Showing posts with label ABM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ABM. Show all posts

Sunday, September 12, 2010

The Indian SAM Network

INTRODUCTION

One of the most populous nations in the world, India has engaged in numerous regional conflicts in the past. The threat environment led to the creation of a point-defense oriented EW and SAM network designed not to protect the skies over India, but to protect the military units tasked with such a role. This ultimately led to the creation of a number of EW and SAM units within the Indian Air Force.

OVERVIEW

Indian air defense elements, to include EW assets, SAM systems, and interceptors, are subordinate to the Indian Air Force (IAF). This allows the IAF to coordinate both sensors and weapons, allowing for a maximum degree of target deconfliction. SAM units are organized as squadrons, with radar units being organized as either signal units or transportable radar units, depending on the assigned types. These units are in turn subordinate to the five operational commands in the IAF.

The Indian SAM network follows a point defense layout. The primary SAM system employed by the IAF is the S-125M (SA-3B GOA). These systems are deployed at various airbases in the northern and western portions of India. EW assets are deployed primarily along border regions, with the highest concentration being present along the northern and western borders with Pakistan.

EW ASSETS

Fifty four EW sites have been identified in India. The primary assets are THD-1955, P-12/18 (SPOON REST), and 36D6 (TIN SHIELD) radars. Thirteen THD-1955 radars arrayed primarily along the border region from Pakistan to Myanmar provide a significant amount of EW coverage. EW coverage is enhanced by fourteen 36D6 radar sites, arrayed primarily along the border with Pakistan. The 36D6 is significant as it can provide both target track data to SAM batteries as well as GCI support for Russian-origin fighter aircraft such as the MiG-29 (FULCRUM) or Su-30MKI (FLANKER-H). P-12/18 radar sites are scattered throughout the region, as are indigenous Indra-II radar units. The net result is an EW network that is heavily oriented towards potential threats.

The following image depicts the locations of identified Indian EW facilities. Dark blue diamonds represent basic EW sites, typically manned by P-12/18 or Indra-II radar systems, while light blue diamonds represent THD-1955 radar facilities. Blue circles represent 36D6 radar facilities. The range rings given for the 36D6 sites represent the 165 km acquisition range against a typical fighter-size target. Each radar system is capable of target detection at greater ranges depending on the target RCS and altitude, with the THD-1955 typically employing a range of 400 km.
The following image depicts a typical THD-1955 site. These large radars are sited atop dedicated structures. This site is located south of Shillong in eastern India.
The following image depicts a deployed 36D6 radar at Pune AB in western India. This radar likely serves as both an EW and GCI asset, given its co-location with Su-30MKI fighters.
India does possess the 40V6 series of masts for mounting the 36D6, although their use appears to be relatively infrequent. The following image from February 2008 depicts a 36D6 mounted atop a 40V6 mast assembly at Nal AB. Imagery captured four months later indicates that the 36D6 is still deployed but has been removed from the 40V6. Only thee 36D6 locations have an identifiable 40V6 series mast available for use.
Other EW assets include the A-50I AWACS based at Agra AB, and potentially an aerostat system found near the border with Pakistan. The aerostat system's purpose is unknown at this time, but could potentially be used to mount an air surveillance system. The facility can be seen in the image below.
THE S-125

India's primary strategic SAM system is the S-125M. These systems were delivered between 1973 and 1989 from the USSR, and thirty four batteries are currently active. These batteries provide point defense for key military installations, typically airbases, in the northern and western portions of India.

The locations of India's active S-125M batteries and their engagement zones can be seen in the image below:
The S-125M has two specific drawbacks: range and single-target engagement capability. The ability of the system to engage one target per battery is partially mitigated by placing multiple batteries at many locations, but the 25 km maximum range of the system effectively reduces its role to one of point defense only, lacking the range to provide long-range overlapping fields of fire necessary for a more robust air defense network.

IAF S-125M batteries are frequently relocated in their operating areas. This can be done to complicate targeting by enemy assets and to allow systems to be cycled through maintenance periods. The following image depicts the S-125M deployment area at Vadodara AB in western India. While only one location currently has an active battery, there are four other locations which have been active at some point in the past.
Numbering the S-125M locations 1 through 5 from west to east, the following information can be derived from available imagery:

Site 1
-Active from December 2005 to March 2010

Site 2
-Active from October 2000 to October 2002
-Active from June 2003 to November 2003
-Active from December 2003 to March 2010

Site 3
-Active from October 2000 to October 2002

Site 4
-Active from November 2003 to December 2005
-Currently active as of March 2010

Site 5
-Active from June 2003 to March 2010

All told, there are twenty one inactive or former S-125M positions identified throughout India that can be used as relocation sites should the need arise.

TACTICAL SYSTEMS

Tactical SAM systems are also operated as point defense assets in the IAF. The primary system is the Osa-AKM (SA-8 GECKO), a mobile system mounted on a wheeled TELAR. The 10 km range of the system allows it to serve as a layered short-range counterpart to co-located S-125M batteries.

An IAF Osa-AKM TELAR can be seen in-garrison near Ambala AB in the image below.
The Indian Army operates the 2K12 Kvadrat (SA-6 GAINFUL), which could be employed in a similar capacity to IAF Osa-AKM units if required. The Army also operates additional Osa-AKM units.

LIMITATIONS

Given that India has chosen to rely on a point-defense oriented air defense network, the lack of long-range SAM coverage is not a true limitation. Furthermore, the presence of significant numbers of fighter aircraft such as the Su-30MKI cpaable of acting in concert with the EW network to perform interception tasks can alleviate the lack of long-range SAM coverage. However, there are still some limitations to be addressed within the network as it is currently organized.

The primary limitation is one of terrain. Northern and eastern India contains very varied terrain, which can introduce significant blind spots in radar or SAM coverage, reducing the network's effectiveness. The issue of EW coverage has been addressed to a degree by the procurement of the A-50I AWACS platform.

The other significant limitation faced by the strategic SAM network is one of age. While many of the systems have been refurbished or modified to retain their effectiveness, the age of the systems is such that a potential aggressor has enjoyed a significant amount of time to discern weaknesses and develop ECM systems and countertactics to defeat the deployed systems. In truth, it is the age of many of these systems that has pushed India towards developing and procuring new SAM systems to replace the elderly systems currently in widespread use.

ABM DEVELOPMENTS

One significant aspect of Indian air defense that will become operational in the near future is an ABM capability. India began researching an ABM system in 1999, with the goal of fielding a two-tier system. The two-tier system would consist of the exoatmospheric PAD, a Prithvi SRBM derivative, and the endoatmospheric AAD. Where PAD employs a directional warhead, AAD employs a hit-to-kill kinetic warhead. It is now believed that a new weapon referred to as PDV will replace the PAD in the two-tier structure. This system is capable of engaging 1500 km range ballistic missiles, making it an ATBM rather than a true ABM system, but a separate system with a design goal of engaging 5000 km range weapons is underway to field a true ABM.

The radar syste employed by the PAD/AAD weapons is referred to as Swordfish and is in actuality a modified Israeli EL/M-2080 Green Pine radar system. Two of these radars were delivered to India in 2002. One is currently sited northeast of Bangalore, with the second being located near Konark on India's northeast coast. The radars are sited in protective domes. The inland facility can be seen in the image below:
FUTURE PROSPECTS

India is actively developing and acquiring new SAM systems to revitalize its air defense force for the 21st Century. There are three significant programs which should begin to bear fruit in the near term. The first is the Akash, being procured by the IAF to potentially replace S-125M systems. This is an indigenous mobile SAM system derived in part from the 2K12. Maitri is a short-range SAM being co-developed with France, employing technology used in the French Mica BVR AAM. The third program is a long-range SAM system. This system may build upon the aforementioned AAD weapon under the codename of Ashvin. Deployment of these weapon systems will eventually allow the IAF to retire the S-125M and Osa-AKM, replacing them with weapons more capable of performing effectively in the current environment.

CONCLUSION

While India's SAM network does not appear to be particularly robust or capable on paper, it is not intended to serve as the primary protector of the nation's airspace. However, even with its more limited role, modernization programs must continue if the network is to remain viable in the forseeable future.

SOURCES

-Satellite imagery provided courtesy of Google Earth

IAF Orbat
SIPRI
PAD Test

Sunday, August 15, 2010

The Japanese SAM Network

INTRODUCTION

Japan is a heavily populated nation spread out over a series of islands in the Western Pacific. American and Japanese SAM systems have protected Japanese airspace since the early days of the Cold War. Aging systems and recent developments in the region have led Japan to begin fielding a modern air defense and anti-missile network.

OVERVIEW

Japanese SAM systems are subordinate to both the JGSDF and the JASDF. The JGSDF operates the HAWK and Chu-SAM systems, with Japanese Patriot batteries being operated by the JASDF. However, JASDF control networks provide targeting and EW support for all SAM systems in Japan, as the JASDF operates the Aircraft Control and Warning Wings manning Japan's EW sites. 5 JGSDF units and six JASDF units are equipped with HAWK or Patriot SAMs.

