Home Forums Chat Forum Trident submarines without the missiles

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  • Trident submarines without the missiles
  • Mackem
    Full Member

    Isn’t it what Russia sort of did in the cold war. (They had a few proper ones but rather exaggerated the number that actually worked)

    Pawsy_Bear
    Free Member

    That ‘idiotic’ that the warmongery Yanks are trying develop something similar?
    Latest ‘anti Corbyn mindless ranting’ I think you mean.

    no idea what your talking about please try in plain English? What American new design? They having a huge fleet of ICBM boats aren’t about to follow Corbyn defence policy from the hip.

    Why would he announce such a thing, because the Americans are developing their own new non nuclear missile submarines? This is news. Please explain.

    Pawsy_Bear
    Free Member

    Isn’t it what Russia sort of did in the cold war. (They had a few proper ones but rather exaggerated the number that actually worked)

    They flew their strategic bombers over Red Square in a continuous loop during a May Day parade to make the west think they had lots. Subsequent satellite photography showed the true number. Remember deception is part of the art of war.

    Pawsy_Bear
    Free Member

    I should add that spy satellite’s were just being used at this point. They got a very good shot of the airfield and could count them on the ground all lined up 😀

    But not to worry, their bombs didn’t have any nuclear warheads anyway – hopefully… sorry couldn’t resist

    awh
    Free Member
    Kuco
    Full Member

    Got to admit it makes a good photo when launched at night.

    Pawsy_Bear
    Free Member

    Time for Dr. Strangelove

    Dr. Strangelove recommends that the President gather several hundred thousand people to live in deep mineshafts where the radiation will not penetrate. He suggests a 10:1 female-to-male ratio for a breeding program to repopulate the Earth when the radiation has subsided.

    Turgidson, worried that the Soviets will do the same, warns about a “mineshaft gap”

    😀

    Flaperon
    Full Member

    Corbyn has no choice but to go for this approach – Labour is after all the working man’s party and he can’t exactly make his manifesto pledge “lose ten thousand jobs in the defence sector”.

    CountZero
    Full Member

    With the secretive nature of all things nuclear how about this. We tell everybody were building some really big nuclear torpedoes or whatever. In actual fact they are fakes (but we keep that bit quiet)… Hey presto…We have the deterent but just saved a few quid!

    Quite possibly what the North Koreans are doing, the missiles they display at their big patriotic displays look suspiciously flimsy.

    tinybits
    Free Member

    Would an option not be ‘No ballistic missile subs but I’ll build a fleet of air craft carriers / destroyers / whatever that’ll keep the same jobs without threatening to nuke the world’?

    nickc
    Full Member

    I wonder how many jobs were lost when the US decided to cancel the Skybolt missle? and we had to retire the V bomber fleet.

    The reason we have a sub launched US designed and controlled Polaris system is that they decided not to continue making the aircraft launched bomb we were using before…

    Independent system my arse.

    legend
    Free Member

    That, and the realisation that subs are much, much more secure than using air or land launched systems

    gobuchul
    Free Member

    The reason we have a sub launched US designed and controlled Polaris system is that they decided not to continue making the aircraft launched bomb we were using before…

    It’s really not.

    The submarines offer a much more effective strategic deterrent.

    dragon
    Free Member

    It’s a terrible idea coming from the school of Blairs third way, that in the effort to appease everyone, instead makes no one happy.

    Why is he even commenting on it anyway surely he should be saying ‘cheers for the question but until the Labour defence review is complete, policy remains as it was’.

    Pawsy_Bear
    Free Member

    Not true RAF continued with a nuclear delivery role.

    Main reason was sound, manned bombers were unlikely to penetrate Russian airspace and deliver their weapons. Also aircraft were likely to be destroyed in a first strike. ICBMs in subs pretty much undetectable and safe from nuclear first strike and so was a credible deterrent.

    Our deterent is independent. We just use thier systems. They have no control over our systems. IMHO if your going to go nuclear and can buy off the shelf then you save a lot of tax payers money.

    Vulcans and Victors continued on in RAF service way past there sell by date as tankers and bombing the Falklands

    Pawsy_Bear
    Free Member

    Agree with dragon.

    Pawsy_Bear
    Free Member

    Tornado GR1 was still carrying free fall nuclear bombs until 1998.

    nickc
    Full Member

    Vulcans and Victors continued on in RAF service way past there sell by date as tankers and bombing the Falklands

    Wait…are you suggesting that things designed to do one thing, could be perhaps reconfigured to do something else? Maybe we could think of something else we could do that with..? Something that currently carries nuclear weapons perhaps, I mean if we’ve done it once already?

    Klunk
    Free Member

    Our deterent is independent.

