrastructure with little capability beyond
maintaining legacy weapons
Legacy stockpile
Infrastructure Cost
This approach continues the Cold War mentality of
strength in numbers, rather than a focus on
overall capabilities
3Clear Objectives Exist for the Future Nuclear
Weapons Stockpile
I am committed to achieving a credible deterrent
with the lowest-possible number of nuclear
weapons consistent with our national security
needs - Pres. Bush May 2001
- Reliable, secure, and safe stockpile
- Responsive nuclear weapon infrastructure
- Sustain confidence for the long term
- Continue moratorium on nuclear testing
The current approach for the stockpile and
infrastructure does not adequately provide a path
forward that meets the Presidents guidance
A New Approach is Needed to Meet DoDs Future
Stockpile Needs
4Objectives of a New Approach
- Initiate an immediate change from the current
path of maintaining complex Cold War-era designs
indefinitely - Provide flexibility in the stockpile and ability
to adapt to changing needs - Sustain critical skills to design, certify, and
produce nuclear warheads - Free-up capacity and resources to enable
transformation to a responsive, sustainable
infrastructure
Reliable Replacement Warhead (RRW) Concepts May
Provide a Way to Achieve These Objectives
5The New Approach and Potential Implementation
- If RRW proves feasible, we should have a way to
enable a broad change in our nuclear enterprise - Enhance safety, security, and control on weapons
- Demonstrate our ability to design and certify
without nuclear testing - Reduce the size and cost of the nuclear
infrastructure - Potential to disassemble a larger number of
retired weapons
Current Plan
New Approach
Stockpile
Wxx Life Extension (LEP)
Stockpile
Wxx
RRWs
Wxx
Life Extension
6Our New Approach Must Meet National Security
Objectives
- Supports defense policy goals of
- Assuring allies and friends of US mutual security
commitments - Dissuading potential aggressors from
planning/acquiring WMD - Deterring potential aggressors from using WMD
- Defending against or defeating an aggressor
- Enables stockpile reductions
- Consistent with U.S. non-proliferation
initiatives
7It Must Also Preserve Essential National
Capability
- Sustains and exercises national capability for
nuclear warhead design, engineering, and
production skills - Fosters scientific and technical capabilities to
reduce technical surprise - Enables an infrastructure that is responsive to
changing national security needs - Facilitates nuclear incident/emergency response
capabilities
8Managing Risk Today vs. 2030
Today
2030
- Legacy infrastructure with limited capability
- Heavy reliance on hedge stockpile for risk
management
- Responsive and efficient infrastructure with
enhanced capability - Reduced reliance on hedge stockpile for risk
management
We need a more balanced approach between
stockpile size and infrastructure responsiveness
9Nuclear Weapons Stockpile Transformation
TODAY (2005)
2010
2020
2030
LONG TERM VISION
- DoD Weapons
- Weapon systems designed and fielded during Cold
War - Warheads (8-9 types)
- All Cold War-era legacy warheads
- Plan to refurbish indefinitely
- Infrastructure
- Make components to refurbish warheads
- Some components expensive, difficult to
manufacture - Risk Management
- High reliance on back-up warheads
- Warheads
- All non-refurbished legacy warheads retired
- 2-4 types of RRWs
- Responsive Infrastructure
- Streamlined
- Steady-state production of warheads for
deployment - Risk Management
- Low reliance on non-deployed back-up warheads
- High reliance on responsive infrastructure
TRANSFORM Target Based To Enterprise Based
Deterrent
10Nuclear Weapons Stockpile and Infrastructure
Transformation
TODAY (2005)
2010
2020
2030
LONG TERM VISION
- DoD Weapons
- Weapon systems designed and fielded during Cold
War - Warheads (8-9 types)
- All Cold War-era legacy warheads
- Plan to refurbish indefinitely
- Infrastructure
- Make components to refurbish warheads
- Some components expensive, difficult to
manufacture - Risk Management
- High reliance on back-up warheads
- Develop and field RRW warheads
- Develop low-cost warhead back-up options
- Continue life extension refurbishments evaluate
quantity needed - Conduct stockpile transformation studies
- Evaluate tradeoffs of an all-RRW stockpile versus
mixed stockpile - Re-scope warhead life extension needs
- Develop warheads for next-generation delivery
systems - Complete stockpile transformation plans
- Warheads
- All non-refurbished legacy warheads retired
- 2-4 types of RRWs
- Responsive Infrastructure
- Streamlined
- Steady-state production of warheads for
deployment - Risk Management
- Low reliance on non-deployed back-up warheads
- High reliance on responsive infrastructure
11Summary
- The current nuclear enterprise is unsustainable
in the long term - If RRW proves feasible, we could have a way to
enable a broad change in our nuclear enterprise - Enhance safety, security, and control on weapons
- Demonstrate our confidence to manufacture and
certify without nuclear testing - Reduce the size and cost of the nuclear
infrastructure - Potential to disassemble a larger number of
retired weapons - We need to work with the NNSA and Congress on
stockpile and infrastructure transformation
RRW Can Enable Transformation of the Stockpile
and Infrastructure