EW

24 active and one inactive EW site form the basis of Japan's early warning network. These sites are located around the periphery of Japan and provide support for both JASDF and JGSDF SAM units. The bulk of these locations operate the indigenous FPS-3 EW radar.

The locations of Japan's EW sites can be seen in the image below:
PATRIOT

In 1984 Japan chose the Patriot missile system to replace its aging Nike-Hercules batteries. The initial PAC-1 batteries were upgraded to PAC-2 standard. Six missile groups operate the Patriot in the JASDF, oriented throughout the nation. These batteries are primarily located on the grounds of former Nike-Hercules units, taking advantage of the hardened revetments already present to protect the TELs.

A representative Patriot battery can be seen in the image below. This site is located near Tokyo, and is a former Nike missile position. The main upgrade performed to Nike sites allowing Patriot operation is the inclusion of a raised berm for the AN/MPQ-53 engagement radar, which can clearly be seen. Amusingly, two of the site's former occupants remain as gate guards.
The locations and coverage zones of Japan's Patriot batteries can be seen in the image below. A portion of the Patriot batteries located on Okinawa are in fact operated by the US Army, but cannot sufficiently be differentiated based on the imagery available. As such, they are all included here.
HAWK AND CHU-SAM

The JGSDF has operated the HAWK missile system since 1965. Eleven batteries appear to remain active in available imagery, with other batteries held in-garrison at various locations.

The locations and coverage zones of Japan's active HAWK batteries can be seen in the image below:
Chu-SAM, the Mitsubishi Type 03, is Japan's indigenous replacement for the HAWK in JSGDF service. Chu-SAM was inducted in 2005, with the first training firings taking place at Fort Bliss, Texas in late 2006. The extent of Chu-SAM deployment is not currently known. Chu-SAM will offer a significant capability increase in terms of performance and mobility when compared to the HAWK.

Chu-SAM components can be seen in-garrison near Tokyo in the image below:
MISSILE DEFENSE

The increasing threat of DPRK ballistic missiles has led Japan to pursue a relatively robust BMD network. There are three primary components to the system: sensors, land-based PAC-3 missiles, and sea-based SM-3 missiles. The system began to be studied in 1995, with the first component, the PAC-3, becoming operational in 2007. PAC-3 systems were deployed to northern Japan in 2009 in anticipation of DPRK missile tests.

The BMD sensor network will consist of three radar types. Seven FPS-3 radars in the existing EW network have been modified to improve missile detection capabilities. In addition, four new FPS-5 phased-array radars (previously developed as the FPS-XX) will be built by 2012. In the interim, a US FBX-T radar system deployed to Japan in June of 2006 to provide BMEW capability. This system was deployed at Shariki in northern Japan. The US also began operating PAC-3 missiles at Kadena in late 2006.

Japan's projected land-based BMEW network can be seen in the image below. Modified FPS-3 sites are marked with light blue circles, FPS-5 radar site locations are marked with dark blue circles, and the FBX-T radar location is marked as a yellow circle.
The FBX-T radar system can be seen in the image below. This radar has been used to monitor DPRK missile tests. This is a temporary location, with a more permanent site being constructed approximately 1 kilometer to the south.
For the sea-based portion of the network, four Kongo-class AEGIS destroyers will be upgraded and equipped to fire the SM-3. Work on these four vessels, the Kongo, Chokai, Myoko, and Kirishima, will be complete by the end of 2010. Kongo completed modifications in 2007 and conducted Japan's first AEGIS missile intercept in December of that year.

Modification of Japan's command and control networks to incorporate the new BMD capabilities and mission will be completed by 2012

CONCLUSION

The changing threat environment, coupled with the age of legacy systems such as the HAWK, have led Japan to develop one of the most modern air defense networks found in the world. When the BMD network is fully operational after 2012, Japan will have provided its citizens with a robust defensive capability to repel both air and missile attacks on its soil.

SOURCES

-Satellite imagery provided courtesy of Google Earth

PAC-3 deployed
PAC-3 flight test
Chu-SAM
Chu-SAM testing

Japan's Missile Defense, March 2007
Overview of Japan's Defense Policy, Japanese MoD
Defense White Paper, Japanese MoD, 2009

Monday, November 9, 2009

Sary Shagan Update

Last week I mentioned that I am working on an expanded and updated look at Russia's ABM programs, including the Sary Shagan test range. Well, this project might take a little bit longer than expected. To understand why I have decided to make this a far more time-consuming project than originally anticipated, take a look at the work in progress in the image below:



I'm pretty sure we can all agree that the end result will be worth the wait, right? My intention is to model the major facilities, including operational radars like the Don-2NP (HORSE LEG) seen above, and launch components like the 53T6 silos. I've found this to be ridiculously easier than when I tried modeling the S-300PS (SA-10B GRUMBLE), albeit still time consuming. The level of detail in the structures will depend on how long it takes to generate the basic structures. The HORSE LEG seen above is pretty basic; at the very least it still requires the two array faces and a few more odds and ends atop the radar housing. I'll probably build the basic buildings and structures (i.e. something like the HORSE LEG only with the array faces and a paint job) and then see where I'm at before deciding whether or not to go back and make them ridiculously detailed with windows and whatnot.

Anyway, since it is in fact now Monday, why don't I go see about a new Image of the Week.

Oh, an for those of you who might be curious, this is what my S-300PS ended up looking like:



Yeah, oops.

-Satellite imagery provided courtesy of Google Earth; 3D model created using Google Sketchup

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Non-Google Earth Imagery Finds

INTRODUCTION

Sometimes, Google Earth, useful as it is, is just not enough. In many cases it is necessary to refer to another imagery source to locate current imagery of a given location, or perhaps imagery of a location not covered in Google Earth. There are many other online browsers which can be consulted, such as Microsoft's Bing Maps (formerly known as Windows Live Local), but many of these sources only focus on the most popular (usually meaning populated) areas. This can leave an analyst quite irritated, especially given the fact that procuring imagery from an external supplier can be a tedious and restrictive process. Not to mention expensive. Fortunately, there is an answer.

TERRA SERVER

Terra Server is an imagery provider, a relatively inexpensive and uncomplicated source of imagery from suppliers such as Digital Globe. And for those of you who have been browsing online imagery for quite some time now, no, Terra Server is not related to the former Microsoft endeavor bearing the same name. By far the best feature of Terra Server is the ability to browse imagery online. This allows any potential purchaser to preview exactly what is being offered, even to the point where images of a given target captured on different dates can be browsed.

Terra Server is not meant to be a free imagery viewing service, and as such the imagery is watermarked and the preview window is not that large (although for a monthly fee you can get a larger, non-watermarked viewer). Even with the aforementioned restrictions to viewing, the "service" provided is bascally free of charge for unlimited use. This makes it very valuable to analysts, especially those on a budget! The value is further emphasized when the volume of imagery available for viewing is examined. Many areas not covered by high-resolution imagery in Google Earth are clearly visible, and many other areas feature very recent imagery captured at various points in 2009. In short, any analyst who has not yet browsed through Terra Server's holdings is missing out on a fantastic resource.

WHAT'S BEEN FOUND

The following placemark file for use in Google Earth depicts the locations of a number of interesting facilities identified through Terra Server's imagery browser: Right click, save as.

There are three folders in the file, as well as three other placemark files. The folders include updates for the Chinese 2nd Artillery file, the SAM Site Overview, and interesting sights at Kapustin Yar.

The other three placemarks depict a Tu-144D on display in Germany, the 53T6 testing grounds at Sary Shagan, and the Voronezh-DM BMEW radar at Armavir.

By clicking on each placemark, a window will open containing a link to the Terra Server imagery depicting these locations. Hopefully this will demonstrate the usefulness of Terra Server's service, as well as providing analysts with insight into some of the facilities identifiable using the Terra Server viewer.

SOURCES

-Placemark locations compiled by browsing Terra Server imagery, or Google Earth historical imagery

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Nuclear Korea

INTRODUCTION

On the 25th of May, 2009, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) conducted its second nuclear weapons test. Once again, the DPRK has become an area of focus for intelligence analysts and politicians as the next course of action for the West is determined. While it remains to be seen whether or not tensions between the DPRK, its southern neighbor, and the rest of the world will be mitigated, one fact remains: the DPRK is developing a nuclear arsenal.

NUCLEAR TESTING

The DPRK has detonated two nuclear devices in the past three years. The first test took place in October of 2006, with the second taking place in May of 2009. Seismic monitoring has provided analysts with a general location of both test events, along with a rough determination of the yield of both tests. The first test seems to have been a sub-kiloton event, with the second test falling in the 1-3 kiloton range. The test location is roughly 65 kilometers northwest of the Musudan-Ri missile test complex, in the isolated northeastern sector of the DPRK.

THE TEST SITE

The DPRK's nuclear test site consists of multiple areas. The isolated location is ideal for this type of testing; there is no civillian presence to speak of, and the terrain allows for UGFs to be employed at will to protect and mask sensitive activity. The bulk of the test area consists of three likely test locations, five unidentified locations, and a rail transfer point located south of Sumunnae, representing the only significant source of transportation into the area.

