A truly dependent independent deterrent?

Tad | Jun 08, 2010 | there are 1 comments 1
Trident D-5

Trident D-5

During the recent UK election campaign Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg made his opposition to like-for-like Trident replacement plans clear, mainly on the basis of the high costs and record breaking budget deficit.   Forming a key element of the newly elected Coalition Government with Conservative David Cameron, Clegg is now in an excellent position to highlight other problems associated with Trident modernization plans before they are irreversibly acted on.

One problem not highlighted in the leadership campaign is the ‘dependence’ of the Trident system on the support of the US.   Indeed, having presented Trident modernization in the 2006 White Paper as meeting the requirement of a ‘UK nuclear force [that] remains fully operationally independent’, suggestions that it is anything short of this call into question the very rationale for renewing it on this basis.

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tags Nukes on a Blog, trident, submarines, modernization, d-5 (all tags)


Cut public spending or forgo nuclear weapons?

Tad | May 03, 2010 | there are 0 comments 0

According to new analysis from the Institute for Fiscal Studies, should all three of Britain’s main political parties meet the budget commitments detailed in their election manifestos, then the UK looks set to face the biggest public spending cuts in over a generation.  The report suggests that Labour and the Liberal Democrats will have to make cuts on a scale not seen since the 1970s, when Prime Minister Jim Callaghan’s government was forced to turn to the International Monetary Fund for help in propping up the country.

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tags Nukes on a Blog, UK, Trident, tax (all tags)


'Get Real Nick, Get Real!'

Tad | Apr 22, 2010 | there are 0 comments 0
Get Real Nick!

Get Real Nick!

Gordon Brown's response to Liberal Democrat candidate Nick Clegg's suggestion that the UK should review its like-for-like renewal of Trident, especially in light of President Obama's view that terrorists with nuclear material are the number one risk to international security:

'Get Real Nick, Get Real!' What would we do if we were threatened by Iran or North Korea?'  

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tags Nukes on a Blog, Trident, UK, North Korea, Iran Watch (all tags)


U.S. May Have Test-Fired a Trident from Saudi Arabia

Laicie Olson | Apr 01, 2010 | there are 0 comments 0

Was it just an April Fools joke? Yesterday the Associated Press reported that the United States had test-fired a nuclear-capable Trident missile as part of a military drill with Saudi Arabia. The launch may have come in response to Saudi and Gulf Arab concerns over Iran's evolving nuclear weapons program.

A defense official in Washington confirmed that the missile launch took place late last week and was part of a demonstration. The official also stated that U.S. Missile Defense Agency head Lt. Gen. Patrick O'Reilly was present. The Pentagon has since denied that any missile was fired and states that while O’Reilly was in the region last week, he was not present at any launch.

Regardless of the 'he said she said' of it all, the news draws attention to the recent beefing up of defenses around Iran. The recently accelerated initiative, originally launched by the Bush administration, involves nearly the entire Gulf region, including Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain and Kuwait...

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tags Iran Watch, Missile Defense, Nukes on a Blog, Trident (all tags)


Trident Uncertainties

Tad | Mar 08, 2010 | there are 0 comments 0
The UK's

The UK's "Vanguard" class SSBN

A 2006 MOD White Paper said that the UK’s current fleet of Trident ballistic missile submarines would have to be retired in the early 2020s, estimating that it would take around 17 years to design, manufacture, and commission the replacement boomers.  After a controversial vote in the House of Commons in 2007, it looked certain that the UK would replace its Vanguard class submarines as a key part of an extension plan to its at-sea ‘Trident’ nuclear deterrent.  

Having devoted £7.7 billion in October 2007 for research and design in the initial ‘Concept Phase’ of the replacement program, the UK Government was scheduled to make ‘Initial Gate’ decisions as early as September 2009.  These decisions would have kicked off a series of technical assessments and design work, committing Prime Minister Gordon Brown to pay out some 15% of the estimated £15-20 billion procurement costs for the new submarine.  

In July 2009, the Government decided to delay the design contract until 2010.  In January 2010, it was reported that the Government had postponed making its ‘Initial Gate’ decisions indefinitely, allegedly due to difficulties in agreeing on the type of nuclear reactors needed to power the future submarines.  However, the timing of the announcement casts doubt on the claim that the delay is purely technical in nature.  And as the Vanguard retirement clock continues to tick, suggestions of ‘indefinite’ delays call into question the Government’s commitment to the ‘urgent’ nature of the replacement program, as depicted in the White Paper timetable…

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tags Nukes on a Blog, Trident, UK, nuclear, D5, Vanguard Submarines (all tags)

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