Nukes on the High Seas: Israel's Underwater Atomic Arsenal
10/09/14
Robert Farley
Defense, State of the Military, Israel
Israeli submarines—if reports are accurate—will carry a portion of Israel’s nuclear deterrent under the sea. Can these subs provide a practical deterrent?
In a few months, the fifth “Dolphin” submarine will leave Germany and enter Israeli service. A sixth boat will arrive by 2017.
Under normal circumstances, a force of six modern diesel-electric
submarines would represent a large, but not outlandish, undersea
commitment on the part of a country of Israel’s size and wealth. But the
Dolphins apparently play a much larger role in Israel’s self-defense
plans; reports indicate that they will carry a portion of Israel’s
nuclear deterrent, in the form of nuclear-armed, submarine-launched
cruise missiles (SLCMs). Theoretically, this gives Israel the third leg
(after ballistic missiles and fighter-bombers) of the nuclear triad. But
do the Dolphins provide a practical deterrent?
The Boats and Their Missiles
Israel
is not the first country to attempt to manage its subsurface nuclear
deterrent with conventional submarines. Early Soviet ballistic-missile
submarines relied on conventional propulsion, as did the earliest
Chinese prototype missile sub. However, conventional subs have distinct
disadvantages relative to their nuclear kin in deterrent missions. Most
importantly, they lack the range to remain on station for extended
periods of time without access to supply tenders or friendly bases. This
makes the submarine vulnerable to attack, potentially as part of a
policy of preemption. It also means that fewer subs can conduct
deterrent patrols at any given time, making the task of anti-submarine
forces considerably easier.
The
history of the Dolphin class is relatively well known. The first three
boats (delivered starting in the late 1990s) were developed from the
ubiquitous German Type 209 class, although with longer hulls and a
larger displacement. The second three boats (the first of which was
delivered just recently, with the next two arriving before 2017) more
closely resemble the German Type 212. Germany donated the first two
boats to Israel, partially in recompense for German assistance with
Iraq’s chemical-weapons and ballistic-missile programs.
Read full articlehttp://nationalinterest.org/feature/nukes-the-high-seas-israels-underwater-atomic-arsenal-11434
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