Russia conducted a test of a revolutionary nuclear-capable drone submarine that poses a major strategic threat to U.S. ports and harbors.
U.S. intelligence agencies detected the test of the unmanned underwater
vehicle, code-named Kanyon by the Pentagon, during its launch from
a Sarov-class submarine on Nov. 27, said Pentagon officials familiar with
reports of the test.
No details were available about the location or results of the test
Pentagon spokesman
Capt. Jeff Davis declined to comment. “We closely monitor Russian underwater
military developments, but we will not comment specifically about them,” Davis
said.
Development of the new drone submarine
was first disclosed in September 2015 and then confirmed by the Russian military two months later.
Russian officials said the secret program was mistakenly disclosed.
Russia calls the
drone development program the “Ocean Multipurpose System ‘Status-6.’” The
developer is Russia’s TsKB MT Rubin design bureau, the defense industry
entity that builds all Russia’s submarines.
U.S. intelligence
agencies estimate the Kanyon secret underwater drone will be equipped with
megaton-class warheads—the largest nuclear weapons in existence, with the
killing power of millions of tons of TNT.
The weapon likely
could be used against U.S. ports and bases, including those used by ballistic
missile submarines.
The two U.S. nuclear
missile submarine bases are located at Kings Bay, Georgia, just north of the
Florida border, and Puget Sound in Washington State.
Russia’s nuclear
weapons development in recent years has alarmed American military leaders in
part due to a new doctrine adopted by Moscow that increases its reliance
on nuclear forces in a conflict. The new doctrine indicates that Russia will
quickly escalate to the use of nuclear arms to compensate for its aging and
outdated conventional forces.
U.S. intelligence
agencies also have detected Russia’s development of new low-yield tactical
nuclear weapons—arms that could be used more easily in regional conflicts.
Former Pentagon
official Mark Schneider said the test of the underwater nuclear delivery
vehicle poses a new strategic threat.
“The Status-6, a
nuclear powered, nuclear armed drone submarine, is the most irresponsible
nuclear weapons program that Putin’s Russia has come up with,” said Schneider,
now with the National Institute for Public Policy.
“Status-6 is
designed to kill civilians by massive blast and fallout,” he said, noting that
such targeting violates the law of armed conflict.
According to a
Russian document disclosed on state television Nov. 10, 2015, the sub is a
self-propelled underwater craft capable of carrying a nuclear warhead up
to 6,200 miles. The vehicle can submerge to a depth of 3,280 feet and travel at
speeds of up to 56 knots.
A drawing of the
drone submarine shows it will be nuclear powered, controlled by surface ships,
and supported by a Sarov submarine.
Russia’s Sarov has
been described in Russian press reports as a diesel electric-powered vessel for
testing new weapons and technology. Sarov also has been described as an
intelligence-gathering submarine.
The Russian document
said Russia planned to build a Kanyon prototype by 2019 and begin testing that
year. The 2015 leak was Moscow’s attempt to warn the
United States about its displeasure with U.S. missile defenses in Europe
and the deployment of missile defense ships to the region. Watchman, well we woke the sleeping bear up!
Russian presidential
spokesman Dmitri Peskov told reporters one day after the leak that
classified information had been accidentally disclosed—an unusual public
admission of a security error that has raised concerns about false Russian
strategic messaging.
The Russian nuclear
arms buildup has coincided with what U.S. officials say are unprecedented
public statements by Russian leader Vladimir Putin about nuclear weapons
in response to Western opposition to Moscow’s military annexation of Ukraine’s
Crimean peninsula.
In addition to the
nuclear-tipped drone, Russian nuclear modernization includes a new class of
ballistic missile submarines, new submarine-launched ballistic missiles, two
new land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles, and a new long-range
bomber. Russia also is building a new railroad-based missile system.
The U.S. Navy is
developing new underwater drones, but none will be nuclear armed. Watchman, if you believe that Jill Stein will sell you a recount in Michigan, Wisconsin and PA.
Schneider, the
former Pentagon official who has held a number of positions involving strategic
weapons, said reports from Russia indicate the drone sub will be armed with a
100-megaton warhead.
“The Russian
government daily Rossiyskaya Gazeta reported that to achieve ‘extensive radioactive
contamination’ the weapon ‘could envisage using the so-called cobalt bomb, a
nuclear weapon designed to produce enhanced amounts of radioactive fallout
compared to a regular atomic warhead,'” Schneider said.
“A cobalt bomb is a
‘doomsday’ weapons concept conceived during the Cold War, but apparently never
actually developed,” he said.
Testing of the
drone, which is said to be powered by a nuclear reactor with limited shielding,
poses environmental risks. A guidance failure could result in an undersea
nuclear disaster.
The New START arms treaty requires notification of new offensive
strategic weapons in a U.S.-Russia commission.
“We could even
propose a ban on such weapons,” Schneider said.
During congressional
testimony in December 2015, Rose Gottemoeller, then the undersecretary of state
for arms control and international security, said the Russian nuclear-armed
drone is a concern.
“I know we are
concerned about it; of course we are concerned about it as a threat to the
United States,” said Gottemoeller, now NATO’s deputy secretary general. She
noted that the system would pose a great threat if “widely put into operation.”
The Obama
administration took no action against Russia’s violation of the 1987
Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces treaty.
Retired Air Force
Gen. Robert Kehler, former commander of the U.S. Strategic Command, has said
development of the underwater nuclear strike vehicle is one element of a
“troubling” Russian strategic nuclear buildup.
Rep. Mike Rogers
(R., Ala.), chairman of the House subcommittee on strategic forces, has said
that the Russians assert the nuclear drone submarine will be used to target
coastal areas and inflict “unacceptable damage to a country’s territory by
creating areas of wide radioactive contamination that would be unsuitable for
military, economic, or other activity for long periods of time.”
“What does it say
about a country that feels that nuclear weapons are such a significant tool of
its military and diplomatic strategy that it discloses systems in this manner?”
Rogers asked during a House hearing. “And what does this say about a
country that would invest resources in such a weapon? This is just nuts.”
Pavel Podvig, a
Russian nuclear forces watcher, stated two years ago that the Status-6 payload
“looks like a massive dirty bomb,”—a nuclear device that kills with radiation
as opposed to a combination of a nuclear blast and radiation.
“A number of people
noted that the description does not necessarily exclude the possibility that
the initial ‘damaging’ can be done by a regular nuclear device,” Podvig said.
“Which only makes this whole thing even more insane—do they think that a
nuclear weapon on its own would not inflict ‘unacceptable damage’?” he said. Below is a diagram of a U.S. drone sub equipped with smaller drones.
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