Everything about The Uk Trident Programme totally explained
The
UK Trident programme is the
United Kingdom's
Trident missile-based
nuclear weapons programme. Under the programme, the UK's
Royal Navy operates around 50 nuclear-armed Trident II D-5
submarine-launched ballistic missiles and four
Vanguard-class ballistic missile submarines from
Clyde Naval Base on
Scotland's west coast.
'Trident' entered service in 1994. Since the 1998
Strategic Defence Review, it has been the UK's only active
nuclear weapons system.
Description
Each of the four Vanguard-class
ballistic missile submarines may carry up to 16
Trident II D-5 submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs), with each missile capable of carrying up to 12
independently targetable nuclear warheads. A 1000 metre aerial trails on the surface behind the submarine to pick up incoming messages. During a patrol the submarine is expected to remain silent for three months and is only allowed to make contact with the base in a dire emergency. The submarine navigates using mapped
contours of the ocean floor and patrols a series of preplanned "boxes" measuring several thousand square miles.
Intelligence is constantly relayed to the vessel giving details of shipping movements and potentially hostile aircraft or submarines in the area. Most of the crew never know where they're and no one on board would know which targets were selected. Most of the weapons have a yield of 80-100
kilotons but some are only 10-15 kilotons. Some have multiple warheads and some only a small single device as a
British Prime Minister may feel constrained if the response was massively disproportional to the threat. This means that the warheads are no longer aimed at specific targets but await coordinates that can be received from HQ, programmed into their onboard computers and fired within a 15 minute timescale. The final decision on firing the missiles is the responsibility of the British Prime Minister and each holder of this office is required to write a personal letter to the commanders of the four trident missile carrying submarines. The letters are locked in the onboard safe on each vessel and, in the event of the submarine irrevocably losing contact with the base due to nuclear war, the decision to fire is handed over to the commander of the submarine. While this number is half the limit specified by the previous government, it represents a 50% increase in capacity over the Trident's predecessor, the
Polaris A3TK Chevaline.
The United Kingdom has purchased the rights to 58 Trident missiles under the
Polaris Sales Agreement (modified for Trident) from a jointly maintained "pool." These missiles are fitted with UK-built warheads and are exchanged when requiring maintenance. Under the terms of the agreement the United States doesn't have any veto on the use of British nuclear weapons.
While the British government states the warheads used in the UK Trident system were "designed and manufactured in the UK at the Atomic Weapons Establishment (AWE), Aldermaston," declassified
U.S. Department of Energy documents indicate the warhead system was involved in non-nuclear design actives alongside the
U.S. W76 nuclear warhead fitted in some US Navy Trident missiles. The
National Audit Office noted that most of the warhead development and production expenditure was incurred in the US. The
U.S. President authorised the transfer of nuclear warhead components to the UK between the years 1991 to 1996. This has led the
Federation of American Scientists to speculate that the U.K. warhead may share design information from the W76; a practice which is encouraged by the
1958 US-UK Mutual Defence Agreement.
Cost
The total acquisition costs of the Trident programme were £9.8 billion, or £14.9 billion at 2005 prices, 38% of which was incurred in the U.S. In 2005/2006 annual expenditure for running and capital costs was estimated at between £1.2bn and £1.7bn and are estimated to rise to £2bn to £2.2bn in 2007/2008, including
Atomic Weapons Establishment costs. Since Trident became operational in 1994, annual expenditure has ranged between 3% and 4.5% of the annual defence budget, and is expected to increase to 5.5% of the defence budget by 2007/2008. The
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute has estimated the figure as about 165, consisting of 144 deployed weapons plus an extra 15% as spares Spares are usually needed within the supply chain, including the maintenance workshops.
At the same time, the British Government indicated that warheads "required to provide a necessary processing margin and for technical surveillance purposes" were not included in the "fewer than 200" figure. However, as recently declassified archived documents on Chevaline make clear, the 15% excess (referred to by SIPRI as for spares) is normally intended to 'provide the necessary processing margin' and 'surveillance rounds don't contain any nuclear material' being completely inert. These surveillance rounds are used to monitor deterioration in the many non-nuclear components of the warhead, and are best compared with inert training rounds. The SIPRI figures correspond accurately with the official announcements and are likely to be the most accurate. The
Natural Resources Defense Council speculates that a figure of 200 is accurate to within a few tens, and the
World Almanac speculates that the number is between 200 and 300, but fails to produce any hard evidence. Experience with earlier weapons has demonstrated that it's dangerous to speculate in this area, and the speculation has invariably been proved wrong.
