Nonstrategic Nuclear Weapons Congressional Research Service
30 Russia has also reportedly reduced the number of military bases that could deploy nonstrategic nuclear weapons and has consolidated its storage areas for these weapons. According to unclassified estimates, the Soviet Union may have had 500-600 storage sites for nuclear warheads in 1991. By the end of the decade, this number may have declined to about 100. In the past 10 years, Russia may have further consolidated its storage sites for nuclear weapons, retaining around 50 in operation.
120
With consideration for the uncertainties in estimates of Russian nonstrategic nuclear forces, some sources indicate Russia may have had up to 4,000 warheads for nonstrategic nuclear weapons around ten years ago In its 2009 report, the congressionally mandated Strategic Posture Commission indicated that Russia may have had around 3,800 operational nonstrategic nuclear weapons A more recent estimate indicates that Russia today has approximately 1,910 nonstrategic nuclear warheads
assigned for delivery by air, naval, ground, and various defensive forces The authors calculate that, within this total, Russia’s Navy maintains about 930 warheads for cruise missiles, antisubmarine rockets, antiaircraft missiles, torpedoes, and depth charges The Air Force may have roughly 500” nuclear warheads available for delivery by fighters and bombers. The Army may have 70 warheads for short-range missiles and artillery, along with,
possibly, some additional warheads for the dual-capable M intermediate-range missile. Some 380 of Russia’s nonstrategic nuclear warheads maybe allocated to Russia’s air and missile defense forces, with nearly 290 nuclear warheads for air defense forces and roughly 90 for the Moscow A missile defense system and coastal defense units Another source, using a different methodology, concluded that Russia may have half that amount, or only 1,000 operational warheads for nonstrategic nuclear weapons This estimate concluded that Russia might retain up to 210 warheads for its ground forces, up to 166 warheads for its air and missile defense forces, 334 warheads for its air force, and 330 warheads for its naval forces Where past studies calculated the number of operational warheads by combining estimates of reductions from Cold War levels with assessments of the number of nuclear-capable units and delivery systems remaining in Russia’s force structure, this author focused on the number of operational units and the likely number of nuclear warheads needed to achieve their assigned missions. The 2018 Nuclear Posture Review affirmed that Russia maintains and is modernizing an active stockpile of up to 2,000 nonstrategic
nuclear weapons To this point, Lieutenant General Robert P. Ashley, then the Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, noted in a speech in May
120
Hans M. Kristensen, Non-Strategic Nuclear Weapons, Federation of American Scientists, Special Report No. 3, Washington, DC, May 2012, p. 68, http://www.fas.org/_docs/Non_Strategic_Nuclear_Weapons.pdf.
121
US. Congress, House Armed Services Committee Hearing. James Miller, Principal Deputy Under Secretary
of Defense for Policy, Prepared Statement, November 2, 2011, p. 2.
122
William J. Perry, Chairman and James R. Schlesinger, Vice Chairman,
Am erica’s Strategic Posture, The Final Report of the Congressional Commission on the Strategic Posture of the United States, Washington, DC, April 2009, p. 111, https://www.usip.org/sites/default/files/file/strat_posture_report_adv_copy.pdf .
123
Hans M. Kristensen and Matt Korda, “ Russian Nuclear Forces, 2021 ,”
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, March 15,
2021, https://thebulletin.org/premium/2021-03/nuclear-notebook-russian-nuclear-weapons-2021/.
124
See Igor Sutyagin,
Atom ic Accounting A New Estimate of Russia’s Nonstrategic Nuclear Forces, Royal United Services Institute, Occasional Paper, London, November 2012, p. 3, https://rusi.org/sites/default/files/201211_op_atomic_accounting.pdf .
125
Ibid, p. 73.
126
US. Department of Defense,
Nuclear Posture Review, Report, Washington, DC, February 2018, p. 58, https://media.defense.gov/2018/Feb/02/2001872886/-1/-1/1/2018-NUCLEAR-POST URE-REVIEW-FINAL-
REPORT PDF.