Navy Ohio Replacement (SSBN[X]) Ballistic
Missile Submarine Program: Background and
Issues for Congress

Ronald O'Rourke
Specialist in Naval Affairs
October 22, 2013
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R41129
CRS Report for Congress
Pr
epared for Members and Committees of Congress

Navy Ohio Replacement (SSBN[X]) Ballistic Missile Submarine Program

Summary
The Navy’s proposed FY2014 budget requests $1,083.7 million for continued research and
development work on the Ohio replacement program (ORP), a program to design and build a new
class of 12 ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs) to replace the Navy’s current force of 14 Ohio-
class SSBNs. The Ohio replacement program is also known as the SSBN(X) program. On
September 18, 2013, Admiral Jonathan Greenert, the Chief of Naval Operations, testified that the
Ohio replacement program “is the top priority program for the Navy.”
Under the Navy’s FY2012 budget, the first Ohio replacement boat was scheduled to be procured
in FY2019, and Ohio replacement boats were to enter service on a schedule that would maintain
the Navy’s SSBN force at 12 boats. The Navy’s FY2013 budget deferred the procurement of the
first Ohio replacement boat by two years, to FY2021. The Navy’s proposed FY2014 budget
maintains FY2021 as the procurement date for the lead boat. As a result of the deferment of the
procurement of the lead boat from FY2019 to FY2021, the Navy’s SSBN force will drop to 11 or
10 boats for the period FY2029-FY2041. The Navy says the decline to 11 or 10 boats during this
period will be acceptable in terms of meeting strategic nuclear deterrent mission requirements
because none of the 11 or 10 boats during that period will be encumbered by lengthy maintenance
actions.
The Navy in May 2013 estimated the procurement cost of the lead ship in the program at $12.0
billion in constant 2013 dollars, including $4.6 billion in detailed design and nonrecurring
engineering (DD/NRE) costs for the entire class, and $7.4 billion in construction costs for the
ship itself. The Navy in May 2013 estimated the average procurement cost of boats 2 through 12
in the Ohio replacement program at about $5.4 billion each in FY2010 dollars, and is working to
reduce that figure to a target of $4.9 billion each in FY2010 dollars. Even with this cost-reduction
effort, observers are concerned about the impact the Ohio replacement program will have on the
Navy’s ability to procure other types of ships at desired rates in the 2020s and early 2030s.
Potential oversight issues for Congress for the Ohio replacement program include the following:
• the impact on the program of the March 1, 2013, sequester on FY2013 funding
and unobligated prior-year funding for the program;
• the potential impact on the program of a possible sequester later this year or early
next year on FY2014 funding and unobligated prior-year funding for the
program;
• the likelihood that the Navy will be able to reduce the average procurement cost
of boats 2-12 in the program to the target figure of $4.9 billion each in FY2010
dollars;
• the accuracy of the Navy’s estimate of the procurement cost of each SSBN(X);
• the prospective affordability of the Ohio replacement program and its potential
impact on funding available for other Navy shipbuilding programs; and
• the question of which shipyard or shipyards will build SSBN(X)s.
This report focuses on the Ohio replacement program as a Navy shipbuilding program. CRS
Report RL33640, U.S. Strategic Nuclear Forces: Background, Developments, and Issues, by Amy
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Navy Ohio Replacement (SSBN[X]) Ballistic Missile Submarine Program

F. Woolf, discusses the SSBN(X) as an element of future U.S. strategic nuclear forces in the
context of strategic nuclear arms control agreements.
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Navy Ohio Replacement (SSBN[X]) Ballistic Missile Submarine Program

