A submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) is a
ballistic missile capable of being launched from
submarine
A submarine (often shortened to sub) is a watercraft capable of independent operation underwater. (It differs from a submersible, which has more limited underwater capability.) The term "submarine" is also sometimes used historically or infor ...
s. Modern variants usually deliver
multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (MIRVs), each of which carries a
nuclear warhead
A warhead is the section of a device that contains the explosive agent or toxic (biological, chemical, or nuclear) material that is delivered by a missile, rocket (weapon), rocket, torpedo, or bomb.
Classification
Types of warheads include:
*E ...
and allows a single launched missile to strike several targets. Submarine-launched ballistic missiles operate in a different way from
submarine-launched cruise missiles.
Modern submarine-launched ballistic missiles are closely related to
intercontinental ballistic missile
An intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) is a ballistic missile with a range (aeronautics), range greater than , primarily designed for nuclear weapons delivery (delivering one or more Thermonuclear weapon, thermonuclear warheads). Conven ...
s (ICBMs), with ranges of over , and in many cases SLBMs and ICBMs may be part of the same family of weapons.
History
Origins
The first practical design of a
submarine
A submarine (often shortened to sub) is a watercraft capable of independent operation underwater. (It differs from a submersible, which has more limited underwater capability.) The term "submarine" is also sometimes used historically or infor ...
-based launch platform was developed by the Germans near the end of
World War II
World War II or the Second World War (1 September 1939 – 2 September 1945) was a World war, global conflict between two coalitions: the Allies of World War II, Allies and the Axis powers. World War II by country, Nearly all of the wo ...
involving a launch tube which contained a
V-2 ballistic missile variant and was towed behind a submarine, known by the code-name
''Prüfstand XII''. The war ended before it could be tested, but the engineers who had worked on it were taken to work for the United States (
Operation Paperclip) and for the Soviet Union on their SLBM programs. These and other early SLBM systems required vessels to be surfaced when they fired missiles, but launch systems were adapted to allow
underwater launching in the 1950-1960s. A converted
Project 611 (Zulu-IV class) submarine launched the world's first SLBM, an
R-11FM (SS-N-1 Scud-A, naval variant of the SS-1
Scud) on 16 September 1955.
Five additional Project V611 and AV611 (Zulu-V class) submarines became the world's first operational
ballistic missile submarines (SSBs) with two R-11FM missiles each, entering service in 1956–57.
The
United States Navy
The United States Navy (USN) is the naval warfare, maritime military branch, service branch of the United States Department of Defense. It is the world's most powerful navy with the largest Displacement (ship), displacement, at 4.5 millio ...
initially worked on a sea-based variant of the
US Army Jupiter
Jupiter is the fifth planet from the Sun and the List of Solar System objects by size, largest in the Solar System. It is a gas giant with a Jupiter mass, mass more than 2.5 times that of all the other planets in the Solar System combined a ...
intermediate-range ballistic missile, projecting four of the large, liquid-fueled missiles per submarine.
[Friedman, pp. 192–195] Rear Admiral
W. F. "Red" Raborn headed a Special Project Office to develop Jupiter for the Navy, beginning in late 1955.
However, at the
Project Nobska submarine warfare conference in 1956, physicist
Edward Teller stated that a physically small one-megaton
warhead
A warhead is the section of a device that contains the explosive agent or toxic (biological, chemical, or nuclear) material that is delivered by a missile, rocket (weapon), rocket, torpedo, or bomb.
Classification
Types of warheads include:
*E ...
could be produced for the relatively small, solid-fueled
Polaris missile, and this prompted the Navy to leave the Jupiter program in December of that year. Soon
Chief of Naval Operations
The chief of naval operations (CNO) is the highest-ranking officer of the United States Navy. The position is a statutory office () held by an Admiral (United States), admiral who is a military adviser and deputy to the United States Secretary ...
Admiral
Arleigh Burke concentrated all Navy strategic research on
Polaris, still under Admiral Raborn's Special Project Office.
All US SLBMs have been solid-fueled while all
Soviet
The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. (USSR), commonly known as the Soviet Union, was a List of former transcontinental countries#Since 1700, transcontinental country that spanned much of Eurasia from 1922 until Dissolution of the Soviet ...
and Russian SLBMs have been liquid-fueled except for the Russian
RSM-56 Bulava, which entered service in 2014.