Basing
"Trident" is based at
HMNB Clyde, in western
Scotland. This comprises two facilities, a submarine berth at Faslane and ordnance depot at RNAD Coulport.
Politics
According to the
British House of Commons'
Defence Select Committee, the original purpose of Trident was to discourage aggression against the UK, its allies and its interests from the
Soviet Union and the
Warsaw Pact.
Opposition
The Trident system received significant opposition during its development. The most visible opposition has stemmed from the more general use of nuclear weapons, and also from Trident's status under
international law. Trident is also seen by some, such as the
Scottish National Party, as a sticking point in relations between the
Scottish Parliament and
Westminster, since the submarines which carry the missiles are based at
HMNB Clyde in
Scotland, but controlled by the
Ministry of Defence, in
London.
Activism
Several groups have taken action against Trident, including the
Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and
Trident Ploughshares, a group set up specifically to oppose the Trident system. In 2006 a year-long protest at Trident's base at Faslane, named
Faslane 365, was initiated with the aim of blockading the base every day for one year. As of 26 January, 50 groups had taken part in blockades, leading to 474 arrests.
Trident Ploughshares describes their opposition as follows:
» We believe that the use or threatened use of nuclear weapons is totally immoral and irresponsible and that the Trident system is illegal under international law. Our disarmament action is necessary since the UK government has to date shown no signs of any intention to dismantle the system. As citizens we've both a right and a duty to uphold international humanitarian law. The UK’s Trident nuclear weapons system is based on 4 submarines which carry between 12 and 16 missiles, each of which can deliver a number of 100 kiloton warheads to individual targets - mass destruction on an unimaginable level.
Scottish politics
A number of
Scottish political parties, such as the
Scottish National Party,
Scottish Green Party,
Scottish Socialist Party and
Solidarity, have policies opposing the use of Trident missiles at Faslane in Scotland. Some members and ex-members of those parties, such as
Tommy Sheridan, have taken part in blockades of the base there.
In addition to more general anti-nuclear feeling, some see Trident as symbolic of differences in political opinion between Scotland and the rest of the UK - for example, in a major
House of Commons vote the majority of
Scottish MPs voted against upgrading the system, while a substantial majority of
English MPs,
Welsh MPs and
Northern Irish MPs voted in favour.
Legality
On
8 July 1996 the
International Court of Justice, the highest court of the
United Nations, handed down an
advisory opinion that stated that the threat or use of nuclear weapons would in most cases violate various articles of
international law, including the
Geneva Conventions, the
Hague Conventions, the
UN Charter, and the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
On
19 December 2005 Rabinder Singh QC and
Professor Christine Chinkin, a colleague of
Cherie Blair at
Matrix Chambers, handed down a
legal opinion at the request of
Peacerights which specifically addressed
"whether Trident or a likely replacement to Trident breaches customary international law"
Drawing on the ICJ opinion, Singh and Chinkin argued that:
"The use of the Trident system would breach customary international law, in particular because it would infringe the "intransgressible" [principlesof international customary law] requirement that a distinction must be drawn between combatants and non-combatants."
Replacement
The British replacement of Trident is a proposal to replace the existing Trident weapons system based on four
Vanguard class submarines each armed with 16 Trident II submarine-launched ballistic missiles. The government has begun planning a new submarine-based system but there's some opposition to this proposal, including from those who want to take the opportunity for full nuclear disarmament. There is also some controversy over the legality of Trident. Proposals to replace the Trident system were passed by the House of Commons by a majority of 248 on the
14 March 2007. However, the US are extending the life of their Trident submarines to 30-40 years and
Professor Richard Garwin, a US nuclear weapons expert and advisor to three US presidents, has advised British MP's that the same could be done in the UK saving £5 billion and allowing time for a rethink of British nuclear strategy.
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