All Content from Business Insider 09月13日
美军新洲际导弹计划延宕,老旧“民兵III”或将服役至2050年代
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美国空军原计划用新型“哨兵”洲际弹道导弹(ICBM)替换服役已久的“民兵III”导弹,但“哨兵”项目面临严重的成本超支和交付延误。根据政府问责局(GAO)的报告,空军可能不得不延长“民兵III”的服役期限,甚至可能持续到2050年代。导致“哨兵”项目受挫的原因包括不切实际的交付时间表、工程设计问题、萎缩的工业基础以及空军内部的组织问题。目前,空军正在努力解决这些挑战,并计划对“哨兵”项目进行重组,以控制成本增长,同时继续维持“民兵III”的战备状态。

🇺🇸 美国空军的“哨兵”洲际弹道导弹(ICBM)项目正经历严重的延误和成本超支,这可能迫使军方延长其老旧的“民兵III”导弹的服役寿命。原计划由“哨兵”导弹替换全部450枚“民兵III”,但如今“哨兵”的预计成本已翻倍至1400亿美元以上,且部署时间推迟至2030年代。

🏗️ “哨兵”项目延误的主要原因包括:不切实际的交付时间表、工程和系统设计上的挑战、洲际弹道导弹工业基础的萎缩以及空军内部的管理问题。此外,早期对“哨兵”能复用现有“民兵”发射设施的设想被证明不切实际,需要新建大量发射设施,这显著增加了成本和复杂性。

⏳ 尽管面临挑战,空军仍计划继续推进“哨兵”计划,并对其进行重组以控制成本。同时,军方将不得不继续维护和操作“民兵III”系统,这意味着需要解决其零部件短缺和过时等问题,并可能需要对部分子系统进行大修,以确保其能够运行至2050年代。

🚀 “民兵III”是美国核力量的重要组成部分,是其核三位一体(包括潜射弹道导弹和核轰炸机)的陆基支柱。延长其服役寿命虽然是应对当前困境的必要措施,但也凸显了维持老旧武器系统所面临的维护成本和技术挑战。

An unarmed Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missile launches from Vandenberg Air Force Base

The Air Force has stood ready to defend the US with its nuclear-armed Minuteman III intercontinental ballistic missiles for over 50 years. Now the service might be forced to extend that into the 2050s, a new report said.

Officials plan to replace the aging Minuteman III with the new Sentinel ICBM, but severe cost overruns and delays have curtailed that nuclear missile program and left the Pentagon struggling to figure out solutions.

According to the US Government Accountability Office, a watchdog agency that reports to Congress, the Air Force believes it must continue to maintain Minuteman III missiles over the next decade and beyond while Sentinel is completed. Sentinel, manufactured by Northrop Grumman, was originally planned to replace all 450 Minuteman III missiles beginning later this decade at an estimated cost of $78 billion.

In the years since the Sentinel contract was awarded in 2020, both the delivery timeline and cost have ballooned. The US Department of Defense estimates the Sentinel will now cost over $140 billion and be delayed by years, with deployment potentially expected sometime in the 2030s.

Work to keep Minuteman III operational will be significant in the coming decades.

The Pentagon has blamed this on an unrealistic delivery schedule, problems with Sentinel's engineering and system design, an atrophied ICBM industrial base, and organizational issues within the Air Force, GAO said. ICBMs are the land-based element of the US' nuclear triad, which also includes submarine-launched ballistic missiles and nuclear bombs carried by aircraft like the B-2 bomber.

The Sentinel is a three-stage solid-fuel missile that will purportedly have a lighter carbon composite structure and more advanced electronics and systems for easier upgrades. It's also expected to be able to carry more warheads than its predecessor.

The Air Force has said transitioning from Minuteman III to Sentinel is a complex project involving not only converting old silos to new ones capable of hosting Sentinel but also keeping Minuteman III forces in a ready status while Sentinel is introduced.

In July, Lt. Gen. Andrew Gebara, the Air Force's deputy chief of staff for strategic deterrence and nuclear integration, said at a Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies think tank event that cost growth was largely attributed to infrastructure work to build "all the launch facilities, all the launch centers, all the wiring, all that goes into that."

But larger critical missteps in the Air Force's management of Sentinel and the transition to the new ICBM have been documented for years. Earlier this year, the Federation of American Scientists think tank wrote that the Air Force "assumed that the Sentinel would be able to reuse much of the original Minuteman launch infrastructure," including refurbishment of 450 missile silos. Now, it appears the service will have to build new launch facilities, including new silos — hardened underground launchers spread across the central US where the missiles are maintained and kept in a high state of readiness.

The Air Force Global Strike Command Minuteman III ICBM test-fired Tuesday from Vandenberg Air Force Base, California.

In the meantime, the Air Force will continue to operate and maintain its Minuteman III system as a nuclear deterrent, with the timeline to retire them still being figured out by the service.

But keeping Minuteman III missiles online will be challenging. Per the report, many parts for the ICBM are either limited in supply or obsolete, and the Air Force doesn't have a plan for continued Minuteman III test flights. Minuteman III program officials told the GAO it's possible to keep the missile running until 2050, but it'll require overhauls of some subsystems that add to the government's higher costs.

While the Air Force is confident the ICBM can be used through the next decades, they told the GAO there are unknowns in ground electrical subsystems and electronics that could degrade the missiles. Previously, officials had said keeping Minuteman III running wasn't feasible because of how it expensive it would be and risks to sustaining the missiles.

Despite issues, the Air Force is continuing work on the Sentinel and acknowledging the need to restructure the program. "Work can still continue under the contract that exists today, so we don't want to slow down, come to a full stop on the program," Gebara said earlier this year. "But there definitely needs to be a restructure to get after the cost growth that's happened."

Read the original article on Business Insider

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洲际弹道导弹 民兵III 哨兵导弹 美国空军 核武器 ICBM Minuteman III Sentinel US Air Force Nuclear Weapons
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