Nuclear Arsenals of the world.

Grand Danois

Entertainer
If you want references - you'll find a lot of them here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_states_with_nuclear_weapons#_note-2
IIRC The Bulletin figures are stockpiles*. The US is keeping a very high proportion of their nukes in operational or active reserve state (80-90%).

That costs a bundle: 35 billion 1998 Dollars.

http://www.brookings.edu/projects/archive/nucweapons/curspend.aspx

You are suggesting the Russians are keeping twice as many in that state on a smaller budget (the entire Russian defence budget is smaller than this)?

The reason why the US is comfortable reducing its arsenal is because the Russians is incapable of maintaning the same numbers as the US.

If you look at this table you have ballpark numbers for op & aa numbers for Russia:

http://www.nrdc.org/nuclear/nudb/datab19.asp

* Oh! I see the Wiki article actually says stockpiles. And uses The Bulletin for its reference. Too bad The Bulletin went exclusive some time ago.
 

Chrom

New Member
Wikipedia is really not the best sources of information, anybody can just go on and put random crap for any reason. I would use other sites where nobody can edit them.
I do not advice you to believe wiki. I said there are lot of references there. You can read all these referred sources youself.
 

Chrom

New Member
IIRC The Bulletin figures are stockpiles*. The US is keeping a very high proportion of their nukes in operational or active reserve state (80-90%).

That costs a bundle: 35 billion 1998 Dollars.

http://www.brookings.edu/projects/archive/nucweapons/curspend.aspx

You are suggesting the Russians are keeping twice as many in that state on a smaller budget (the entire Russian defence budget is smaller than this)?

The reason why the US is comfortable reducing its arsenal is because the Russians is incapable of maintaning the same numbers as the US.

If you look at this table you have ballpark numbers for op & aa numbers for Russia:

http://www.nrdc.org/nuclear/nudb/datab19.asp

* Oh! I see the Wiki article actually says stockpiles. And uses The Bulletin for its reference. Too bad The Bulletin went exclusive some time ago.
Maintaining nukes are much cheaper than you might think. After all, Russia and USA have very comparable armies (in size), and Russian defence spending is less than 1/10 of USA ones. I cant see particular reason why Russia CAN maaintain comparable number of tanks or SAM's for 1/10 money but cant do the same with nuclear warheads.

Besides, relevant quote from your link "Tactical nuclear and dual-capable forces — $1.0 b"
 

Grand Danois

Entertainer
Maintaining nukes are much cheaper than you might think. After all, Russia and USA have very comparable armies (in size), and Russian defence spending is less than 1/10 of USA ones. I cant see particular reason why Russia CAN maaintain comparable number of tanks or SAM's for 1/10 money but cant do the same with nuclear warheads.
Ah there it is... you actually believe Russia has parity with 7-8% of the defence spending of the US? And twice the number of warheads with perhaps 10% of the budget?

You are suggesting that producing and maintaining a warhead in Russia costs something like 1/20th of what it costs to the US? The US stockpile cost the US 44.4 billion 2007 US Dollars in 1998. That is much more than the current Russian defence budget (31 billion Dollars, 2007).

You underestimate what it costs to maintain warheads. And that on top of tanks SAMs and whatnot.

Besides, relevant quote from your link "Tactical nuclear and dual-capable forces — $1.0 b"
US has put more emphasis on stratnukes. And I don't think you can derive tac nuke spending from that figure alone.
 
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Chrom

New Member
Ah there it is... you actually believe Russia has parity with 7-8% of the defence spending of the US? And twice the number of warheads with perhaps 10% of the budget?
More or less yes. See number of strategic warheads (for these we have officiall numbers) - they are equal, yet Russia spend again 1/10 of USA for strategic forces.

You are suggesting that producing and maintaining a warhead in Russia costs something like 1/20th of what it costs to the US? The US stockpile cost the US 44.4 billion 2007 US Dollars in 1998. That is much more than the current Russian defence budget (31 billion Dollars, 2007).
This is a good question however - is it Russia spend too few, or USA spend much too much? My opinion - USA spend the money in a very ineffective way.
You underestimate what it costs to maintain warheads. And that on top of tanks SAMs and whatnot.
Well, lets better look at cost of maintaining tanks and aircrafts - i'm 100% sure what you will come to same figure - USA spend 5 to 10 times more money for same amount of tanks and aircrafts than Russia.


US has put more emphasis on stratnukes. And I don't think you can derive tac nuke spending from that figure alone.
Again, the number of strategic nukes are equal on both sides. USA spend more money on strategic nukes than ENTIRE RUSSIAN DEFENCE BUDGET.
 

Chrom

New Member
Also, i fail to see your logic - you are now willing to accept 10.000 nukes on USA side, but unwilling to admit 10.000+ (15.000+) nukes on russian side from the same source.

P.S. You greatly overestimate the cost to maintain tactical nukes. They cost almost nothing.
 

Chrom

New Member
You have to elaborate... :confused:
What elaborate? Tactical nukes by they nature do not require expencive specialised platforms like strategic nukes. They just use general purpose platfroms like guns and bombs. Warhead itself is very cheap to maintain.
 

Grand Danois

Entertainer
What elaborate? Tactical nukes by they nature do not require expencive specialised platforms like strategic nukes. They just use general purpose platfroms like guns and bombs. Warhead itself is very cheap to maintain.
Elaborate on this:

Also, i fail to see your logic - you are now willing to accept 10.000 nukes on USA side, but unwilling to admit 10.000+ (15.000+) nukes on russian side from the same source.
nothing.
You have to elaborate... :confused:
 

Chrom

New Member
8,600 Russian nukes in 2002 is in the ballpark, with 18,000 including inactive reserve (de facto unusable as a weapon). This I have argued all along. No contradiction.
Unusable in the very moment. In case of need they could be restored to usable status within days. They called "reserve" not for nothing.
 

Chrom

New Member
There is a reason why something is called "active reserve". ;)
Active reserve is warheads (or even complete weapon) ready to be installed within weapon (bomb, cruise missile, etc) and used. Rest is either dissasmbled warheads or warheads needed repair/check/etc. This can be made within days if it is really needed. As i said, they are called reserve for a reason. Just radiactive material reserve(plutonium, uranium, etc) measured in tons and Russia have it enouth to arm hundreds thousands warheads.
 

F-15 Eagle

New Member
  • Thread Starter Thread Starter
  • #39
Active reserve is warheads (or even complete weapon) ready to be installed within weapon (bomb, cruise missile, etc) and used. Rest is either dissasmbled warheads or warheads needed repair/check/etc. This can be made within days if it is really needed. As i said, they are called reserve for a reason. Just radiactive material reserve(plutonium, uranium, etc) measured in tons and Russia have it enouth to arm hundreds thousands warheads.
The U.S. has enough for hundreds of thousands of warheads too, though no one needs quit that many. 4000-15000 nukes is good enough in my opinion.
 

Ozzy Blizzard

New Member
The U.S. has enough for hundreds of thousands of warheads too, though no one needs quit that many. 4000-15000 nukes is good enough in my opinion.
None would be perfect in my opinion!!!

As far as strategic , Kato' estimate was on the money, 5/600 warheads ready to rock is plenty. More than enough death and sufficient redundency. Tactical nukes, well they dont play much of a part in deturrent so it depends on your doctrine.
 
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