Contents
Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 1
Background ...................................................................................................................................... 1
U.S. Navy SSBNs in General .................................................................................................... 1
Mission of SSBNs ............................................................................................................... 1
Current Ohio-Class SSBNs ................................................................................................. 2
Summary of U.S. SSBN Designs ........................................................................................ 4
U.S.-UK Cooperation on SLBMs and the New UK SSBN ................................................. 6
Ohio Replacement Program....................................................................................................... 8
Program Origin and Early Milestones ................................................................................. 8
Planned Procurement Quantity: 12 SSBN(X)s to Replace 14 Ohio-Class Boats .............. 10
Procurement and Replacement Schedule .......................................................................... 10
SSBN(X) Design Features ................................................................................................ 12
Acquisition Cost ................................................................................................................ 14
Operation and Support (O&S) Cost .................................................................................. 15
Common Missile Compartment (CMC) ............................................................................ 15
Program Funding ............................................................................................................... 16
Issues for Congress ........................................................................................................................ 17
Impact of March 1, 2013, Sequester on FY2013 Funding ...................................................... 17
Potential Impact of Possible Late 2013/Early 2014 Sequester on FY2014 Funding ............... 18
Likelihood That Navy Will Reach $4.9 Billion Target Cost .................................................... 18
Accuracy of Navy’s Estimated Unit Procurement Cost .......................................................... 20
Overview ........................................................................................................................... 20
October 2013 CBO Report ................................................................................................ 21
Program Affordability and Impact on Other Navy Shipbuilding Programs ............................ 22
Overview ........................................................................................................................... 22
September 2013 Navy Testimony ..................................................................................... 23
Some Options for Addressing the Issue ............................................................................ 24
Construction Shipyard(s) ......................................................................................................... 33
Legislative Activity for FY2014 .................................................................................................... 36
FY2014 Funding Request ........................................................................................................ 36
FY2014 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 1960/S. 1197) ........................................ 36
House ................................................................................................................................. 36
Senate ................................................................................................................................ 37
FY2014 DOD Appropriations Act (H.R. 2397/S. 1429) ......................................................... 37
House (Committee Report) ............................................................................................... 37
House (Floor Consideration) ............................................................................................. 38
Senate ................................................................................................................................ 38

Figures
Figure 1. Ohio (SSBN-726) Class SSBN ........................................................................................ 4

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Tables
Table 1. U.S. SSBN Classes ............................................................................................................ 5
Table 2. Navy Schedule for Procuring SSBN(X)s and Replacing Ohio-Class SSBNs ................. 12
Table 3. Ohio Replacement Program Funding ............................................................................... 16
Table 4. Navy SSBN(X) Procurement Schedule and a Notional Alternative Schedule ................. 27
Table 5. Construction Shipyards of U.S. SSBNs ........................................................................... 34

Appendixes
Appendix A. June 2013 Navy Blog Post Regarding Ohio Replacement Options ......................... 39
Appendix B. Earlier Oversight Issue: A Design with 16 vs. 20 SLBM Tubes .............................. 41

Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 47

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Navy Ohio Replacement (SSBN[X]) Ballistic Missile Submarine Program

Introduction
This report provides background information and potential oversight issues for Congress on the
Ohio replacement program (ORP), a program to design and build a new class of 12 ballistic
missile submarines (SSBNs) to replace the Navy’s current force of 14 Ohio-class SSBNs. The
Ohio replacement program is also known as the SSBN(X) program. On September 18, 2013,
Admiral Jonathan Greenert, the Chief of Naval Operations, testified that the Ohio replacement
program “is the top priority program for the Navy.”1
The Navy’s proposed FY2014 budget requests $1,083.7 million for continued research and
development work on the Ohio replacement program. Decisions that Congress makes on the Ohio
replacement program could substantially affect U.S. military capabilities and funding
requirements, and the U.S. shipbuilding industrial base.
This report focuses on the Ohio replacement program as a Navy shipbuilding program. Another
CRS report discusses the SSBN(X) as an element of future U.S. strategic nuclear forces in the
context of strategic nuclear arms control agreements.2
Background
U.S. Navy SSBNs in General
Mission of SSBNs
The U.S. Navy operates three kinds of submarines—nuclear-powered attack submarines (SSNs),
nuclear-powered cruise missile submarines (SSGNs), and nuclear-powered ballistic missile
submarines (SSBNs).3 The SSNs and SSGNs are multi-mission ships that perform a variety of
peacetime and wartime missions.4 They do not carry nuclear weapons.5

