The most heavily defended city in the
world is not Washington, DC. It’s
Moscow. While the District of Columbia has legions of Secret
Service and Homeland Security police defending it, the Russian capital is the
only one in the world—that we know of—defended with nuclear-tipped missiles.
It’s all the result of an exception built into a forty-four-year-old arms
control treaty.
The 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty was
an arms control agreement between the United States and Soviet Union. Unlike
other treaties that focused on offensive weapons, the ABM Treaty focused on
limiting defensive weapons, missiles designed to knock down incoming nuclear
warheads. The theory behind the treaty was that unrestricted ABM missile
deployments on both sides would lead to ever-escalating offensive missile
arsenals, as each side tried to overcome the other’s ever-growing defenses.
The ABM Treaty didn’t outlaw all ABMs,
however: each side was allowed a single ABM site with up to one hundred
missiles. It could place them where it wished. The United States decided to
place the Safeguard system around Grand Forks Air Force Base in North Dakota,
hoping in doing so to shield its most lethal and accurate missiles from
surprise attack. Safeguard was only briefly operational before it was
dismantled; protecting a single location with an enormously expensive system
didn’t make sense.
The Soviet Union, on the other hand, was a
highly centralized government with the capital city of Moscow at the center.
The destruction of Moscow in a surprise nuclear first strike could cripple the
USSR’s ability to respond in kind. The result was the A-35 system, a complete
air defense network designed to ensure Moscow’s survival in a nuclear war.
The A-35 system was first proposed in the 1950s, as American
intercontinental ballistic missiles began to eclipse bombers as a major threat
to Moscow. The original concept called for thirty-two antiballistic missile
sites ringing the city, along with eight ballistic missile early warning radars
and one battle management radar. Over the course of development, the number of
missile sites was reduced to four sites of eight launchers each (sixty-four
missiles total), but the missiles themselves would be armed with nuclear
warheads, greatly increasing their effectiveness. Instead of destroying a
bullet with a bullet, the ABM system would destroy bullets with well-timed hand
grenades.
The system was first armed with the A-350
antiballistic missile. The A-350 was nearly the size of an ICBM itself, a
liquid-fueled rocket weighing seventy-two thousand pounds. Armed with a
two-to-three-megaton warhead, it was designed to intercept incoming warheads at
altitudes of up to 120 kilometers—high enough not to damage the city below with
the ensuing thermonuclear blast. In addition to the A-350, Moscow was also
surrounded by forty-eight SA-1 “Golden Eagle” surface-to-air missiles, each of
which had a range of fifty kilometers and either a conventional or nuclear
warhead, for interception of enemy bombers.
The A-35 system was designed to protect
Moscow and the Kremlin against six to eight nuclear ICBMs. The main U.S. ICBM
at the time, Minuteman III could carry three warheads each, making that
eighteen to twenty-four warheads.
Despite these preparations, rapidly
expanding nuclear arsenals on both sides made A-35 obsolete. By the time of
completion, A-35 was up against one thousand Minuteman III missiles, plus
another six hundred Polaris missiles at sea, a number the system could not
possibly stop. By 1968 the U.S. blueprint for nuclear war, the Single
Integrated Operating Procedure (SIOP), dedicated sixty-six Minuteman missiles and two Polaris
missiles to stripping away A-350’s missile and radar network in two devastating
waves, an attack amounting to eight warheads per target. Altogether, an
astonishing 65,200 kilotons of nuclear firepower would be used in a nuclear
siege of Moscow lasting just minutes. (For reference, the atomic bomb used at
Hiroshima was sixteen kilotons.)
The ABM system was upgraded in the
mid-1970s. The new A-135 system was designed not just to protect the capital
against all-out nuclear war but a limited attack, perhaps accidental or started
by some renegade
American general. The system began development in 1968 but only became
operational in 1989. It was only considered reliable, however, as recently as
1995.
A-135 was a substantial upgrade. It added
sixty-eight new missiles launchers to the original thirty-two, giving Moscow
the full one hundred ABM launchers allowed under treaty. It used two missiles,
the Novator 53T6 (NATO code name: Gazelle) endoatmospheric interceptor and the
OKB Fakel 51T6 (code name: Gorgon) exoatmospheric interceptor. Both
interceptors used ten-kiloton warheads, much smaller than the A-350’s warhead
and a testament to Moscow’s faith in the accuracy of the missiles.
The thirty-two Gorgon missiles reached
the end of their serviceable lives in 2002–03, and had been removed from
active duty service by 2006. Meanwhile, the 53T6 missiles have allegedly been
replaced with new missiles, also named 53T6, with a range of eighty kilometers
and an altitude of thirty thousand meters.
Despite the new missiles, the future for
Moscow’s ABM system is unclear. Much of the existing system is old and will
eventually need replacing. That will be expensive, and Russia’s defense
spending has begun falling again. Under the New START treaty the country
is allowed only 1,550 deployable nuclear warheads, and the question is whether
or not A-135’s warheads are more valuable on ballistic missile interceptors or
ballistic missiles. Sooner or later, Moscow will have to decide whether to prop
up such a limited system, or go all in on nuclear deterrence.
Kyle Mizokami is a defense and
national-security writer based in San Francisco who has appeared in the Diplomat, Foreign Policy, War is Boring and the Daily Beast. In
2009 he cofounded the defense and security blog Japan Security Watch.
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