    But this is not convincing. In the days when Bruce Kent led CND, one of the great hawks of the era, Air Vice-Marshal Stuart Menaul wrote, in 1980: “Britain no longer has an independent nuclear deterrent … strategic considerations as far as Britain is concerned are no longer relevant … it could only be used after authority for the use of nuclear weapons had been conveyed from the President of the United States to SACEUR [the US general at Nato].” Even further back, in 1962, Robert McNamara, then US defense secretary, stated that the UK did not operate independently.

    The absorption of the UK into the US nuclear force was made explicit only this year. Stephen Johnson, the American admiral in charge of the US Trident programme, gave his annual progress report to Congress. Among his top accomplishments for “sustainment of our [ie the US] sea-based deterrent” was sending HMS Victorious to sea after a refit. He does not list the British Trident submarine separately. No, the British Trident submarine is simply listed with the American ones under the heading “Today’s Force”.

    wobbliscott
    Free Member

    Well it is independent in that after we make the initial purchase of the system we have the industry, skills, capability to maintain it over its entire life. We practice drills and strategies to actually deploy them. This is something we can’t switch off and switch on as and when we feel like it – if we ditch Trident then that is it for a UK nuclear deterrent/threat forever. We can’t just pick it up in 20 or so years if the worlds outlook turns worse than we guessed/hoped (or Corbyn is guessing) and the Nuclear equipped Chinese, Pakistani’s, Indians, Russians, North Koreans and who know’s who else, starts to get a bit frisky with the rest of the world We. That would leave only the Americans and the French – so that means just the Americans in reality as the French will just surrender. And then there is no guarantee that the Americans won’t just feed us to the wolves and sit back and defend themselves – sacrifice us. Not a particularly fantastic situation for a future world we cannot predict at threat to be in.

    Also with all these other nations with Nukes how will we negotiate with them to disarm if we don’t have them (there are constant negotiations/discussions going on all the time around minimising and reducing the worlds global stockpile of nukes). We will have no negotiating power.

    Land based and airborne based nukes are useless – aircraft will be shot down long before they are in a position to deploy the weapon, ground based forces are constantly monitored and tracked and will be taken out. At least with sub Bourne nukes you have half a chance of retaining a weapons system to deal with whatever the aftermath might be from a nuclear strike.

    Unfortunately Pandora’s box has been opened and we’ve passed the point of no return. So as effective or ineffective the system really is I would prefer to have it just in case. Cornyn’s is just trying to impose his own personal agenda, trying to cut a deal with his Union puppet masters to help him impose his own will and to hell with democracy.

    Klunk
    Free Member

    Well it is independent in that after we make the initial purchase of the system we have the industry, skills, capability to maintain it over its entire life.

    nope the missiles go back to the US Navy at Kings Bay, Georgia, USA for servicing

    nickc
    Full Member

    At least with sub Bourne nukes you have half a chance of retaining a weapons system to deal with whatever the aftermath might be from a nuclear strike.

    what? Mass murder masquerading as revenge?

    What a great footnote in History to leave, “Britain was evaporated, but in the world’s most pointless and futile gesture it annihilated millions of innocent civilians in a desperate act of vengeance, and even more of earth was rendered uninhabitable thanks to the most ridiculous act of petulance the world has ever seen”

    Kuco
    Full Member

    Kings Bay, MOD pays £12 million a year towards the running cost of the base.

    Klunk
    Free Member

    Land based and airborne based nukes are useless

    someone should tell france, usa, russia, china, israel, pakistan, india and north korea.

    Flaperon
    Full Member

    Our deterent is independent. We just use thier systems. They have no control over our systems. IMHO if your going to go nuclear and can buy off the shelf then you save a lot of tax payers money.

    Thought one of the major downsides of Trident is that the Americans can veto a launch decision.

    Flaperon
    Full Member

    Double post. Stupid forum.

    Pawsy_Bear
    Free Member

    Nickc

    Yes but why would we now, knowing Corbyn would not put nuclear weapons in them and not pull the trigger, spend the huge amount of money to deploy a less than best solution?

    Why not buy another couple of Astute subs? His policy, cancel Trident replacement completely, is at least rational. Saddling us with a number of huge expensive submarines duplicating existing capabilities just doesn’t make sense. Unless as dragon says above, he’s trying auto appease everyone?

    ninfan
    Free Member

    I wonder how many jobs were lost when the US decided to cancel the Skybolt missle? and we had to retire the V bomber fleet.

    Not as many as when Labour cancelled Blue Streak I’ll bet… (For which Skybolt was the intended replacement) even though that wasn’t why v-force got retired.

    Why is he even commenting on it anyway surely he should be saying ‘cheers for the question but until the Labour defence review is complete, policy remains as it was’.