1 Statement of Admiral Jonathan Greenert, U.S. Navy, Chief of Naval Operations, Before the House Armed Services
Committee on Planning for Sequestration in FY 2014 and Perspectives of the Military Services on the Strategic
Choices and Management Review, September 18, 2013, p. 10.
2 CRS Report RL33640, U.S. Strategic Nuclear Forces: Background, Developments, and Issues, by Amy F. Woolf.
3 In the designations SSN, SSGN, SSBN, and SSBN(X), the SS stands for submarine, N stands for nuclear-powered
(meaning the ship is powered by a nuclear reactor), G stands for guided missile (such as a cruise missile), B stands for
ballistic missile, and (X) means the design of the ship has not yet been determined.
As shown by the “Ns” in SSN, SSGN, and SSBN, all U.S. Navy submarines are nuclear-powered. Other navies operate
non-nuclear powered submarines, which are powered by energy sources such as diesel engines. A submarine’s use of
nuclear or non-nuclear power as its energy source is not an indication of whether it is armed with nuclear weapons—a
nuclear-powered submarine can lack nuclear weapons, and a non-nuclear-powered submarine can be armed with
nuclear weapons.
4 These missions include covert intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR), much of it done for national-level
(as opposed to purely Navy) purposes; covert insertion and recovery of special operations forces (SOF); covert strikes
against land targets with the Tomahawk cruise missiles; covert offensive and defensive mine warfare; anti-submarine
warfare (ASW); and anti-surface ship warfare. The Navy’s four SSGNs, which are converted former SSBNs, can carry
larger numbers of Tomahawks and SOF personnel than can the SSNs. SSGN operations consequently may focus more
strongly on Tomahawk and SOF missions than do SSN operations. For more on the Navy’s SSNs and SSGNs, see CRS
Report RL32418, Navy Virginia (SSN-774) Class Attack Submarine Procurement: Background and Issues for
(continued...)
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The SSBNs, in contrast, perform a specialized mission of strategic nuclear deterrence. To perform
this mission, SSBNs are armed with submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs), which are
large, long-range missiles armed with multiple nuclear warheads. SSBNs launch their SLBMs
from large-diameter vertical launch tubes located in the middle section of the boat.6 The SSBNs’
basic mission is to remain hidden at sea with their SLBMs, so as to deter a nuclear attack on the
United States by another country by demonstrating to other countries that the United States has an
assured second-strike capability, meaning a survivable system for carrying out a retaliatory
nuclear attack.
Navy SSBNs, which are sometimes referred to informally as “boomers,”7 form one leg of the
U.S. strategic nuclear deterrent force, or “triad,” which also includes land-based intercontinental
ballistic missiles (ICBMs) and land-based long-range bombers. At any given moment, some of
the Navy’s SSBNs are conducting nuclear deterrent patrols. The Navy’s report on its FY2011 30-
year shipbuilding plan states: “These ships are the most survivable leg of the Nation’s strategic
arsenal and provide the Nation’s only day-to-day assured nuclear response capability.”8 The
Department of Defense’s (DOD’s) report on the 2010 Nuclear Posture Review (NPR), released on
April 6, 2010, states that “strategic nuclear submarines (SSBNs) and the SLBMs they carry
represent the most survivable leg of the U.S. nuclear Triad.”9
Current Ohio-Class SSBNs
The Navy currently operates 14 Ohio (SSBN-726) class SSBNs. The boats are commonly called
Trident SSBNs or simply Tridents because they carry Trident SLBMs.
A total of 18 Ohio-class SSBNs were procured in FY1974-FY1991. The ships entered service in
1981-1997. The boats were designed and built by General Dynamics’ Electric Boat Division
(GD/EB) of Groton, CT, and Quonset Point, RI. They were originally designed for 30-year
service lives but were later certified for 42-year service lives, consisting of two approximately 19-

