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Home » Los Alamos and Labs » Dazed and Confused by RRW — Part 1

Dazed and Confused by RRW — Part 1

If you’ve been fol­low­ing the debate over the Reliable Replacement Warhead pro­gram (RRW) and if you haven’t, you should be there’s a good chance that you’re con­fused over how this pro­gram is sup­posed to go about rev­o­lu­tion­iz­ing the U.S. nuclear weapons stock­pile. Is RRW a “pro­gram to improve the reli­a­bil­ity [and] longevity… of exist­ing weapons and their com­po­nents”? Or is it an “enabler” for a long-​​term goal of build­ing “new (or replace­ment) war­heads”?
Trinity1.jpgIf you’re con­fused, you’re not alone. Even the Congressional Research Service dryly observed that “many find RRW to be con­fus­ing because it is a new pro­gram and descrip­tions of it have changed.” (The CRS study linked here, by the way, is an absolute must-​​read for any­one who’s inter­ested in these issues.)
Just last week, Stephen I. Schwartz wrote here on Defense Tech that even as con­tro­versy still swirls over the first RRW war­head pro­gram, the labs are devel­op­ing plans for as many as three other RRW war­heads and that the end-​​result of RRW will be not a fixed, long-​​lived war­head design, but rather “steady-​​state pro­duc­tion of war­heads for deploy­ment.“
In order to under­stand what RRW is, and what it might evolve into, its impor­tant to take a step back and look at where the U.S. stock­pile is today, and how it got there. Over the next few days, Im going to do my best to sum­ma­rize the his­tory of stock­pile stew­ard­ship in the U.S. and the debates which led to the cre­ation of RRW (which I wrote about in greater detail here). Then we can get to the meat of what RRW is all about.
Below the jump the Cold War ends, and Stockpile Stewardship is (re)born.


During the Cold War, high turnover was the key to main­tain­ing con­fi­dence in the reli­a­bil­ity of the nuclear stock­pile. New weapons were con­stantly being designed, built, tested and added to the stock­pile, allow­ing older weapons to be retired, or rel­e­gated to reserve sta­tus; war­heads rarely accu­mu­lated more than a cou­ple of decades of shelf life, at most.
Once a pro­duc­tion run of war­heads had made it into the stock­pile, odds were slim that any of the war­heads in the run would be tested again. The excep­tion to this rule were the rel­a­tively small num­ber of so-​​called “stock­pile con­fi­dence tests” which took place dur­ing the late 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s, and the pri­mary stages which were occa­sion­ally taken from stock­pile war­heads for use in tests of new weapons con­cepts.
Warhead2.jpgWhile stock­piled war­heads were not often put through fur­ther nuclear tests, they were rou­tinely sam­pled for dis­as­sem­bly, thor­ough inspec­tion and all sorts of non-​​nuclear (or above-​​ground) test­ing. This activ­ity, known as stock­pile sur­veil­lance, was intended to catch pro­duc­tion defects and aging-​​related dete­ri­o­ra­tion to any of the warhead’s 3000 com­po­nents. Most of these com­po­nents are located out­side of the warhead’s nuclear sub­sys­tem, so their full range of func­tions could be tested with­out a nuclear test.
The knowl­edge base devel­oped over forty years of stock­pile sur­veil­lance (begin­ning with the intro­duc­tion of sealed-​​pit designs in the late 1950s) laid the foun­da­tions for the Stockpile Stewardship Program (SSP), which was offi­cially born in 1994.
Three events which took place at the end of the Cold War led to the cre­ation of SSP. In 1989, the Rocky Flats site in Colorado, where all the plu­to­nium “pits,” or trig­gers, in the stock­pile had been pro­duced, was shut down after years of egre­gious health and safety vio­la­tions. In 1992, shortly before its dis­so­lu­tion, the USSR declared a uni­lat­eral mora­to­rium on nuclear test­ing. In response, Congress passed a sim­i­lar test­ing mora­to­rium, and the President George H. W. Bush announced an indef­i­nite mora­to­rium on the intro­duc­tion of new weapon designs into the stock­pile. The era of high stock­pile turnover was over, and the Stockpile Stewardship Program was born.
The Stockpile Stewardship Program was orga­nized by Congress from the Department of Energy’s exist­ing stew­ard­ship activ­i­ties in the 1994 Defense Authorization Act. The pro­gram was part of a new pol­icy aimed at keep­ing the nation’s bomb-​​making skills and facil­i­ties in sus­pended ani­ma­tion in case a new nuclear arms race were to break out.
In keep­ing with this pol­icy, resources which were cut from bomb-​​making and nuclear test­ing activ­i­ties were chan­neled to the three activ­i­ties nec­es­sary for stock­pile stew­ard­ship: improv­ing the nuclear complex’s under­stand­ing of the sci­ence of war­head per­for­mance and aging (known as “stock­pile sci­ence”), keep­ing an eye out for signs of dete­ri­o­ra­tion as war­heads age (“stock­pile sur­veil­lance”) and repair­ing prob­lems which may arise (“war­head life exten­sion”).
You can find more details about these three activ­i­ties in the paper I men­tioned ear­lier (includ­ing some wor­ry­ing reports about the prob­lems SSP has had coor­di­nat­ing the dif­fer­ent activ­i­ties).
In the next post, Ill be focus­ing on war­head life exten­sion, and look­ing at the debates over how to replace old war­head com­po­nents as an exam­ple of the tech­ni­cal con­tro­ver­sies behind the scenes of the RRW debate.
– Haninah Levine

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August 1st, 2006 | Los Alamos and Labs, Money Money Money, Nukes | 20623 Comments »http://defensetech.org/2006/08/01/dazed-and-confused-by-rrw-part-1/Dazed+and+Confused+by+RRW+-+Part+12006-08-01+15%3A21%3A46sharon_weinberger You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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  1. fronten says:
    August 1, 2006 at 6:38 pm

    should i say it?
    shouldn’t ?
    this site is going bet­ter with the more peo­ple sup­ply­ing good work for it.
    hey you, doing the work of some­one in love and away..
    you are doing great!
    (i would even say its bet­ter than before, but thats no good idea one day away)

    Reply
  2. Haninah says:
    August 2, 2006 at 7:52 am

    Thanks a lot! I’m glad to be able to con­tribute to Noah’s work.

    Reply
  3. Home says:
    August 15, 2008 at 3:39 am

    Energy’s exist­ing stew­ard­ship activ­i­ties in the 1994 Defense Authorization Act. The pro­gram was part of a new pol­icy aimed at keep­ing the nation’s bomb-​​making skills and facil­i­ties in sus­pended ani­ma­tion in case a new nuclear arms race were to break out.

    Reply

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