The locations of the identified facilities and areas in the DPRK's nuclear test area can be seen in the image below. Unidentified facilities are marked as red buildings.
Two of the possible test locations are similar, with the third site being of a wholly different configuration. Of the two similar sites, the northern site is commonly associated with the DPRK's nuclear testing. Whether this is due to intelligence sources leaking information or due to imagery interpretation, it is interesting to note that the southern site has escaped mention, as has the central site. Moreover, Globalsecurity offers before and after imagery of the northern site captured at the time of the 2006 nuclear test. While the imagery is not the highest quality, it should be pointed out that there does not appear to be any significant difference or change in activity at the northern site in either image. This begs the question: was this the actual site of the October 2006 test?

After the 2009 test event, the CTBTO provided coordinate data for the presumed test events of 2006 and 2009, along with probability ellipses indicating the area around the theorized detonation sites where the event was likely located. All three of the identified facilities in the test area fall within the boundaries of both the 2006 and 2009 probability ellipses.

While there is no firm evidence to suggest which site was the "host" to which event, some conclusions may be drawn. It is likely that at least one event took place at the northern site, given that all of the coordinates released by various agencies such as the USGS and the CTBTO for the epicenters of the 2006 and 2009 events are arrayed roughly in an east-west line just north of the northern site. This suggests that at least one, and perhaps both, of the test events took place at the northern site. The central site is not as expansive as the other facilities, and features an antenna farm of some sort, suggesting that it may represent a monitoring station for the two other facilities. The devices seen mounted atop the masts to the north of the facility may be atmospheric sampling devices meant to track the unintended release of radiation from the underground tests.

Details of the northern, central, and southern sites can be seen in the images below. The first image depicts the north site. A possible security checkpoint for entry into the test area can be seen, as well as the likely location of the test shaft itself.
Next, the central site can be seen. This site contains fewer structures than the north or south sites. In fact, the facilities on the western edge of the main area appear to possibly be in disrepair, suggesting that this may have been an existing facility partially converted to use for monitoring the nuclear testing grounds. To the north, the possible sensor masts can clearly be seen.
Finally, the southern site is depicted. Notice the similar layout to the northern site, with the buildings in the main area of the facility organized in a general "U" shape. There is also a possible security checkpoint, and a facility which may be housing the opening to the vertical test shaft. More likely, however, would be positioning the entrance to a vertical or horizontal shaft inside the main facility itself, given that it is situated in a valley between two ridges.
The remaining four unidentified facilities in the area likely perform administrative and support functions for the test range. One such facility, seen in the image below, contains a helipad and apparent housing structures.
The three remaining facilities may be abandoned or unoccupied military garrisons (the site was imaged in February of 2005), or further housing and support areas for nuclear technicians manning the site during a test cycle. The lack of activity at these locations in the available imagery suggests that the site may only be manned during a test period, and also raises a significant question: where did the bomb come from?

There are numerous UGFs in the area, a helipad, and a rail transfer point to the south. This suggests that range security and transport may be supported by helicopter, and that significant amounts of material and personnel arrive by rail, perhaps after arriving in the region by air. The UGFs and various unidentified facilities are the dark horses of the facility. It is possible that the components were delivered individually and then assembled on-site for a test. It is also possible that there is a nuclear weapons plant buried within one of the UGFs producing the weapons after nuclear material is delivered. A final option, one which has no real supporting evidence but which should nevertheless be considered, is that there is a facility in the region, likely inside of an UGF, that produces both the fissile material and the weapons. Enrichment facilities at Yongbyon would seem to refute this idea, but it does make for an interesting theory: while the world is distracted by the goings-on at Yongbyon, the DPRK quietly produces and tests nuclear weapons at a much more remote and lesser-known facility.

NUCLEAR GOALS

Many analysts have assumed that the DPRK is working towards a nuclear capability and has not as of yet fielded a weaponized bomb. There are two holes in this logic which should be pointed out immediately. Bear in mind that this is speculation, and should not necessarily be taken as pure fact, but rather a logical line of thought given the information at hand.

Firstly, a small detonation is a small detonation, not necessarily a fizzle or test failure. Current estimates indicate that the 2009 event was the result of a device no larger than three kilotons detonating underground. Rather than assuming that this is a step towards a multi-kiloton, or even megaton class nuclear or thermonuclear device, the possibility that the test was a complete success and the weapon performed as designed should not be overlooked. For that matter, the previous test in 2006 may have been a complete success as well, either testing a small-scale nuclear device or validating the performance of the components to be used for a later test.

With regard to the possibility of a small-scale nuclear weapon having been developed successfully, it is known that an armed conflict on the peninsula would result in the DPRK employing a large number of special operations forces. Small devices would be ideal weapons to smuggle into the Repiblic of Korea and detonate in advantageous locations. A small device detonating on the Han river in Seoul, for example, would not only destroy many of the bridges crossing the river, but would likely incite a mass panic, without obliterating a sizeable portion of the city itself. The resulting exodus of civillians, seeking shelter from future attacks or medical care for exposure to radiation, has the potential to interfere with the movement and resupply of military forces in the region. Small warheads would also be ideal for delivery by submarine or missile to targets such as air bases close to the coastline, and could be detonated inside the major port facilities to further complicate the ROK's resupply and civillian evacuation operations. From an asymmetric aspect, they could also be used after an outbreak of hostilities to environmentally cripple fishing grounds in the area which are important for both the ROK and Japan.

The second of the aforementioned holes in logic is that current analysis seems to be focusing on a nuclear-armed ballistic missile representing the end result of the DPRK's nuclear weapons program. As demonstrated previously, this may not necessarily be the case. The standard explanation given is that the DPRK has designs on fielding a nuclear-armed ICBM capable of striking the United States. Testing a weapon and miniaturizing the warhead to fit atop an ICBM takes time. However, this assumes that the second test was another trial, and does not allow for the possibility that the device which detonated was a weapons-ready device. If that were to be the case, then it would be likely that the intended delivery vehicle is not in fact an ICBM.

If DPRK nuclear warheads do not progress much further in yield, they will not have much value atop the nations's largely inaccurate ballistic missiles over intercontinental ranges. This would make aerial delivery or delivery by other means far more likely as they can impart a greater degree of accuracy. Where the weapons would be valuable in terms of missile delivery would be as "terror weapons" meant to be fired at the ROK or Japan. In this capacity the accuracy of the delivery systems would be less important given the large metropolitan and industrial areas in each nation which would be far easier to target. Also, firing a small yield weapon into the ROK to cause panic among the populace as described previously would not result in a release of radiation on the scale found in detonating a much larger weapon. That would almost make it more logical for the DPRK to pursue smaller yield weapons as they could then be employed in select areas without causing a significant degree of ill effects for the DPRK's own military forces to contend with. Alternatively these small weapons could be deployed in artillery shells or battlefield rockets to pulverize US and ROK positions along the DMZ before an advance into the ROK.

However, a limited number of nuclear warheads, large or small yield, are still not logically destined to be fitted to ballistic missiles targeting facilities in or outside the Korean theater. The DPRK's leaders may be paranoid and misguided, but they are not stupid. The United States is fielding numerous ballistic-missile defense systems and has multiple PAC-3 batteries in theater. Japan is also fielding the PAC-3, and the ROK is beginning to field the Patriot system as well, albeit in the PAC-2 form. AEGIS ABM-tasked vessels could also be placed in-theater if needed. This would make relying on ballistic missiles as the delivery system for nuclear warheads a questionable proposition as there is no guarantee that the nuclear-armed missiles would reach their targets. That is not an acceptable proposition for such an important national asset, of which there would only be a limited quantity. In that respect, the asymmetric, naval, or airborne delivery methods begin to seem far more plausible, and more logical from the standpoint of the DPRK. Airborne delivery would not necessarily require any miniaturization of a weapon, making it seem like a decent enough solution, but many of the same air defenses which would be used to intercept ballistic missiles would also be able to target hostile aircraft in conjunction with allied fighters, making airborne delivery a dubious proposition as well. At the end of the day, unless a large number of warheads are fielded to mount atop ballistic missiles and the loss of a percentage is accepted, the most likely uses would seem to be naval or asymmetric.

There is still value to testing a nuclear-capable ballistic missile, even if a large scale deployment is not planned. This would force the US, the ROK, and Japan to divert more attention and resources to missile defense, potentially at the expense of other forces in-theater. Ergo, small-yield weapons testing and ballistic missile trials may not indicate that the DPRK is intending to operationally mate missiles and warheads to a significant degree.

FUTURE EFFORTS

The next question that must be answered is the future direction of the DPRK's nuclear weapons program. It will be important to study the results of any future nuclear test events to answer some of these questions.