(...continued)
Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke, and CRS Report RS21007, Navy Trident Submarine Conversion (SSGN) Program:
Background and Issues for Congress
, by Ronald O'Rourke.
5 The Navy’s non-strategic nuclear weapons—meaning all of the service’s nuclear weapons other than submarine-
launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs)—were removed from Navy surface ships and submarines under a unilateral U.S.
nuclear initiative announced by President George H. W. Bush in September 1991. The initiative reserved a right to
rearm SSNs at some point in the future with nuclear-armed Tomahawk land attack missiles (TLAM-Ns) should
conditions warrant. Navy TLAM-Ns were placed in storage to support this option. DOD’s report on the 2010 Nuclear
Posture Review (NPR), released on April 6, 2010, states that the United States will retire the TLAM-Ns. (Department
of Defense, Nuclear Posture Review Report, April 2010, pp. xiii and 28.)
6 SSBNs, like other Navy submarines, are also equipped with horizontal torpedo tubes in the bow for firing torpedoes
or other torpedo-sized weapons.
7 This informal name is a reference to the large boom that would be made by the detonation of an SLBM nuclear
warhead.
8 U.S. Navy, Report to Congress on Annual Long-Range Plan for Construction of Naval Vessels for FY 2011, February
2010, p. 15.
9 Department of Defense, Nuclear Posture Review Report, April 2010, p. 22. The next sentence in the report states:
“Today, there appears to be no viable near or mid-term threats to the survivability of U.S. SSBNs, but such threats—or
other technical problems—cannot be ruled out over the long term.” The report similarly states on page 23: “Today,
there appears to be no credible near or mid-term threats to the survivability of U.S. SSBNs. However, given the stakes
involved, the Department of Defense will continue a robust SSBN Security Program that aims to anticipate potential
threats and develop appropriate countermeasures to protect current and future SSBNs.”
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year periods of operation separated by an approximately four-year mid-life nuclear refueling
overhaul, called an engineered refueling overhaul (ERO). The nuclear refueling overhaul includes
both a nuclear refueling and overhaul work on the ship that is not related to the nuclear refueling.
Ohio-class SSBNs each carry 24 SLBMs. The first eight boats in the class were originally armed
with Trident I C-4 SLBMs; the final 10 were armed with larger and more-capable Trident II D-5
SLBMs. The Clinton Administration’s 1994 Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) recommended a
strategic nuclear force for the START II strategic nuclear arms reduction treaty that included 14
Ohio-class SSBNs, all armed with D-5s. This recommendation prompted interest in the idea of
converting the first four Ohio-class boats (SSBNs 726-729) into SSGNs, so as to make good use
of the 20 years of potential operational life remaining in these four boats, and to bolster the U.S.
SSN fleet. The first four Ohio-class boats were converted into SSGNs in 2002-2008,10 and the
next four (SSBNs 730-733) were backfitted with D-5 SLBMs in 2000-2005, producing the
current force of 14 Ohio-class SSBNs, all of which are armed with D-5 SLBMs.
Eight of the 14 Ohio-class SSBNs are homeported at Bangor, WA, in Puget Sound; the other six
are homeported at Kings Bay, GA, close to the Florida border.
Unlike most Navy ships, which are operated by single crews, Navy SSBNs are operated by
alternating crews (called the Blue and Gold crews) so as to maximize the percentage of time that
they spend at sea in deployed status. The Navy consequently maintains 28 crews to operate its 14
Ohio-class SSBNs.
The first of the 14 Ohio-class SSBNs (SSBN-730) will reach the end of its 42-year service life in
2027. The remaining 13 will reach the ends of their service lives at a rate of roughly one ship per
year thereafter, with the 14th reaching the end of its service life in 2040.
The Navy has initiated a program to refurbish and extend the service lives of D-5 SLBMs to 2042
“to match the OHIO Class submarine service life.”11
Figure 1 shows an Ohio-class SSBN with the hatches to some of its SLBM launch tubes open.

10 For more on the SSGN conversion program, see CRS Report RS21007, Navy Trident Submarine Conversion (SSGN)
Program: Background and Issues for Congress
, by Ronald O'Rourke.
11 Statement of Rear Admiral Stephen Johnson, USN, Director, Strategic Systems Programs, Before the Subcommittee
on Strategic Forces of the Senate Armed Services Committee [on] FY2011 Strategic Systems, March 17, 2010, p. 4.
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Figure 1. Ohio (SSBN-726) Class SSBN
With the hatches to some of its SLBM launch tubes open

Source: U.S. Navy file photo accessed by CRS on February 24, 2011, at http://www.navy.mil/management/
photodb/photos/101029-N-1325N-005.jpg.
Summary of U.S. SSBN Designs
The Navy has operated four classes of SSBNs since 1959. Table 1 compares the current Ohio-
class SSBN design to the three earlier U.S. SSBN designs. As shown in the table, the size of U.S.
SSBNs has grown over time, reflecting in part a growth in the size and number of SLBMs carried
on each boat. The Ohio class carries an SLBM (the D-5) that is much larger than the SLBMs
carried by earlier U.S. SSBNs, and it carries 24 SLBMs, compared to the 16 on earlier U.S.
SSBNs.12 In part for these reasons, the Ohio-class design, with a submerged displacement of
18,750 tons, is more than twice the size of earlier U.S. SSBNs.

