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Launch-ready nuclear weapon

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High-alert or Launch-ready nuclear weapon(s) commonly refers to a ballistic missile(s) armed with a nuclear warhead(s) whose launch can be ordered (through the National Command Authority) and executed (via a nuclear command and control system) within 15 minutes or less. Can include any weapon system capable of delivering a nuclear warhead in this time frame.


Virtually all high-alert nuclear weapons are possessed by the U.S. and Russia. Both nations use automated command and control systems in conjunction with their early warning radar and/or satellites to facilitate the rapid launch of their land-based Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs) and some Submarine Launched Ballistic Missiles (SLBMs).[1] Fear of a “disarming” nuclear first-strike that would destroy their command and control systems and nuclear forces led both nations to develop “launch-on-warning” capability, which requires high-alert nuclear weapons able to launch on a 30 minute (or less) tactical warning, the nominal flight time of ICBMs traveling to and from the U.S. to Russia.


A definition of "high-alert" requires no specific explosive power of the weapon carried by the missile or weapon system, but in general, most high-alert missiles are armed with strategic nuclear weapons with yields equal to or greater than 100 kilotons.[2] The U.S.[3] and Russia[4] have for decades possessed ICBMs and SLBMs capable of being launched in only a few minutes. The U.S. “Minuteman” ICBM earned its name for its quick-launch capability.


The U.S. and Russia currently have a total of 900 missiles and 2581 strategic nuclear warheads on high-alert, launch-ready status. The total explosive power of these weapons is about 1185 Mt (megatons, or million tons of TNT equivalent explosive power).[5]


Notes and References

  1. ^ Blair, Bruce. "The Logic of Accidental Nuclear War". © The Brookings Institution 1993.
  2. ^ Starr, Steven. "An Explanation of Nuclear Weapons Terminology". © Nuclear Age Peace Foundation 2008.
  3. ^ Correll, J. How the Air Force Got the ICBM". © Air Force Magazine Online (Journal of the Air Force Association) 2005, July, Vol. 88, No. 7.
  4. ^ NTI online database. "Russia: History of Soviet/Russian ICBMs".
  5. ^ Starr, Steven. “High-alert nuclear weapons: examining the risks”. SGR Newsletter, No. 26, Autumn 2008, in press.