Further tests resulting in a yield in the same range seen in the 2009 test will indicate that this is likely the design yield of the weapon. Contrarily, testing of weapons with increasing yield will indicate that the DPRK has its sights set on large yield weapons, and perhaps on thermonuclear weapons. Future nuclear test events will also aid analysts in determining the potential uses for such a weapon. Large yield weapons would have the ability to strike hardened facilities using less-accurate delivery systems, but small yield weapons would have to be accurately delivered and may only have limited use until a time when the DPRK has fielded a ballistic missile with hard-target kill levels of accuracy. Also, an expanded test program with shorter intervals between events will likely indicate that the DPRK has neared deployment of an operational weapon. However, a lack of test events does not necessarily indicate that weapons are not being deployed; if, as theorized previously, the current test met the DPRK's goals, then future testing may not be required until such a time when a larger yield weapon is desired.

Missile testing and training operations will also provide insight into whether nuclear warheads are being developed or deployed. Chemical or biological weapons are more likely to be used given their comparative cheapness and the belief that the DPRK maintains a large stockpile of one or both of those weapons. As long as CBW handling operations are detected in missile units without a significant change in procedure, it can be assessed with a degree of accuracy that nuclear weapons are not present.

A final option to consider for the future is another weapon system that has been rendered partially ineffective by recent defensive systems testing by the West: a FOBS. The DPRK's continued efforts to develop the Taepo-dong 2 SLV/ICBM is potentially indicative of a desire to have a space launch capability. After the most recent test the DPRK declared that a satellite had been orbited, a point which Western analysts dispute. Nevertheless, as a nuclear-tipped TD-2 is a paper threat until the DPRK produces a warhead of significant size to overcome the inherent inaccuracy of the delivery vehicle and develops penetration aids to defeat any American ABM systems, if a satellite launch capability can be developed and demonstrated, a FOBS would be an interesting avenue to pursue.

CONCLUSION

It can be stated with certainty that the DPRK is developing a nuclear weapons capability. How far along the program is, how many weapons may be available, and the intended and actual yields of the developed systems are up for debate. But at the end of the day, it would seem that the world is going to have to make room for another member of the Nuclear Club. How the West approaches and deals with the DPRK will have a significant impact on other nations wishing to acquire the same capability, providing them with an idea of how far the West will go to get its way. In this light, the DPRK's nuclear program, should it reach operational status, may be an impetus for Iran to fully develop a similar capability. And as a final note, the effect of a nuclear DPRK in the Korean theater may have much more ominous implications; could this be the final straw which forces Japan to shake off its self-imposed shackles and become a nuclear and offensive power in its own right?

ADDITIONAL DISCUSSION

Feel free to discuss the content of this article at the IMINT & Analysis Forum in the discussion thread found here.

SOURCES

-Satellite imagery provided courtesy of Google Earth

HYDESim
CTBTO on the DPRK's Nuclear Tests
The ROK's Patriots
DPRK Nuke Test
ISIS Online

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Saturday, March 29, 2008

The Strategic Warfare Reading List

INTRODUCTION

Any serious student or researcher focusing on the concept of strategic warfare can often be hard-pressed to find suitable in-depth source material. The purpose of this article is to provide students, researchers, and historians with a reading list consisting of some of the most interesting and valuable sources that I have collected in the field of strategic warfare.

THE READING LIST

Ballistic and Cruise Missile Threat - NASIC
NASIC's report detailing the current major strategic missile systems in service or development is a useful starting point when researching strategic delivery systems. Most major programs are mentioned, and basic details such as range and throw weight are provided, as well as a few choice illustrations. The only serious drawback is that the document is only 30 pages in length, meaning that there is not a great deal of detailed information about any of the systems mentioned therein. However, it is a valuable reference tool, containing data on most major missile non-US missile systems in development or service. This unclassified publication can be found online here.

US Strategic and Defensive Missile Systems 1950-2004 - Mark A Berhow
Number 36 in Osprey Publishing's Fortress Series, this volume is a short yet suprisingly detailed account of the development and deployment of American land-based defensive and strategic missile systems. While naval strategic weapons are not covered, all major US ICBM programs are given mention, as are the HAWK, NIKE and SAFEGUARD defensive missile programs. A final mention is given to the current NMD system being deployed. It should be noted that PATRIOT and THAAD, among others, are not covered, as they have not been deployed as operational defensive systems in the United States.

Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces - Pavel Podvig
This is the single, definitive reference source dealing with the Russian strategic nuclear arsenal. All major delivery systems are covered, from strategic bombers to submarine launched ballistic missiles. The technical data is absolutely first rate, and a history of each program is provided. Topics such as nuclear production facilities, nuclear testing, and strategic defense are also covered in exhaustive detail. There are also extensive endnotes for each chapter, with some of them providing further details and insight into little-known weapon systems alluded to or mentioned briefly in the text. The only drawback is that Mr. Podvig's work was published in 2001, and as such does not deal with the most current systems such as the RS-24 ICBM. He does maintain a website here, which provides up-to-date information supplementing his excellent text. This is the one reference work that any serious Cold War researcher simply must obtain.

The Kremlin's Nuclear Sword - Steven J. Zaloga
This is a shorter, less technical alternative to Podvig's work. It shares the same main drawback of being slightly aged, having been published in 2002. The main advantage to Zaloga's work is that the political side of the equation is given more attention, as are many of the developmental systems which did not enter production. The work is organized chronologically, which can be an inconvenience for a researcher focusing on one type of delivery system. The chronological layout does allow for a more historical analysis to be made, allowing the reader to examine the types of delivery systems that were in development concurrently. Zaloga's work does have merit as a secondary source, or as a primary source if Podvig's work cannot be located. Space surveillance, defensive systems, and nuclear testing and production are either not covered in Zaloga's work, or are only briefly mentioned. All in all, an excellent overview of Russian strategic nuclear forces and a better source than Podvig's where the political side is concerned.

The Making of the Atomic Bomb, Dark Sun: The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb - Richard Rhodes
Both of these extensive reference works offer a great deal of historical and political insight into the American nuclear weapons programs during the early days of the Cold War. Be warned; while both books tend to focus more on the political and historical implications of the programs, they do delve into the weapons development aspect and as such can get very technical.

The ABM Treaty Charade - William T. Lee
This is one of the most interesting reference works on the Cold War, and consequently it is also one of the hardest to find. It is a higly technical look at the Soviet nationwide ABM network, the existance of which was denied by Western intelligence during the run-up to the signing of the ABM Treaty. There is a healthy dose of political discourse dealing with the rationale behind the West's ignorance of the USSR's progress, as well as a concise overview of Soviet ABM programs. The bulk of the work details the evidence supporting the idea that a nationwide ABM network existed in the Soviet Union. If a copy can be obtained, this is one of the most significant and revealing works on the Cold War yet published, and the only English-language publication dealing solely with Soviet ABM programs.

Space Weapons, Earth Wars - Bob Preston et al
Anti-missile and anti-satellite systems are becoming the new rage in the field of strategic warfare. While it primarily focuses on space warfare systems from an American standpoint, delving into the rationale behind acquiring such systems and how best to employ them, this reference work is invaluable to anyone interested in the topic as there is a great deal of technical data presented that cannot be found anywhere else. Various types of systems are described, as well as the technical requirements that they must meet in order to be successful. As a RAND publication, it can be found online here.

CONCLUSION

Strategic warfare is one of the most interesting topics in the field of military studies. By using the sources listed above, any researcher will be well on his or her way to gaining a more complete understanding of the weapon systems and the political motives behind their development. As I locate more source material, I will update this article with the relevant details.

Friday, August 3, 2007

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Russian Strategic Defense - Part 3, The Future

INTRODUCTION

Part 3 of this series focuses on future developments in the field of Russian Strategic Defense. The previous two entries are still available:

Part 1: The S-300P
Part 2: The ABM Network

THE S-400

The next generation SAM system being trialled by the Russian military is the Almaz-Antey S-400 Trieumf (Triumph; SA-X-21). The S-400 represents the latest iteration of the S-300P SAM system. The S-400 may have originally been designated S-300PM-3 due to the relationship with the older system. The 48N6DM used by the S-400 is a derivative of the S-300PM-2's 48N6D missile, and the S-400 will be able to employ the 9M96 series of SAMs as well. The largest changes to the S-400 when compared to the more dated S-300P variants are the inclusion of the new GRAVE STONE target engagement radar, and the inclusion of the new 40N6 400 kilometer range missile. GRAVE STONE is said to give the S-400 an anti-stealth capability. With the 40N6, 48N6DM, and 9M96, the S-400 will represent a very capable SAM system able to engage a variety of targets at various ranges.

The S-400 is due to enter operational service in the summer of 2007, with the first battery being employed near Elektrostal, outside of Moscow as part of the capital city's SAM defense network. Work on the 40N6 missile is still progressing, and this weapon is to be incorporated into the S-400 batteries as early as 2008. Until then, the S-400 will remain little more than yet another incremental upgrade to the S-300P family.

SAMODERZHETS

Later versions of the S-400 system will most likely be of the Samoderzhets family. With the merger of Almaz and Antey a few years ago, a whole wealth of SAM experience was merged, and Samoderzhets will be the first hardware example of that merger. Samoderzhets will be an S-400 system incorporating a towed TEL carrying two 9M82M (SA-X-23 GIANT) ATBMs. This will provide a far more robust ATBM capability for an S-400 battery, and potentially increase the export value of the system as well.