12 The larger size of the Ohio-class design also reflects a growth in size over time in U.S. submarine designs due to
other reasons, such as providing increased interior volume for measures to quiet the submarine acoustically, so as to
make it harder to detect.
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Table 1. U.S. SSBN Classes
George
Lafayette/Benjamin
Washington
Ethan Allen
Franklin (SSBN-
Ohio (SSBN-726)

(SSBN-598) class
(SSBN-608) class
616/640) class
class
Number in class
5
5
31
18/14
Fiscal years
FY1958-FY1959
FY1959 and FY1961
FY1961-FY1964
FY1974/FY1977 -
procured
FY1991
Years in
1959-1985
1961-1992
1963-2002
1981/1984 - present
commission
Length
381.7 feet
410.5 feet
425 feet
560 feet
Beam
33 feet
33 feet
33 feet
42 feet
Submerged
6,700 tons
7,900 tons
8,250 tons
18,750 tons
displacement
Number of SLBMs
16
16
16
24
Final type(s) of
Polaris A-3
Polaris A-3
Poseidon C-3/
Trident II D-5
SLBM carried
Trident I C-4
Diameter of those
54 inches
54 inches
74 inches
83 inches
SLBMs
Length of those
32.3 feet
32.3 feet
34 feet
44 feet
SLBMs
Weight of each
36,000 pounds
36,000 pounds
65,000/73,000 pounds
~130,000 pounds
SLBM (pounds)
Range of SLBMs
~2,500 nm
~2,500 nm
~2,500 nm/~4,000 nm
~4,000 nm
Sources: Prepared by CRS based on data in Norman Polmar, The Ships and Aircraft of the U.S. Fleet, Annapolis,
Naval Institute Press, various editions, and (for SSBN decommissioning dates) U.S. Naval Vessel Register.
Notes: Beam is the maximum width of a ship. For the submarines here, which have cylindrical hulls, beam is the
diameter of the hull.
The range of an SLBM can vary, depending on the number and weight of nuclear warheads it carries; actual
ranges can be lesser or greater than those shown.
The George Washington-class boats were procured as modifications of SSNs that were already under
construction. Three of the boats were converted into SSNs toward the ends of their lives and were
decommissioned in 1983-1985. The two boats that remained SSBNs throughout their lives were
decommissioned in 1981.
Al five Ethan Al en-class boats were converted into SSNs toward the ends of their lives. The boats were
decommissioned in 1983 (two boats), 1985, 1991, and 1992.
Two of the Lafayette/Benjamin Franklin-class boats were converted into SSNs toward the ends of their lives and
were decommissioned in 1999 and 2002. The 29 that remained SSBNs throughout their lives were
decommissioned in 1986-1995. For 19 of the boats, the Poseidon C-3 was the final type of SLBM carried; for the
other 12, the Trident I C-4 SLBM was the final type of SLBM carried.
A total of 18 Ohio-class SSBNs were built. The first four, which entered service in 1981-1984, were converted
into SSGNs in 2002-2008. The remaining 14 boats entered service in 1984-1997.
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U.S.-UK Cooperation on SLBMs and the New UK SSBN
SSBNs are also operated by the United Kingdom, France, Russia, China, and India. The UK’s
four Vanguard-class SSBNs, which entered service in 1993-1999, each carry 16 Trident II D-5
SLBMs. Previous classes of UK SSBNs similarly carried earlier-generation U.S. SLBMs.13 The
UK’s use of U.S.-made SLBMs on its SSBNs is one element of a long-standing close cooperation
between the two countries on nuclear-related issues that is carried out under the 1958 Agreement
for Cooperation on the Uses of Atomic Energy for Mutual Defense Purposes (also known as the
Mutual Defense Agreement). Within the framework established by the 1958 agreement,
cooperation on SLBMs in particular is carried out under the 1963 Polaris Sales Agreement and a
1982 Exchange of Letters between the two governments.14 The Navy testified in March 2010 that
“the United States and the United Kingdom have maintained a shared commitment to nuclear

