Dave Majumdar. National Interest Online
23 January 2018
A leaked version of the Trump Administration's
Nuclear Posture Review posits that Russia is developing a
new nuclear-tipped torpedo with strategic ranges that can
be used to target coastal areas of the continental United
States. The weapon-called Status-6-would, in the short term present
the United States Navy with a challenge that it
could not counter without significant investment in new
weaponry.
"If we assume that this is a real capability-that it will
have a prototype built in 2019 and become operational in
early 2020's-then this is a significant disruptive capability
that the U.S. must be able to counter," retired U.S. Navy
submariner Thomas Callender, currently a senior research
fellow for defense programs at the Heritage Foundation
told The National Interest. "Taking its top speed of greater
than 56kts and depth of greater than 3280 feet into account,
this would be a difficult target to kill with current
weapons."
Publicly available information about the U.S. Navy's
Mk-48 ADACAP suggest that the weapon has a maximum
speed of 55kts and a maximum depth of 2600ft, which
means that the torpedo would have great difficulty in
countering the Status-6.
"This would mean that if operating close to max depth,
the Navy's primary ASW [anti-submarine warfare] weapon
could not reach and kill it," Callender said. "This is not to
say that the Navy could not build a torpedo in the next
several years before Status-6 reaches operational status that
would have sufficient speed and depth. If the
Administration and DoD [Department of Defense] believe
this is a capable threat, I am confident that they can find the
money and the Navy would focus on rapid development."
Given the Status-6's size, range and speed, certain
assumptions can be made about it. "I would think that at
speeds in excess of 50kts the UUV [unmanned underwater
vehicle] would be fairly noisy, but I am unsure of how
great the detection range would be," Callender said. "A
small screw at high speed would create higher frequency
noise that would not propagate as far as slower turning
submarine screws and other lower frequency machinery
noises."
Moreover, it would matter where the Russian would
fire the Status-6 from-because its launch location would
make a significant difference in how difficult the weapon is
to track. "Depending from where they launched the UUVbased
on endurance they could launch from the Barents
[Sea] and reach the East Coast-if it can navigate properly
with inertial navigation, "Callender said. "They mention
that this could be launched from larger mother submarine,
which could enable it to be relatively stealthily launched
closer to the U.S. coast-reducing the response time before it
reaches its target and detonates. I would expect it would
still be several hours transit."
It would only be once the Status-6 reaches shallower
waters that it would be vulnerable to interception. "Once it
approaches the East Coast and crosses the continental shelf
it must come increasingly shallower and make it easier to
kill with current weapons-in the proper geometry,"
Callender said. "But the closer to the coast the greater the
chance for contamination or damage if the warhead had
secondary explosion from a U.S. weapon hitting it."
Moreover, given the sheer power of the Status-6's
allegedly 100-megaton warhead, the U.S. Navy would have
to ensure that destroyed the weapon completely before it
gets to its target. "If it is indeed a 100 megaton warhead,
we would want to make sure you killed it-potentially
detonating the warhead and definitely spreading nuclear
contamination-far from the U.S. coast in deep open ocean,"
Callender said. "It would come down to cueing of its
launch and transit from acoustic arrays and MPA [maritime
patrol aircraft] patrols (P-3/P-8). Based on its speed, the P8
would be my preferred kill platform."
One of the questions that puzzles naval expertsparticularly
undersea warfare specialists-is how the Russian
expect to control the Status-6 weapon. "That they mention
that 'it would be controlled from surface ships' is
interesting," Callender said. "Would it slow and come to
'periscope depth' periodically for a GPS fix and updated
instructions? It could not maintain constant C2 [command
and control."
At the end of the day, it might not matter too much.
While the United States might not have a countermeasure
to defeat the Status-6-assuming it actually exists-it will not
take the Navy long to build a weapon to intercept it. It will
be expensive and it will not be easy, but Congress would
certainly appropriate the money if the Status-6 were a real
problem to be solved. "I think the U.S. Navy could defeat
this potential capability given some time and sufficient
funding to develop or modify weapons and develop
CONOPS [concept of operations] to most effectively
detect, locate and kill the UUV," Callender said. "It would
not be easy or cheap."
But then with the Pentagon, when is anything ever
cheap or easy?
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