OTHER SAM DEVELOPMENTS

There are two other SAM systems under development for future use, the S-500 and the S-1000. The S-500 has been described as an S-300P follow-on system. The S-500 will likely not enter development for some time, and will represent the next generation of Russian SAM systems, perhaps finally breaking out of the S-300P family's mold. The S-1000 has been described as a follow-on to the S-300V system. The S-1000 may enter development earlier than the S-500, as there is no "S-400 equivalent" being pursued for the Russian S-300V systems. The Antey-2500 and Antey-2500D appear targeted at the export market only, and the upgraded S-300VM and S-300VM-1 appear to be non-starters for domestic use as well, although their technology and 9M82M/M1 missiles may filter down to the Samoderzhets system. In reality, the S-1000 may represent a THAAD-style system, or with the merger of Almaz and Antey the S-500 and S-1000 may be replaced by a single system useable for both roles, along the lines of Samdoerzhets.

ABM DEVELOPMENTS

Much less work appears to be underway on the ABM front. There have been rumors of a new ABM interceptor being developed, desugnated 45T6, but nothing more is known about this system. It would logically be a replacement for the Fakel 51T6 exoatmospheric interceptors, as these have recently been taken out of service.

Most of the ABM work underway is in the radar field. The aforementioned Voronezh-DM radar (see Part 2) is the latest BMEW LPAR design, and is currently under construction at two sites.

Beyond that, very little work appears to be underway regarding future ABM components. Sary Shagan is still an actively-used ABM test range, as evidenced by a recent 53T6 test launch, but there does not appear to be any significant R&D activity ongoing. That could be due to the existance of the test range outside Russian territory; ABM development may be moved to Kapustin Yar, Ashuluk, or another test range in the future to keep it "in house".

THE FUTURE

What is the future of the Russian strategic defense network? With an active, operational ABM system, and a robust SAM network, the future may not be as important as the present. That is to say that money may be better spent upgrading current systems and keeping them viable for the next 10-15 years, before beginning development on the next generation of strategic defense systems.

SOURCE MATERIAL

The following sources were consulted in the preparation of this report:

Globalsecurity's Russian BMD page
Pavel Podvig's blog
Russian language website on ABM systems
ABM and Space Defense
1999 US Senate Hearings on ABMs and Missile Defense

Jane's Strategic Weapons Systems (various years)
Jane's Land-based Air Defence (various years)
Fakel's Missiles (Moscow, 2003)

Various posters at Secret Projects, in particular Overscan, Meteorit, and Muxel, provided a good debate about the topic and provided the inspiration for this project. Thanks also to Trident for the Lake Balkhash thing!

All overhead imagery is provided courtesy of Google Earth.

Friday, May 4, 2007

Fire From Space

INTRODUCTION
One of the most prominent missions of the United States Air Force (USAF) is that of strike. At any time, theater commanders can order USAF fighter jets to hit targets with uncanny precision. However, with continued advances in air defense technology, the skies over hostile nations are becoming increasingly more dangerous. The answer is to remove the skies from the equation completely: it’s time for the USAF to embrace space.

SPACE SYSTEMS VS AIRBORNE SYSTEMS
One of the major development and procurement efforts currently being considered by the USAF will result in a new long-range strike aircraft. The current fleet of B-52H, B-1B, and B-2A strategic bombers will need to be replaced around 2040.[1] The USAF is also considering a shorter-ranged, theater strike aircraft to be available around 2015. Apparently, the current focus in this regard is a derivative of the Lockheed F-22A, known as the FB-22.[2] Under the banner of “Prompt Global Strike,” the USAF is currently conducting a two-year study to outline a future strike system capable of striking targets anywhere in the globe in a matter of minutes. Such a system, if procured, is expected to be available in the 2012 to 2015 timeframe.[3]

The problem the USAF will face in coming months is one of funding. It is illogical to assume that Congress will authorize funding for three independent programs, especially given the fact that at least two of those programs, the new strategic bomber and the “Prompt Global Strike” program, seem to have similar goals in mind and as a result offer similar capabilities. The USAF wants a quick-reaction strike capability, both over intermediate and global ranges. The USAF will need a new strategic bomber. By combining the strategic bomber requirement, the intermediate strike aircraft requirement, and the quick-strike program, the USAF will be in a position to maximize its resources and minimize the costs involved, and will finally obtain a truly transformational and revolutionary weapon system.

FINDING THE ANSWER
There are a number of concepts which could provide the USAF with the quick-strike capability it desires in the near future. The first of these is a simple modification of current intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), and possibly submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs), with conventional warheads. The conventional ICBM system offers a global strike capability with a minimum of development work at a minimum cost. A conventional ICBM could be in service in a short amount of time, using modified versions of existing systems. One such proposal is the Minotaur III. Minotaur III would employ components from deactivated Peacekeeper ICBMs in concert with a new third stage designed to deploy conventional weapons.[4]

The main argument against a conventional ICBM system is political. How will conventional ICBM launches be differentiated from their nuclear-tipped brethren? Such a differentiation must be made in order to assure other nuclear powers that the United States is not in the process of launching nuclear weapons. Minotaur III answers this question by employing a unique launch signature which will be detectable by launch detection systems. Also, Minotaur III will not be silo-based, negating the need for basing conventional ICBMs at current nuclear launch facilities.[5]

The conventional ICBM system is not without problems. First, there is the issue of accuracy. ICBMs are designed as nuclear delivery systems. Simply mating a conventional warhead to an ICBM would not provide pinpoint accuracy; ICBMs are not designed to provide such a degree of accuracy as such accuracy levels are not necessary when delivering a nuclear warhead. Second, once an ICBM is launched, it cannot be recalled without complete loss of the system by remote detonation. Conventional strike aircraft hold an advantage in this regard: if intelligence changes or is found to be in error, a mission can be cancelled without loss of a multi-million dollar strike aircraft.

Another concept which could provide the required strike capability is a subsonic platform capable of employing weapons or armed unmanned combat aerial vehicles (UCAVs). One such concept involves a Boeing 747, equipped with the facilities to launch and recover both an F-22A (mounted dorsally) and a UCAV (mounted under the fuselage).[6] On the surface, the 747 concept seems to be cost-effective: existing 747s and F-22As would merely need to be modified, and UCAVs are comparatively cheap systems to develop and procure. Such a proposal would certainly be ambitious and seem to offer a good deal of capability, but is not necessarily the right answer. A subsonic platform would require refueling support, basing, and would not provide the quick-reaction capability desired by the USAF, necessitating the development and procurement of a second system to satisfy that requirement.

A third concept to be considered for a future strikes system is an armed orbital satellite. Logistically and politically, this presents the least feasible option. While a satellite could easily be configured to deploy a weapon, it comes with a myriad of logistical issues. First and foremost, satellites are not unlimited resources. They must be maintained and fueled, and in this case rearmed. Those factors necessitate the presence of an orbital system capable of mating with these weaponized satellites. Such a system is not currently available on a consistent basis, as the Space Shuttle program is currently struggling with technical issues. Furthermore, if a new orbital system is to be developed to service these satellites, then it would seem more logical to arm the orbiter rather than the satellites! Launch systems would also be required to place these satellites into orbit.

From a political standpoint, armed satellites present two major problems. First, to be most effective, a satellite should be locked into a geostationary orbit over a potentially hostile nation. This would help to alleviate the need for refueling maneuvering systems, but does mean that the satellite is not available to cover other areas without maneuvering and using valuable fuel. The political argument against such an action would be that orbiting a weapon directly over a nation is an overtly hostile action. Such an action would likely be attacked as an example of the aggressiveness of the United States; a nation with an armed satellite positioned directly over its capital could argue that it is being convicted without a trial, as it has not (yet) acted in a hostile manner.

Second, there is the issue of a technical problem occurring and an armed satellite crashing into a populated area. While the satellite itself would likely burn up upon reentry, the weapons themselves would likely survive reentry and fall to Earth as that is, after all, their designed function. The United States would be the target of severe backlash if the weapons impacted in a friendly nation, and could find itself in the middle of an unwanted war if the weapons impact in a neutral or potentially hostile nation state’s territory.

A fourth concept capable of meeting the goals of quick response and global strike is an aerospace craft. Such a craft would be capable of launching and recovering from the CONUS. When considering such an aerospace craft, the question that must be answered is one of system characteristics: is the answer a single-stage-to-orbit (SSTO) or two-stage-to-orbit (TSTO) craft?

From a technical standpoint, a SSTO platform offers fewer risks. A TSTO platform must achieve a clean separation; launching aircraft at the comparatively benign speed of Mach 3 was proven to be troublesome in the 1960’s during the CIA’s TAGBOARD program and has not been attempted since.[7] The TAGBOARD program utilized two specially modified OXCART reconnaissance aircraft to deploy D-21 drones for reconnaissance sorties.[8] Three clean separations were achieved before a failed fourth attempt resulted in the cancellation of the program after the loss of the M-21 launch aircraft, the D-21 drone, and the life of Launch Control Officer (LCO) Ray Torick.[9]

TSTO craft also present financial and developmental concerns. A TSTO craft requires two components, and both components must be funded, developed, and procured. If one component is found to be lacking during development, then the entire program must be put on hold while a suitable alternative can be developed. Support equipment for both craft must also be developed and procured. The size of the orbital component of the TSTO craft is dictated by the carriage capability (or throw weight, if a conventional space launch vehicle is used) of the launch system. A SSTO craft can be considerably larger than a TSTO craft’s orbital stage, and as such would prove to be more useful as it would possess a larger payload capacity. Insofar as aerospace craft are concerned, the more attractive option is clearly that of a SSTO craft.