13 Although the SLBMs on UK SSBNs are U.S.-made, the nuclear warheads on the missiles are of UK design and
manufacture.
14 A March 18, 2010, report by the UK Parliament’s House of Commons Foreign Affairs Committee stated:
During the Cold War, the UK’s nuclear co-operation with the United States was considered to be at
the heart of the [UK-U.S.] ‘special relationship’. This included the 1958 Mutual Defence
Agreement, the 1963 Polaris Sales Agreement (PSA) (subsequently amended for Trident), and the
UK’s use of the US nuclear test site in Nevada from 1962 to 1992. The co-operation also
encompassed agreements for the United States to use bases in Britain, with the right to store
nuclear weapons, and agreements for two bases in Yorkshire (Fylingdales and Menwith Hill) to be
upgraded to support US missile defence plans.
In 1958, the UK and US signed the Mutual Defence Agreement (MDA). Although some of the
appendices, amendments and Memoranda of Understanding remain classified, it is known that the
agreement provides for extensive co-operation on nuclear warhead and reactor technologies, in
particular the exchange of classified information concerning nuclear weapons to improve design,
development and fabrication capability. The agreement also provides for the transfer of nuclear
warhead-related materials. The agreement was renewed in 2004 for another ten years.
The other major UK-US agreement in this field is the 1963 Polaris Sales Agreement (PSA) which
allows the UK to acquire, support and operate the US Trident missile system. Originally signed to
allow the UK to acquire the Polaris Submarine Launched Ballistic Missile (SLBM) system in the
1960s, it was amended in 1980 to facilitate purchase of the Trident I (C4) missile and again in 1982
to authorise purchase of the more advanced Trident II (D5) in place of the C4. In return, the UK
agreed to formally assign its nuclear forces to the defence of NATO, except in an extreme national
emergency, under the terms of the 1962 Nassau Agreement reached between President John F.
Kennedy and Prime Minister Harold Macmillan to facilitate negotiation of the PSA.
Current nuclear co-operation takes the form of leasing arrangements of around 60 Trident II D5
missiles from the US for the UK’s independent deterrent, and long-standing collaboration on the
design of the W76 nuclear warhead carried on UK missiles. In 2006 it was revealed that the US and
the UK had been working jointly on a new ‘Reliable Replacement Warhead’ (RRW) that would
modernise existing W76-style designs. In 2009 it emerged that simulation testing at Aldermaston
on dual axis hydrodynamics experiments had provided the US with scientific data it did not
otherwise possess on this RRW programme.
The level of co-operation between the two countries on highly sensitive military technology is,
according to the written submission from Ian Kearns, “well above the norm, even for a close
alliance relationship”. He quoted Admiral William Crowe, the former US Ambassador to London,
who likened the UK-US nuclear relationship to that of an iceberg, “with a small tip of it sticking
out, but beneath the water there is quite a bit of everyday business that goes on between our two
governments in a fashion that’s unprecedented in the world.” Dr Kearns also commented that the
personal bonds between the US/UK scientific and technical establishments were deeply rooted.
(House of Commons, Foreign Affairs Committee, Sixth Report Global Security: UK-US Relations,
March 18, 2010, paragraphs 131-135; http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200910/
cmselect/cmfaff/114/11402.htm; paragraphs 131-135 are included in the section of the report
available at http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200910/cmselect/cmfaff/114/11406.htm.)
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deterrence through the Polaris Sales Agreement since April 1963. The U.S. will continue to
maintain its strong strategic relationship with the UK for our respective follow-on platforms,
based upon the Polaris Sales Agreement.”15
The first Vanguard-class SSBN was originally projected to reach the end of its service life in
2024, but an October 2010 UK defense and security review report states that the lives of the
Vanguard class ships will now be extended by a few years, so that the four boats will remain in
service into the late 2020s and early 2030s.16
The UK plans to replace the four Vanguard-class boats with three or four next-generation SSBNs
called Successor class SSBNs. The October 2010 UK defense and security review report states
that each new Successor class SSBN is to be equipped with 8 D-5 SLBMs, rather than 12 as
previously planned. The report states that “‘Initial Gate’—a decision to move ahead with early
stages of the work involved—will be approved and the next phase of the project will start by the
end of [2010]. ‘Main Gate’—the decision to start building the submarines—is required around
2016.”17 The first new boat is to be delivered by 2028, or about four years later than previously
planned.18
The UK has wanted the Successor SSBNs to carry D-5 SLBMs, and for any successor to the D-5
SLBM to be compatible with, or be capable of being made compatible with, the D-5 launch
system. President George W. Bush, in a December 2006 letter to UK Prime Minister Tony Blair,
invited the UK to participate in any program to replace the D-5 SLBMs, and stated that any
successor to the D-5 system should be compatible with, or be capable of being made compatible
with, the launch system for the D-5 SLBM.
The United States is assisting the UK with certain aspects of the Successor SSBN program. In
addition to the modular Common Missile Compartment (CMC) discussed below (see “Common
Missile Compartment (CMC)” in the following section on the Ohio replacement program), the
United States is assisting the UK with the new PWR-3 reactor plant19 to be used by the Successor
SSBN. A December 2011 press report states that “there has been strong [UK] collaboration with
the US [on the Successor program], particularly with regard to the CMC, the PWR, and other
propulsion technology,” and that the design concept selected for the Successor class employs “a
new propulsion plant based on a US design, but using next-generation UK reactor technology
(PWR-3) and modern secondary propulsion systems.”20 The U.S. Navy states that