The world's first operational nuclear-powered
ballistic missile submarine (SSBN) was with 16
Polaris A-1 missiles, which entered service in December 1959 and conducted the first SSBN deterrent patrol November 1960 – January 1961. ''George Washington'' also conducted the first successful submerged SLBM launch with a Polaris A-1 on 20 July 1960. Fifty-two days later, the Soviet Union made its first successful underwater launch of a submarine ballistic missile in the White Sea, on 10 September 1960 from the same converted
Project 611 (
NATO reporting name
NATO uses a system of code names, called reporting names, to denote military aircraft and other equipment used by post-Soviet states, former Warsaw Pact countries, China, and other countries. The system assists military communications by providi ...
Zulu-IV class) submarine that first launched the R-11FM.
The Soviets were only a year behind the US with their first SSBN, the
ill-fated K-19 of
Project 658 (Hotel class), commissioned in November 1960. However, the Hotel class carried only three
R-13 missiles (NATO reporting name SS-N-4) each and had to surface and raise the missile to launch. Submerged launch was not an operational capability for the Soviets until 1963, when the
R-21 missile (SS-N-5) was first backfitted to Project 658 (Hotel class) and
Project 629 (Golf class) submarines.
[Gardiner and Chumbley, pp. 355–357] The Soviet Union was able to beat the U.S. in launching and testing the first SLBM with a live nuclear warhead, an
R-13 that detonated in the
Novaya Zemlya Test Range in the Arctic Ocean, doing so on 20 October 1961, just ten days before the gigantic 50 Mt
Tsar Bomba
The Tsar Bomba (code name: ''Ivan'' or ''Vanya''), also known by the alphanumerical designation "AN602", was a Thermonuclear weapon, thermonuclear aerial bomb, and by far the most powerful nuclear weapon ever created and tested. The Soviet phy ...
's detonation in the same general area. The United States eventually conducted a similar test in the Pacific Ocean on 6 May 1962, with a Polaris A-2 launched from as part of the
nuclear test series
Operation Dominic. The first Soviet SSBN with 16 missiles was the
Project 667A (Yankee class), which first entered service in 1967 with 32 boats completed by 1974. By the time the first Yankee was commissioned the US had built 41 SSBNs, nicknamed the "
41 for Freedom
41 for Freedom refers to the US Navy Fleet Ballistic Missile (FBM) submarines from the , , , , and es. All of these submarines were commissioned 1959–1967, as the goal was to create a credible, survivable sea-based deterrence theory, deterrent ...
".
[Polmar American Submarine, p. 133]
Deployment and further development
The short range of the early SLBMs dictated basing and deployment locations. By the late 1960s the Polaris A-3 was deployed on all US SSBNs with a range of , a great improvement on the range of Polaris A-1. The A-3 also had three warheads that landed in a pattern around a single target. The Yankee class was initially equipped with the
R-27 Zyb missile (SS-N-6) with a range of . The US was much more fortunate in its basing arrangements than the Soviets. Thanks to
NATO
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO ; , OTAN), also called the North Atlantic Alliance, is an intergovernmental organization, intergovernmental Transnationalism, transnational military alliance of 32 Member states of NATO, member s ...
and the US possession of
Guam, US SSBNs were permanently forward deployed at Advanced Refit Sites in
Holy Loch, Scotland,
Rota, Spain, and Guam by the middle 1960s, resulting in short transit times to patrol areas near the Soviet Union. The SSBN facilities at the Advanced Refit Sites were austere, with only a
submarine tender and
floating dry dock. Converted merchant ships
designated T-AKs (
Military Sealift Command cargo ships) were provided to ferry missiles and supplies to the sites. With two rotating crews per boat, about one-third of the total US force could be in a patrol area at any time. The Soviet bases, in
Severomorsk
Severomorsk (), known as Vayenga () until 18 April 1951, is a closed city, closed types of inhabited localities in Russia, town in Murmansk Oblast, Russia. Severomorsk is the main administrative base of the Russian Northern Fleet. The town is sit ...
(near
Murmansk) for the
Arctic
The Arctic (; . ) is the polar regions of Earth, polar region of Earth that surrounds the North Pole, lying within the Arctic Circle. The Arctic region, from the IERS Reference Meridian travelling east, consists of parts of northern Norway ( ...