The concept of an orbital strike aircraft is not new, and is certainly not a concept conceived in the 21st Century. Indeed, the concept of an orbital strike aircraft even predates supersonic flight. The first orbital strike aircraft concept was under development in Nazi Germany during the Second World War.

In the early 1930’s, Austrian-born scientist Dr. Eugen Sänger began studying a rocket powered commercial transport capable of speeds of up to 29,000 kilometers per hour. Dr. Sänger was one of the first “rocket scientists” in the world, and his 1933 book titled Raketenflugtechnik (translated as “The Technique of Rocket Flight”) is widely regarded as the first practical text covering rocket-powered flight.[10] Dr. Sänger conducted private research throughout the 1930s until he found work with a rocket research firm in 1936, the Hermann Göring Institute in Germany.[11]

When World War II broke out, Sänger’s attention turned to a military strike version of his rocket powered transport in order to guarantee continued funding of his research efforts. Sänger’s rocket bomber would achieve global range by “skipping” off of the Earth’s atmosphere rather than reentering.[12] While Sänger’s proposal was never destined to reach the hardware stage in Nazi Germany, it was sufficiently enticing to Soviet intelligence agents that in 1946 Josef Stalin’s son Vasilli offered to pay an informant their weight in gold if they could disclose the post-war whereabouts of Dr. Sänger![13]

The USAF is certainly no stranger to the concept of a space based weapon system. In the 1950’s, the USAF conducted studies of its own orbital strike aircraft. Project ROBO was a study for a bomber based on the work of Dr. Sänger.[14] Under the auspices of the X-20 program, an armed variant known as the X-20B was studied.[15] The X-20 was even considered for the anti-satellite mission in an unarmed state: satellites would not be destroyed, but rather their trajectories would be altered by impact.[16] Unfortunately, the X-20 program as a whole was cancelled before it reached the hardware stage, so the USAF never got the chance to experiment with an armed aerospace plane.[17]

There have been persistent rumors that the USAF may already have tested a highly classified TSTO system from the flight test facility at Groom Lake, Nevada. Current reports seem to indicate that the system, apparently codenamed Blackstar, may have recently been mothballed, possibly due to an unresolved technical issue.[18] If that is indeed the case, it would potentially represent a further case in the argument for a SSTO system. Furthermore, any such program, if the classification level is downgraded sufficiently, may well provide a valid jumping-off point for the development of a SSTO craft. At the very least a plethora of technical data could be made available to designers.

In addition to the aforementioned attempts to capitalize on Dr. Sänger’s research, it should be noted that Russia has been working on military aerospace craft of its own. OKB Tupolev had studied various concepts since the late 1960s. Their current project in this field is known as the Tu-2000. OKB Tupolev envisions the Tu-2000 as a SSTO orbital craft.[19]

In the 1950s and 1960s Vladimir Chelomei, working in concert with OKB Myasischev, designed an orbital aerospace plane intended for use as an anti-satellite system. The craft, dubbed “Rakatoplan,” was a small two-man reusable spacecraft. A March1963 test launch of an unmanned test vehicle reached an altitude of over 600 miles, but the system was cancelled in May of 1964 before it ever became operational.[20]

OKB MiG conducted its own research on aerospace craft in the 1960s and 1970s. Under the Spiral project, OKB MiG researched a TSTO aerospace craft consisting of a Mach 7 carrier aircraft and an orbital vehicle carried on its back. The only facet of this now-defunct program to reach the hardware stage was the 105-11 demonstrator. The 105-11 was a subsonic, jet-powered atmospheric test vehicle designed to test handling characteristics of the Spiral’s orbital craft. After a brief flight test program, the project was shelved. Data gathered while flight testing the 105-11 eventually paved the way for the Buran program.[21]

SSTO STRIKE
Clearly, the most logical answer to the USAF’s future strike needs is a space based weapon system in the form of a SSTO aerospace craft. A space based weapon system will offer many significant advantages over current in-service strike systems. The first, and perhaps most significant, is one of location. An aerospace craft will possess global range and quick-reaction capability. Given the nature of the system, it will be able to launch and recover from bases within the continental United States (CONUS). This will present both significant logistical and political benefits.

Logistically, CONUS-based weapon systems are cheaper to operate when compared to forward-based weapon systems. Consider the case of the Northrop B-2A, the USAF’s much-vaunted “stealth bomber.” In March of 1999 the B-2A undertook its first combat missions over Yugoslavia as part of Operation ALLIED FORCE. B-2As of the 509th Bomb Wing at Whiteman Air Force Base (AFB), Missouri, flew 30-hour round-trip sorties to Yugoslavia and back.[22] This was a very impressive demonstration of the USAF’s global strike capability.[23] Logistically speaking, this was a very cost-effective move.

Consider the benefits of employing the B-2A from the CONUS. First, the USAF saved the money which would have been spent forward deploying the B-2A, the required ground service equipment, and the personnel required to operate and maintain the aircraft. Second, the aircraft was kept in a secure environment. Third, money was saved which would have been paid to deployed personnel in various allowances as a consequence of being deployed away from their home station. All of these savings would also apply to an aerospace craft deployed from the CONUS.

A further logistic benefit to a CONUS based aerospace craft is the lack of support aircraft needed to conduct operations. During a typical USAF operation, there are many support aircraft involved, ranging from in-flight refueling aircraft like the KC-135R, to fighter escorts like the F-15C. Removing the need for these support aircraft will result in a substantial reduction in overall operating costs required to perform a given strike. Eliminating the need for in-flight refueling alone will result in substantial savings; the average cost of transferring 10,000 gallons of jet fuel is nearly $200,000.[24] Furthermore, the costs of deploying aircraft and personnel to forward bases would also be considerably slashed, as far fewer aircraft would need to be deployed to any given combat theater.

There are numerous political benefits to having strike aircraft based in the CONUS. First and foremost, basing privileges do not need to be negotiated with friendly states in close proximity to the desired theater of operations. Secondly, overflight clearances do not need to be negotiated. This would aid in keeping the element of surprise on the side of the USAF: there is no guarantee that a nation which grants US combat aircraft an overflight clearance en route to a combat zone will not notify the targeted nation state that an air strike is incoming.

Any space based weapon system will confer a significant advantage on the USAF’s strike capability in terms of reaction time. A weapon with the speed of an ICBM will need 30 minutes to an hour to reach any target on the globe from the CONUS. The advantage here is clear. An aerospace craft could launch from the CONUS, acting on real-time intelligence data, and strike a priority target in minutes. This would enable the United States government to deal much more decisively with hostile nation states. Rather than needing to wait for forces to be deployed in-theater, strikes could commence virtually immediately at the outset of hostilities, perhaps catching certain sensitive targets before they can be relocated or adequately defended against a conventional air strike.

Any space based weapon system will enjoy virtual immunity from attack, being able to perform its’ mission without interference. This will further decrease the reliance on support assets. This will also remove any doubt from the minds of foreign leaders regarding their ability to defend against an air strike launched by the United States, enabling the United States government to take a far more aggressive stance at the bargaining table.

Any space based weapons program will likely result in a number of commercial benefits. An operational aerospace strike aircraft will have the ability to takeoff, leave the atmosphere, perform a given task, reenter the atmosphere, and land. This could result in a direct commercial benefit in two areas: satellite launch and commercial air transport.

A civilian derivative of a military aerospace craft, or a contracted military craft itself, could be employed as a reusable satellite launch vehicle. Also, technologies in areas such as propulsion, fuels, and construction materials could be used to produce a next-generation commercial aircraft. Of course, any possible commercial benefits are contingent upon the program existing in an unclassified state. However, joint development of a SSTO system with a commercial agency such as the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) would enable the overall program to share development costs and draw upon a larger pool of engineers to solve tough technical problems as they develop.

PROBLEMS TO OVERCOME
The primary obstacle to developing and producing an aerospace craft is that of cost. Simply put, advanced technology comes at a price. The closest example to a military aerospace craft was the NASA X-30 program of the 1980s and 1990s. The X-30 program never resulted in a flight vehicle, but cost estimates generated during the latter stages of the program estimated that $17 billion would have been needed to go from design to flight test, with a further amount of up to $20 billion being needed to produce an operational example.[25] In comparison, the original Engineering, Manufacture, and Development (EMD) contract awarded for the F-22A program was $11 billion.[26]

Fortunately for a military space based weapon system, there was a good deal of research done during the X-30 program, so designers would not necessarily be starting from scratch. That fact alone should help to reduce overall program cost. A production run of operational examples will also help to alleviate the burden of program costs by allowing development costs to be pro-rated over the production run. Individual aircraft cost would rise accordingly, but the yearly overall strain on the Federal budget would be reduced by not having to spend all of the money at once.