15 Statement of Rear Admiral Stephen Johnson, USN, Director, Strategic Systems Programs, Before the Subcommittee
on Strategic Forces of the Senate Armed Services Committee [on] FY2011 Strategic Systems, March 17, 2010, p. 6.
16 Securing Britain in an Age of Uncertainty: The Strategic Defence and Security Review, Presented to Parliament by
the Prime Minister by Command of Her Majesty, October 2010, p. 39.
17 Securing Britain in an Age of Uncertainty: The Strategic Defence and Security Review, Presented to Parliament by
the Prime Minister by Command of Her Majesty, October 2010, p. 5, 38-39. For more on the UK’s Successor SSBN
program as it existed prior to the October 2010 UK defense and security review report, see Richard Scott, “Deterrence
At A Discount?” Jane’s Defence Weekly, December 23, 2009: 26-31.
18 Securing Britain in an Age of Uncertainty: The Strategic Defence and Security Review, Presented to Parliament by
the Prime Minister by Command of Her Majesty, October 2010, p. 39.
19 PWR3 means pressurized water reactor, design number 3. U.S. and UK nuclear-powered submarines employ
pressurized water reactors. Earlier UK nuclear-powered submarines are powered by reactor designs that the UK
designated PWR-2 and PWR-1.
20 Sam LaGrone and Richard Scott, “Strategic Assets: Deterrent Plans Confront Cost Challenges,” Jane’s Navy
International
, December 2011: 17 and 18.
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Naval Reactors, a joint Department of Energy/Department of Navy organization responsible
for all aspects of naval nuclear propulsion, has an ongoing technical exchange with the UK
Ministry of Defence under the US/UK 1958 Mutual Defence Agreement. The US/UK 1958
Mutual Defence Agreement is a Government to Government Atomic Energy Act agreement
that allows the exchange of naval nuclear propulsion technology between the US and UK.
Under this agreement, Naval Reactors is providing the UK Ministry of Defence with US
naval nuclear propulsion technology to facilitate development of the naval nuclear
propulsion plant for the UK’s next generation SUCCESSOR ballistic missile submarine. The
technology exchange is managed and led by the US and UK Governments, with participation
from Naval Reactors prime contractors, private nuclear capable shipbuilders, and several
suppliers. A UK based office comprised of about 40 US personnel provide full-time
engineering support for the exchange, with additional support from key US suppliers and
other US based program personnel as needed.
The relationship between the US and UK under the 1958 mutual defence agreement is an
ongoing relationship and the level of support varies depending on the nature of the support
being provided. Naval Reactors work supporting the SUCCESSOR submarine is reimbursed
by the UK Ministry of Defence.21
U.S. assistance to the UK on naval nuclear propulsion technology first occurred many years ago:
To help jumpstart the UK’s nuclear-powered submarine program, the United States transferred to
the UK a complete nuclear propulsion plant (plus technical data, spares, and training) of the kind
installed on the U.S. Navy’s six Skipjack (SSN-585) class nuclear-powered attack submarines
(SSNs), which entered service between 1959 and 1961. The plant was installed on the UK Navy’s
first nuclear-powered ship, the attack submarine Dreadnought, which entered service in 1963.
The December 2011 press report states that “the UK is also looking at other areas of cooperation
between Successor and the Ohio Replacement Programme. For example, a collaboration
agreement has been signed off regarding the platform integration of sonar arrays with the
respective combat systems.”22
Ohio Replacement Program
Program Origin and Early Milestones
Although the eventual need to replace the Ohio-class SSBNs has been known for many years, the
Ohio replacement program can be traced more specifically to an exchange of letters in December
2006 between President George W. Bush and UK Prime Minister Tony Blair concerning the UK’s
desire to participate in a program to extend the service life of the Trident II D-5 SLBM into the
2040s, and to have its next-generation SSBNs carry D-5s. Following this exchange of letters, and
with an awareness of the projected retirement dates of the Ohio-class SSBNs and the time that
would likely be needed to develop and field a replacement for them, DOD in 2007 began studies
on a next-generation sea-based strategic deterrent (SBSD).23 The studies used the term sea-based