-
Atlantic theater in
Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky for the
Pacific
The Pacific Ocean is the largest and deepest of Earth's five oceanic divisions. It extends from the Arctic Ocean in the north to the Southern Ocean, or, depending on the definition, to Antarctica in the south, and is bounded by the cont ...
theater, required their SSBNs to make a long transit (e.g., through NATO-monitored waters in the Atlantic) to their mid-ocean patrol areas to hold the continental United States (
CONUS) at risk. This resulted in only a small percentage of the Soviet force occupying patrol areas at any time, and was a great motivation for longer-range Soviet SLBMs, which would allow them to patrol close to their bases, in areas sometimes referred to as "deep bastions". These missiles were the
R-29 Vysota series (SS-N-8, SS-N-18, SS-N-23), equipped on
Projects 667B, 667BD, 667BDR, and 667BDRM (Delta-I through Delta-IV classes).
The SS-N-8, with a range of , entered service on the first Delta-I boat in 1972, before the Yankee class was even completed. A total of 43 Delta-class boats of all types entered service 1972–90, with the SS-N-18 on the Delta III class and the
R-29RM Shtil (SS-N-23) on the Delta IV class. The new missiles had increased range and eventually multiple independently targetable reentry vehicles (
MIRV), multiple warheads that could each hit a different target.
Poseidon and Trident I
Although the US did not commission any new SSBNs from 1967 through 1981, it did introduce two new SLBMs. Thirty-one of the 41 original US SSBNs were built with larger diameter launch tubes with future missiles in mind. In the early 1970s the
Poseidon (C-3) missile entered service, and those 31 SSBNs were backfitted with it. Poseidon offered a massive MIRV capability of up to 14 warheads per missile.
Like the Soviets, the US also desired a longer-range missile that would allow SSBNs to be based in CONUS. In the late 1970s the
Trident I (C-4) missile with a range of and eight MIRV warheads was backfitted to 12 of the Poseidon-equipped submarines. The SSBN facilities (primarily a
submarine tender and
floating dry dock) of the base at Rota, Spain were disestablished and the
Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay in
Georgia
Georgia most commonly refers to:
* Georgia (country), a country in the South Caucasus
* Georgia (U.S. state), a state in the southeastern United States
Georgia may also refer to:
People and fictional characters
* Georgia (name), a list of pe ...
was built for the Trident I-equipped force.
Trident and Typhoon submarines

Both the United States and the Soviet Union commissioned larger SSBNs designed for new missiles in 1981. The American large SSBN was the
''Ohio'' class, also called the "Trident submarine", with the largest SSBN armament ever of 24 missiles, initially Trident I but built with much larger tubes for the
Trident II (D-5) missile, which entered service in 1990. The entire class was converted to use Trident II by the early 2000s. Trident II offered a range of over with eight larger MIRV warheads than Trident I. When the commenced sea trials in 1980, two of the first ten US SSBNs had their missiles removed to comply with SALT treaty requirements; the remaining eight were converted to attack submarines (SSN) by the end of 1982. These were all in the Pacific, and the Guam SSBN base was disestablished; the first several ''Ohio''-class boats used new Trident facilities at
Naval Submarine Base Bangor,
Washington. Eighteen ''Ohio''-class boats were commissioned by 1997, four of which were converted as cruise missile submarines (SSGN) in the 2000s to comply with
START I
START I (Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty) was a bilateral treaty between the United States and the Soviet Union on the reduction and the limitation of strategic offensive arms. The treaty was signed on 31 July 1991 and entered into force on 5 De ...
treaty requirements. The Soviet large SSBN was the
Project 941 Akula, famous as the Typhoon-class (and not to be confused with the
Project 971 Shchuka attack submarine, called "Akula" by NATO). The Typhoons were the largest submarines ever built at 48,000 tons submerged. They were armed with 20 of the new
R-39 Rif (SS-N-20) missiles with a range of and 10 MIRV warheads. Six Typhoons were commissioned in 1981–89.
Post-Cold War
New SSBN construction terminated for over 10 years in Russia and slowed in the US with the
collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the
Cold War
The Cold War was a period of global Geopolitics, geopolitical rivalry between the United States (US) and the Soviet Union (USSR) and their respective allies, the capitalist Western Bloc and communist Eastern Bloc, which lasted from 1947 unt ...
in 1991. The US rapidly decommissioned its remaining 31 older SSBNs, with a few converted to other roles, and the base at Holy Loch was disestablished. Most of the former Soviet SSBN force was gradually scrapped under the provisions of the
Nunn–Lugar Cooperative Threat Reduction agreement through 2012.