Political ramifications must certainly be considered when making the decision to develop and deploy an aerospace weapon system. It should first be noted that such a system can operate “within the law,” as there are currently no international laws precluding the usage of such a system, as it effectively operates outside the national boundaries of any nation on Earth.[27] However, that certainly does not mean that objections to such a system will not be raised.

The primary political objection to a space based weapon system will be a matter of defense. For the first time, a nation will have an unquestioned and total superiority in the battlespace environment. Current and projected defensive systems in the possession of threat nations will offer absolutely no defense against a space based weapons platform.

There are two ground based defensive systems which could conceivably intercept or threaten a space based weapon system. The first such system is the National Missile Defense system, in the hands of the United States, and as such would certainly not be regarded as a threat to a USAF-operated space based weapon system. The second potential threat system is the Russian A-135 anti-ballistic missile (ABM) system currently situated around Moscow. The 51T6 (ASIC codename: GORGON) exoatmospheric and 53T6 (ASIC codename: GAZELLE) endoatmospheric interceptors used by the A-135 are not in a position to be proliferated to threat nations as they are out of production, and employ nuclear warheads to perform their intercepts.[28] Also, given the current state of US-Russian international relations, and the continued presence of the Russian nuclear deterrent force, Russia should not be regarded as a potential target for any US strike platform, aerospace craft or otherwise.

Missile defense systems are the undisputed purview of the two Cold War superpowers. Given their complexity and the expense needed to develop and employ such systems, genuine missile defense systems are not likely to be obtained by threat nations in the near term, and as such are not regarded as being a threat to a space based weapon system.

Anti-missile satellites or other such space based interceptor systems, as is the case with anti-missile systems, do not pose a serious threat to a space based weapon platform. Any space based weapon system could conceivably be equipped with offensive or defensive anti-satellite systems to counter such a threat. While threat nations possessing space launch capabilities such as Iran and China could conceivably develop and employ anti-satellite systems, a space based weapon system could either destroy these systems in orbit or neutralize the launch facilities before launch can be accomplished.

This lack of defensive capability will no doubt be a cause of concern for many nation states. The United States will be in a position to act preemptively against any foreign state perceived to be a threat to national security interests. This could potentially affect the relationship between the United States and other nation states. There is a possibility that threat nations will be more likely to form alliances, and to act militarily whenever the opportunity exists. There is also a distinct possibility that threat nations will feel compelled to act, using weapons of mass destruction or other systems likely to be targeted by a space based weapon system, out of fear of losing that battlefield capability in the future. Ultimately however, the United States is in a position to counter any current aggressor with existing systems, and as such should not feel compelled to abandon the concept of a space based weapon system for political reasons alone.

The last issue regarding development of a space based weapon system is one of armament. Current weapons employed by existing strike aircraft, such as the Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM), would not be compatible as they are not capable of withstanding the heat of atmospheric reentry. This would result in a further research and development effort, imposing a further cost on the program.

Ultimately, kinetic weapons may prove to be the best choice for an aerospace weapons platform. There is no risk of premature detonation upon reentry, the weapons bay does not have to incorporate special cooling systems to ensure that warheads are not heated to the point of detonation during high-speed flight or atmospheric reentry following a cancelled strike, and they will possess enough kinetic energy to obliterate any target on the surface of the Earth.

THE B-3
One of the primary roles for an aerospace strike vehicle will be to serve as the USAF’s next-generation bomber, the “B-3.” However, even if the system is mooted as a long-range strike platform, it will by nature be capable of performing a plethora of missions if given the right equipment. Certainly, the strike mission is of the most importance. That being said, given the quick-reaction nature of the craft, it could also be used in an intelligence gathering capacity. This could help to reduce the current dependency on expensive to maintain satellites. The craft could also be employed in an anti-satellite capacity if given rudimentary targeting sensors and an appropriate offensive weapon system.

When designing the next-generation bomber, the follow-on to the B-2A, there is one question that will invariably arise. Should it be a low-observable aircraft, another “stealth” bomber? Given that it has already been determined that the next-generation bomber should be an aerospace craft, the answer is no.

Stealth technology is certainly a very valuable asset, as the recent combat performance of systems such as the F-117A and B-2A will demonstrate. The problem is that it is, for the most part, physically impossible to make a hypersonic stealth aircraft. Even if the aircraft is restricted to operating within the confines of the Earth’s atmosphere, certain physical attributes will virtually eliminate any chances of bestowing low observable characteristics on the aircraft. Consider the three main aspects of stealth technology: radar signature, infra red signature, and electronic signature.

An aircraft’s electronic signature, or the level of detectable electronic emissions emanating from the aircraft, is typically the easiest by nature to control: designers can simply eliminate or greatly reduce the number of detectable emitters on the aircraft. A prime example of this would be Lockheed’s F-117A. The F-117A’s offensive sensor suite consists primarily of two passive infra red sensors and a laser designator. Infra red sensors are passive and therefore do not radiate emissions which could be detected and tracked by an enemy, and laser designators, while they are active emitters, give off emissions in quantities which are still very difficult to detect or track. A strike aircraft can, therefore, employ passive or hard to detect offensive sensors and still retain a high degree of accuracy.[29] The problem areas for making a high-speed aircraft stealthy are, therefore, primarily concerning the radar and infra red signatures of the aircraft.

An aircraft’s radar signature, measured in square meters, is defined as “the ratio of the scattered power density in a given direction (usually the backscatter) to the incident power density normalized so as to be independent of the distance R at which the scattered power is measured.”[30] In simpler terms, RCS is the amount of radar energy reflected by a target which returns to the transmitting emitter. This reflected energy is then interpreted by computers to determine the location of the objects which generated the returns, providing radar operators with a “picture” of the area which they are scanning.

When dealing with an orbital strike platform, radar detection by a hostile nation becomes less important. First, radar detection of threat systems is necessary in order to prosecute an engagement with radar-guided surface-to-air missiles (SAMs) or to direct interceptors towards their target. As neither of these systems represents a threat to an incoming strike aircraft cruising at orbital velocity above the atmosphere, radar detection can be effectively overlooked as it pertains to a threat aspect. Second, there is the issue of early warning. A hostile nation state could employ radar in a conventional environment to detect incoming aircraft and defend or relocate sensitive items which may be targeted.

Defensive systems employed by hostile nation states have already been determined to be of no concern where an aerospace craft is concerned, so the primary concern becomes relocation of targeted items such as mobile missile systems. The issue then becomes one of reaction time. If an aerospace craft can launch from CONUS and reach a target in Iran in thirty minutes, for example, the question is as follows: how much reaction time will the Iranian air defense network have before the craft is overhead?[31]

Consider the following set of parameters: a launch from Whiteman AFB, Missouri, a range to the closest point in Iran of 6410 miles, and an escape speed of 25,000 miles per hour. It will take the strike platform 15.384 minutes to reach Iranian airspace.[32] If Iran can detect inbound targets 200 miles away from its borders, it will detect the aerospace craft roughly 14.904 minutes after it launches, providing a reaction time of roughly 30 seconds. Clearly, there will be insufficient reaction time to react. Radar detection of the aerospace craft is, therefore, of no concern to designers, as hostile nation states will not have sufficient time to react to its presence whether it is detected or not.

The third primary aspect of stealth technology, reducing the infra red signature, is beyond the technical means of a hypersonic aircraft. Airframe friction at high Mach numbers will endow the aircraft with a very large infra red signature. Engine exhaust temperatures will be stratospheric and, given the use of afterburning engines, scramjets, or other exotic propulsion methods, the infra red signature of the exhaust will be impossible to effectively mask. A further issue with the exhaust is that high-temperature exhaust plumes can generate their own radar signature and contribute to the aircraft’s overall radar cross section. This effect was noted during the development of the CIA’s OXCART Mach 3 reconnaissance platform during the late 1950’s and early 1960’s and was identified as a primary contributor to the aircraft’s radar cross section.[33] However, as radar detection has already been proven to be a non-issue, infra red detection can be treated in the same fashion.

Simply put, stealth technology, even if it could be applied to an aerospace craft, is not needed anyway. The USAF would be mindful to avoid the trap of attempting to apply the “latest and greatest” technologies to any future aerospace strike platform. Given the current emphasis on stealth technology in nearly every major US weapons program, over all branches of the Department of Defense, this is certainly a valid concern.

Once a decision to generate a force of orbital strike aircraft has been made, the next issue that must be addressed is the size of the fleet. In order to be an effective weapon system, the B-3 must be able to effectively engage multiple targets on a single sortie. This requires a decent payload capacity, and as payload capacity increases, so does the size of the craft itself, and consequently its cost. The key will be to balance airframe size, and therefore cost, with target engagement capability. Multiple target engagement capability means fewer systems are needed. Ultimately however, the defining factor regarding the number of aircraft employed will most likely be cost, regardless of the capabilities it offers.

