Executive Director Angela Canterbury and Senior Fellows John Isaacs and Lt. General Robert Gard signed onto a letter urging the National Security Advisor to recommend canceling the Long-Range Stand-Off weapon program..
January 26, 2015
The Honorable Susan Rice
National Security Advisor
The White House
Washington DC 20500
Dear Ambassador Rice,
We write to express our strong opposition to the proposed new nuclear-armed air-launchedcruise missile, the Long-Range Stand-Off (LRSO) weapon. This unneeded andexpensive new weapon is designed to enhance U.S. nuclear war-fighting capabilities,which is provocative and dangerous. As part of the FY 2016 budget request, we ask thatyou recommend to the President the cancellation of this weapon program.
As the Obama administration’s 2010 Nuclear Posture Review concluded, thefundamental role of U.S. nuclear weapons is to deter a nuclear attack on the United Statesand its allies. Our submarine- and land-based missile forces and bombers armed withgravity bombs are more than adequate to meet this requirement.
Moreover, the proposed LRSO weapon will be far more capable than the existing Air-Launched Cruise Missile, the weapon it would replace. It will fly faster, have a longerrange and increased accuracy, and be designed for stealth. Those are all attributesintended to increase war-fighting capability, but are unneeded for deterrence.
Proponents of the LRSO weapon within the administration argue that this enhancedwarfighting capability is key. On June 24, 2014, Frank Kendall, as chair of the NuclearWeapons Council, sent a letter to Senator Barbara Mikulski, as chair of the SenateAppropriations Committee, extolling the “flexibility� the new cruise missile wouldprovide, including the ability to “signal intent� and “control escalation.�
It is dangerous to have a nuclear weapon that anyone thinks will allow the United Statesto “control escalation.�
In fact, as British officials have noted, nuclear-armed cruise missiles entail a significantrisk of miscalculation and unintended escalation. Philip Hammond, then the U.K.Secretary of State for Defense, wrote in a February 2, 2013 op-ed in The Telegraph, “Atthe point of firing, other states could have no way of knowing whether we had launched aconventional cruise missile or one with a nuclear warhead. Such uncertainty could risktriggering a nuclear war at a time of tension.�
Moreover, speaking in Prague in 2009, President Obama committed to reducing the roleof U.S. nuclear weapons. The 2010 Nuclear Posture Review repeated that pledge, andstated that the United States “will not support new military missions or provide for newmilitary capabilities.� A new, more capable nuclear-armed cruise missile violates thespirit and the letter of those pledges.
Given the significant fiscal constraints facing the administration, costs must also beconsidered. The estimated budget for the LRSO program is $30 billion, which includes$20 billion for the missile and $8 to $12 billion (in then-year dollars) for a life extensionprogram for its nuclear warhead. However, these are initial estimates and the final costsare likely to be higher.
More importantly, the LRSO weapon is just one element of the Air Force’s plan for theair-based leg of the triad. In addition to the new nuclear-armed cruise missile, the planincludes the B61-12 gravity bomb and the Long-Range Strike Bomber, the newpenetrating bomber. If this role is needed at all, the mission overlap between apenetrating bomber armed with gravity bombs and a new stand-off cruise missile isobvious.
Supporters of the LRSO weapon cite anticipated improvements in the air defenses ofpotential adversaries as a reason to develop the new cruise missile. This again is onlyrelevant for nuclear war-fighting, not deterrence. Moreover, the United States already hasnuclear systems that can penetrate advanced air defenses.
Finally, by canceling the LRSO weapon program, the United States would reduce theincentive for other states to develop and deploy nuclear-armed cruise missiles and lay thegroundwork for future limits on this destabilizing class of weapons.
As long as nuclear weapons exist, the United States needs to maintain an effectivenuclear deterrent. However, a new nuclear-armed cruise missile with enhancedcapabilities is not required for that mission. Instead, it will undermine meaningful pledgesmade by President Obama to reduce the role of nuclear weapons, send the rest of theworld the counterproductive message that the United States seeks not just to maintain butto improve its nuclear arsenal, and add nothing to the U.S. nuclear deterrent.
We ask that you recommend to the President the cancellation of this weapon program.
Sincerely,
Angela Cantebury, Executive Director
Center for Arms Control and Nonproliferation/Council for a Livable World
Philip E. Coyle, III
Former Associate Director for National Security and International Affairs (NSIA), WhiteHouse Office of Science and Technology Policy, 2010-2011
David Culp, Legislative Representative, Nuclear Disarmament
Friends Committee on National Legislation (Quakers)
Lt. General Robert Gard (USA, Ret.)
Former President, National Defense University
Lisbeth Gronlund, Co-Director and Senior Scientist
Global Security Program, Union of Concerned Scientists
John Isaacs, Senior Fellow
Council for a Livable World
Lt. General Arlen Jameson (USAF, Ret.)
Former Deputy Commander, STRATCOM
Daryl G. Kimball, Executive Director
Arms Control Association
Hans Kristensen, Director, Nuclear Program
Federation of American Scientists
Matthew McKinzie, Nuclear Program Director
Natural Resources Defense Council
Kevin Martin, Executive Director
Peace Action
Susan Shaer, Executive Director
Women’s Action for New Directions
Frank N. von Hippel
Senior Research Physicist and Professor of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University
Replies to: Lisbeth Gronlund, UCS, Two Brattle Square, Cambridge, MA 02138-3780
Work phone: 617-301-8063
cc: The Honorable Chuck Hagel, Secretary of Defense
The Honorable John Kerry, Secretary of State
The Honorable Ashton Carter, Secretary of Defense designate