Modernizing and
maintaining the U.S. nuclear arsenal over the next 30 years will cost more than
$1.2 trillion, according to a report released on Tuesday by the Congressional
Budget Office.The report said current plans for the modernization of the
aging planes, ships and missile silos that make up the U.S. nuclear arsenal
would cost 50 percent more than if the U.S. only operated and maintained its
current equipment in the field.
The CBO study reviewed the
Obama’s Administration’s plans for modernization of the nuclear arsenal.
President Donald Trump in January directed Secretary of Defense James Mattis to
conduct his own review the U.S. nuclear forces. The results could be published
in the coming months.
U.S. House
Armed Services Committee member Adam Smith, a Democrat from Washington, said of
the Obama-era plan: “Congress still doesn’t seem to have any answers as to how
we will pay for this effort, or what the trade-offs with other national
security efforts will be.”
The report
said costs would rise from $29 billion in 2017 to $47 billion in
2027, before peaking at around $50 billion a year through the early 2030s.
Trump has said
he wants to ensure the U.S. nuclear arsenal is at the “top of the pack,” saying
the United States has fallen behind in its weapons capacity.
U.S. officials
have noted that America’s nuclear modernization is lagging behind Russia’s
upgrade of its own nuclear triad.
General Paul
Selva, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told Congress in August he
believed Moscow was already two-thirds of the way through its nuclear
modernization process.
In August, the U.S. Air Force
awarded Boeing Co and Northrop Grumman Corp separate contracts to continue
development work on the replacement of the aging Minuteman III intercontinental
ballistic missile system one leg of the nuclear triad.
Days later the Air Force
awarded Lockheed Martin Corp and Raytheon Co separate $900 million contracts to
continue work on a replacement for the AGM-86B air-launched nuclear cruise
missile. That detailed development contract allows the companies to continue
work on the long range standoff weapon yet another leg of the triad.
Source: Reuter
No comments:
Post a Comment