It should be noted that a fleet of aerospace strike aircraft is not intended to serve as the only offensive air arm of the US military. Air defense aircraft such as the F-22A are still needed, as an aerospace craft by nature cannot effectively perform an air intercept mission or a combat air patrol. However, given a large enough fleet of aerospace craft, the USAF could replace its entire fleet of strike aircraft, ranging from tactical bombers such as the F-15E to strategic bombers such as the B-1B. The savings gained by making such a bold and sweeping move would be enormous.

Certainly, in some situations, a definitive military presence is required to perform a “show of force,” or to act as a deterrent between nation states. In these instances, the US Navy can be called upon to deploy an aircraft carrier and its associated air wing to a given theater of operations. Also, combat aircraft are often called upon to support ground forces. Again, the US Navy could take on this responsibility. Any further gaps in the USAF’s capability could be taken up by either low-cost UCAVs, or an increased number of F-22As.

IMPACT OF SPACE BASED SYSTEMS ON THE USAF
One notable effect on the USAF following the induction of an aerospace weapon system into the active inventory will be that of reorganization. New command structures governing the aerospace arm of the USAF will be needed to take full effect of the new capabilities that an aerospace strike system brings to the table. The simple answer would be for such a system to fall under the purview of United States Space Command (USSPACECOM). However, USSPACECOM is not currently knowledgeable on contemporary USAF operations and has little or no experience with regards to day-to-day warfighting. Currently, USSPACECOM manages USAF space activities, none of which are offensive-minded (ICBMs, after all, fall under Air Combat Command). The answer is a merger of elements of USSPACECOM with the other main combatant commands and bringing the space battlefield environment, and the new capabilities available, to the attention of military planners and warfighters at all levels.

Once a command structure is established, joining space assets with more conventional weapon systems, new doctrine and tactics will be needed to effectively utilize all available systems in a given wartime environment. Currently, the only credible quick-strike capability in the USAF is nuclear, in the form of ICBMs. ICBMs are strategic weapon systems, and as such doctrine and tactics regarding their usage will not necessarily effectively translate to a conventional system.

One area of the USAF must be improved if a quick-reaction aerospace craft is to be employed effectively: intelligence. A system that can strike any target in the world within mere minutes must be backed up by accurate, real-time intelligence if it is to be successful. The solution can be provided through various means. First, an aerospace craft configured for a reconnaissance mission rather than a strike mission could be used to make a final pass over the target area before a strike. The intelligence gathered could be datalinked back to commanders, who will then make the call to deploy or not deploy the strike aircraft. Second, satellites could be employed in larger numbers to provide users with a larger range of intelligence data. When hostilities with a given nation state escalate to the point where military action may become necessary, a satellite could be placed into a geostationary orbit over the potential aggressor to provide real-time intelligence data by the minute. Third, given that satellite coverage is not guaranteed, and electro-optical satellites may find their target obscured by cloud coverage, stealthy reconnaissance aircraft could be employed in-theater to provide final verification of targets. Finally, more thorough analysis of current intelligence data, as it is gathered, will provide commanders with a better picture of the battlespace environment and the intended target area without the need for other measures to be put into effect.

The B-3 is intended to be a quick-strike weapon system, and providing planners with the needed data in a timely and efficient manner is crucial to its effective execution of its design goals. Ultimately, the intelligence network must be tailored to provide real-time, accurate intelligence data on very short notice, in order to make the most of the B-3s extraordinary abilities.

CONCLUSION
The decision to proceed or not proceed with an aerospace strike platform will ultimately hinge on its affordability. Given the exceptional and revolutionary capabilities it will bring to the USAF, and the benefits that will be gained through the possession and employment of those capabilities, it can be argued that the benefits will outweigh the costs. USAF officials should argue that developing, employing, and maintaining the B-3 will be cheaper over the long run than proceeding along three paths to produce a new strategic bomber, an intermediate strike aircraft, and a quick-response strike system.

The benefit of having the ability to strike anywhere in the world within minutes cannot be overstated. Politically, it provides the US government with a “big stick” to carry to any international bargaining table. Militarily, it provides planners with the ability to deal with short-notice taskings virtually immediately, and to provide a new form of deterrence suited to the Twenty-First Century world.

Perhaps the most important benefit of an operational aerospace weapon system is the guarantee of US superiority over the coming decades. No other threat nation will possess a similar system, or even a viable defense against such a system, for at least fifty years. When one considers the military capabilities and technological bases of nations such as Iran, Syria, or China, the evidence is clear: the United States will maintain a decisive strategic war fighting edge over any threat nation for quite some time. That decisive war fighting edge is the ultimate driving point behind the argument for an aerospace weapon system. One can only hope that the point is not lost on the United States Air Force.
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[1] Michael Shirak, “USAF focuses on future long-range strike plans,” Jane’s Defence Weekly, 28 January 2004, 12.
[2] Jay Miller, Lockheed Martin F/A-22 Raptor Stealth Fighter, (Hinckley: Midland Publishing, 2005), 76.
[3] Michael Shirak, “US Air Force prepares for prompt strike study,” Jane’s Defence Weekly, 11 May 2005, 10.
[4] Michael Shirak, “Minotaur III eyed for global attacks,” Jane’s Defence Weekly, 11 May 2005, 10.
[5] Ibid.
[6] Colonel George D. Kramlinger, USAF, “Narrowing the Global-Strike Gap with an Airborne Aircraft Carrier,” Air & Space Power 19, no. 2 (Summer 2005): 94.
[7] This action should not be confused with the Space Shuttle’s jettisoning of solid rocket boosters (SRBs) as it ascends towards orbit. The SRBs are simply jettisoned; in the case of TAGBOARD, both launcher and drone were required to maintain controlled flight before and after separation.
[8] The single-seat OXCART aircraft, also known as A-12s, were the predecessors of the SR-71A. The two-seat D-21 mothership was known as the M-21.
[9] Tony R. Landis and Dennis R. Jenkins, Lockheed Blackbirds, 2d ed. (North Branch: Specialty Press, 2004), 24-25.
[10] David Myhra, Sänger: Germany’s Orbital Rocket Bomber In World War II (Atglen: Schiffer Publishing Ltd, 2002), 49-52.
[11] Ibid., 61.
[12] Ibid., 77-79.
[13] Ibid., 4.
[14] Bill Yenne, Secret Weapons Of The Cold War (New York: Berkeley Books, 2005), 144.
[15] Jay Miller, The X-Planes – X-1 to X-45 (Hinckley: Midland Publishing, 2001), 233.
[16] Bill Yenne, Secret Weapons Of The Cold War (New York: Berkeley Books, 2005), 147.
[17] Jay Miller, The X-Planes – X-1 to X-45 (Hinckley: Midland Publishing, 2001), 239.
[18] William B. Scott, “Two-Stage-to-Orbit ‘Blackstar’ System Shelved at Groom Lake?” Aviation Week & Space Technology, 5 March 2006. On-line edition.
[19] Yefim Gordon and Vladimir Rigmant, OKB Tupolev: A History of the Design Bureau and its Aircraft (Hinckley: Midland Publishing, 2005), 327-330.
[20] Bill Yenne, Secret Weapons Of The Cold War (New York: Berkeley Books, 2005), 150-151.
[21] Bill Gunston and Yefim Gordon, MiG Aircraft since 1937 (London: Putnam Aeronautical Books, 1998), 233-235.
[22] James Goodall, B-2 Spirit in action (Carrollton: Squadron/Signal Publications, Inc., 2002), 39.
[23] The only problem was the 15-16 hour ingress time. In a future conflict, when time-sensitive targets must be hit on short notice, 15 to 16 hours will not be sufficient.
[24] James Michael Snead, “Global Air Mobility and Persistent Airpower Operations,” Air & Space Power 18, no. 3 (Fall 2004): 44.
[25] Jay Miller, The X-Planes – X-1 to X-45 (Hinckley: Midland Publishing, 2001), 311-312.
[26] Jay Miller, Lockheed Martin F/A-22 Raptor Stealth Fighter (Hinckley: Midland Publishing, 2005), 42.
[27] Major Samuel L. McNiel, USAF, “Proposed Tenets of Space Power,” Air & Space Power 18, no. 2 (Summer 2004): 80.
[28] Pavel Podvig, ed., Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces (Cambridge: The MIT Press, 2001), 414-418.
[29] A system such as the B-3 may be able to do away with offensive sensors altogether. Given that it will, by design, be striking targets in minutes instead of hours, there may not be time to rely on onboard sensors for target identification and designation. Ergo, the B-3s weapons will most likely be targeted by other means, such as the Global Positioning System (GPS), whereby target coordinates can be fed into the weapons before launch, negating the need for onboard targeting.
[30] David C. Aronstein and Robert J. Piccirillo, HAVE BLUE and the F-117A: Evolution of the “Stealth Fighter” (Reston: American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Inc., 1997), 208.
[31] This is, of course, based on the assumption that Iran acquires the ability to detect such a craft.
[32] Ranges calculated using the Google Earth program’s measure tool.
[33] Tony R. Landis and Dennis R. Jenkins, Lockheed Blackbirds (North Branch: Specialty Press, 2004), 10.