By that time the Russian SSBN force stood at six Delta-IVs, three Delta-IIIs, and a lone Typhoon used as a testbed for new missiles (the R-39s unique to the Typhoons were reportedly scrapped in 2012). Upgraded missiles such as the
R-29RMU Sineva (SS-N-23 Sineva) were developed for the Deltas. In 2013 the Russians commissioned the first
Borei-class submarine, also called the ''Dolgorukiy'' class after the lead vessel. By 2015 two others had entered service. This class is intended to replace the aging Deltas, and carries 16 solid-fuel
RSM-56 Bulava missiles, with a reported range of and six MIRV warheads. The US is building a
replacement for the ''Ohio'' class; however, the first of the class wasn't laid down until October 2020.
Ballistic missile submarines have been of great strategic importance for the United States, Russia, and other nuclear powers since they entered service in the
Cold War
The Cold War was a period of global Geopolitics, geopolitical rivalry between the United States (US) and the Soviet Union (USSR) and their respective allies, the capitalist Western Bloc and communist Eastern Bloc, which lasted from 1947 unt ...
, as they can hide from
reconnaissance satellites and fire their nuclear weapons with virtual impunity. This makes them immune to a
first strike directed against nuclear forces, allowing each side to maintain the capability to launch a
devastating retaliatory strike, even if all land-based missiles have been destroyed. This relieves each side of the necessity to adopt a
launch on warning
Launch on warning (LOW), or fire on warning, is a strategy of nuclear weapon retaliation where a retaliatory strike is launched upon warning of enemy nuclear attack and while its missiles are still in the air, before detonation occurs. It gaine ...
posture, with its attendant risk of accidental nuclear war. Additionally, the deployment of highly accurate missiles on ultra-quiet submarines allows an attacker to sneak up close to the enemy coast and launch a missile on a depressed trajectory (a non-optimal
ballistic trajectory which trades off reduced
throw-weight for a faster and lower path, effectively reducing the time between launch and impact), thus opening the possibility of a
decapitation strike.
List of submarine launched ballistic missiles
Non-military use
Some former Russian SLBMs have been converted into
Volna and
Shtil' launch vehicle
A launch vehicle is typically a rocket-powered vehicle designed to carry a payload (a crewed spacecraft or satellites) from Earth's surface or lower atmosphere to outer space. The most common form is the ballistic missile-shaped multistage ...
s to launch
satellite
A satellite or an artificial satellite is an object, typically a spacecraft, placed into orbit around a celestial body. They have a variety of uses, including communication relay, weather forecasting, navigation ( GPS), broadcasting, scient ...
s – either from a submarine or from a launch site on land.
Gallery
File:Trident C-4 montage-retouched.jpg, Montage of the launch of a Trident I C-4 SLBM and the paths of its reentry vehicles
File:Weapons of the Fleet Ballistic Missile Submarine Fleet.jpg, Selected U.S. SLBMs. L to R: Polaris A1, Polaris A2, Polaris A3, Poseidon, Trident I and Trident II
File:SLBM Comparison.jpg, Selected Russian and Chinese SLBMs. L to R: R-29 Vysota ( SS-N-8), R-29R ( SS-N-18), R-39 ( SS-N-20), R-29RM ( SS-N-23), JL-1, JL-2
File:B05 SLBM.jpg, K-15 Sagarika SLBM
See also
*
Submarine-launched missile
*
Ballistic missile submarine
*
ICBM
An intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) is a ballistic missile with a range (aeronautics), range greater than , primarily designed for nuclear weapons delivery (delivering one or more Thermonuclear weapon, thermonuclear warheads). Conven ...
*
Comparison of ICBMs
*
List of ICBMs
*
Heavy ICBM
*
Nuclear warfare
Nuclear warfare, also known as atomic warfare, is a War, military conflict or prepared Policy, political strategy that deploys nuclear weaponry. Nuclear weapons are Weapon of mass destruction, weapons of mass destruction; in contrast to conven ...
*
Vertical launching system
*
Intermediate-range ballistic missile
*
Submarine-launched cruise missile
Notes
References
*
*
*
External links
Navweaps.com US naval missiles index pageVideoshowing the launch of a Trident SLBM.
*
ttps://web.archive.org/web/20020309175348/http://www.astronautix.com/lvs/r11.htm R-11 SLBMbr>
Trident Submarines Are Killing Machines Unparalleled In Human History.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missile
Missile types
Soviet inventions