    Very good question, perhaps because there’s a risk that they will come up with the ‘wrong’ answer? (as reinforced by his mealy mouthed inability to give precedence to the Falkland Islanders right to self determination)

    ballistic missile subs but I’ll build a fleet of air craft carriers / destroyers / whatever that’ll keep the same jobs without threatening to nuke the world’?

    only 3-5% of the MOD budget is spent on the nuclear deterrent, Nukes are infinitely cheaper than running a conventional military with global reach.

    gobuchul
    Free Member

    What a great footnote in History to leave, “Britain was evaporated, but in the world’s most pointless and futile gesture it annihilated millions of innocent civilians in a desperate act of vengeance, and even more of earth was rendered uninhabitable thanks to the most ridiculous act of petulance the world has ever seen”

    Which is why they will never be used by either side. As mad as MAD is , it’s preferable to the no nuke option.

    I said this on here before, there were a lot of people objecting to the money spent on Fighter Command radar and new aircraft in 1935. Good job they didn’t win the argument.

    Pawsy_Bear
    Free Member

    No they don’t have any control over ours. The decision to fire can be made by the submarine Captain using the authority of the final letter which the Prime Minister alone writes and is carried in each boat.

    Our weapons are under NATO command but w still have the final say or can withdraw them from their use if we feel it’s in the national interest.

    Pawsy_Bear
    Free Member

    What a great footnote in History to leave, “Britain was evaporated, but in the world’s most pointless and futile gesture it annihilated millions of innocent civilians in a desperate act of vengeance, and even more of earth was rendered uninhabitable thanks to the most ridiculous act of petulance the world has ever seen”

    Unfortunately that’s about right. The reason for hiding your nuclear deterent somewhere deep in the Atlantic or wherever is that it will survive a pre emptive strike designed to destroy our nuclear forces before they can retaliate. Thus they can’t be sure they will destroy your nuclear forces and we will have the option to strike back. QED MAD and deterrence. We all sincirely hope the deterent affect works which is why it needs to remain credible or you should scrap all your weapons and save the cash.

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    Which is precisely why nuclear non-proliferation has been the worst policy adopted since WW2. If all the countries that have been fighting each other since then had been given nuclear weapons, we’d have had world peace for the past 60 years.

    nickc
    Full Member

    Yes but why would we now, knowing Corbyn would not put nuclear weapons in them and not pull the trigger, spend the huge amount of money to deploy a less than best solution?

    TBH Speccing one thing and then taking delivery of something completely different, not as capable and four times the cost, and 15 years after it was actually needed; has been the MOD modus operandi for as long as it’s been in existence. Corbyn’s idea fits into that pretty well I’d have thought. There must be civil servants in Admiralty house looking for the leak right now…

    oldnpastit
    Full Member

    Shooting blanks….

    Pawsy_Bear
    Free Member

    Ha ha ha yeah nickc

    allthegear
    Free Member

    reason for hiding your nuclear deterent somewhere deep in the Atlantic or wherever is that it will survive a pre emptive strike designed to destroy our nuclear forces before they can retaliate.

    Except it’s been known since the 90’s that it’s a bit of a stretch of imagination that the deterrent is totally secure from being pre-emptively taken out.

    Most true military nuclear deterrents have multiple platforms for this very reason. Ours is simply political.

    Rachel

    Pawsy_Bear
    Free Member

    I mean, who would have noticed another madman round here? Captain Blackadder: [whistle blows] Good luck, …

    Pawsy_Bear
    Free Member

    Except it’s been known since the 90’s that it’s a bit of a stretch of imagination that the deterrent is totally secure from being pre-emptively taken out.

    I’m sure no deterent is 100%. But all the major protagonist have invested in this method. I’m sure none of us really knows how secure it is. But given everyone is doing it then it leads me to think that it’s still the best option.

    Northwind
    Full Member

    tinybits – Member

    Would an option not be ‘No ballistic missile subs but I’ll build a fleet of air craft carriers / destroyers / whatever that’ll keep the same jobs without threatening to nuke the world’?

    Well, a key part of the argument is that we need to keep making nuclear submarines for ourselves because it’s the only way we can preserve that unique skillset which is only useful for making nuclear submarines… for… ourselves.

    Hmm.

    We do employ a lot of white elephant handlers, breeders and feeders but do we really believe it’d be impossible for them to do anything else? We could just invent some other bullshit industry and spend the same amount of money having half of them build spitfires and the other half take them apart, or similar. Or, y’know, support a useful industry, invest in infrastructure, that sort of thing. If that seems unreasonable, then I suppose we could train 10000 doctors but pay them to not treat any patients, and call them disease deterrants, and declare the scheme to be a success in 20 years because the human race didn’t die out.

    vxrob
    Free Member

    we will keep trident and they will build Successor as its the only reason we keep a permanent seat on the un security council.

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