21 Source: E-mail to CRS from Navy Office of Legislative Affairs, June 25, 2012.
22 Sam LaGrone and Richard Scott, “Strategic Assets: Deterrent Plans Confront Cost Challenges,” Jane’s Navy
International
, December 2011: 19.
23 In February 2007, the commander of U.S. Strategic Command (STRATCOM) commissioned a task force to support
an anticipated Underwater Launched Missile Study (ULMS). On June 8, 2007, the Secretary of the Navy initiated the
(continued...)
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strategic deterrent (SBSD) to signal the possibility that the new system would not necessarily be a
submarine.
An Initial Capabilities Document (ICD) for a new SBSD was developed in early 200824 and
approved by DOD’s Joint Requirements Oversight Committee (JROC) on June 20, 2008.25 In July
2008, DOD issued a Concept Decision providing guidance for an analysis of alternatives (AOA)
for the program; an acquisition decision memorandum from John Young, DOD’s acquisition
executive, stated the new system would, barring some discovery, be a submarine.26 The Navy
established an Ohio replacement program office at about this same time.27
The AOA reportedly began in the summer or fall of 2008.28 The AOA was completed, with final
brief to the Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD), on May 20, 2009. The final AOA report
was completed in September 2009. An AOA Sufficiency Review Letter was signed by OSD’s
Director, Cost Assessment & Program Evaluation (CAPE) on December 8, 2009.29 The AOA
concluded that a new-design SSBN was the best option for replacing the Ohio-class SSBNs. (For
a June 26, 2013, Navy blog post discussing options that were examined for replacing the Ohio-
class SSBNs, see Appendix A.)
The program’s Milestone A review meeting was held on December 9, 2010. On February 3, 2011,
the Navy provided the following statement to CRS concerning the outcome of the December 9
meeting:
The OHIO Replacement Program achieved Milestone A and has been approved to enter the
Technology Development Phase of the Dept. of Defense Life Cycle Management System as
of Jan. 10, 2011.
This milestone comes following the endorsement of the Defense Acquisition Board (DAB),
chaired by Dr. Carter (USD for Acquisition, Technology, and Logistics) who has signed the
program’s Milestone A Acquisition Decision Memorandum (ADM).
The DAB endorsed replacing the current 14 Ohio-class Ballistic Missile Submarines
(SSBNs) as they reach the end of their service life with 12 Ohio Replacement Submarines,

(...continued)
ULMS. Six days later, the commander of STRATCOM directed that a Sea Based Strategic Deterrent (SBSD)
capability-based assessment (CBA) be performed. In July 2007, the task force established by the commander of
STRATCOM provided its recommendations regarding capabilities and characteristics for a new SBSD. (Source: Navy
list of key events relating to the ULMS and SBSD provided to CRS and the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) on
July 7, 2008.)
24 On February 14, 2008, the SBSD ICD was approved for joint staffing by the Navy’s Resources and Requirements
Review Board (R3B). On April 29, 2008, the SBSD was approved by DOD’s Functional Capabilities Board (FCB) to
proceed to DOD’s Joint Capabilities Board (JCB). (Source: Navy list of key events relating to the ULMS and SBSD
provided to CRS and CBO on July 7, 2008.)
25 Navy briefing to CRS and CBO on the SBSD program, July 6, 2009.
26 Navy briefing to CRS and CBO on the SBSD program, July 6, 2009.
27 An August 2008 press report states that the program office, called PMS-397, “was established within the last two
months.” (Dan Taylor, “Navy Stands Up Program Office To Manage Next-Generation SSBN,” Inside the Navy, August
17, 2008.
28 “Going Ballistic,” Defense Daily, September 22, 2008, p. 1.
29 Department of Defense Fiscal Year (FY) 2012 Budget Estimates, Navy, Justification Book Volume 2, Research,
Development, Test & Evaluation, Navy Budget Activity 4
, entry for PE0603561N, Project 3220 (pdf page 345 of 888).
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each comprising 16, 87-inch diameter missile tubes utilizing TRIDENT II D5 Life Extended
missiles (initial loadout). The decision came after the program was presented to the Defense
Acquisition Board (DAB) on Dec. 9, 2010.
The ADM validates the program’s Technology Development Strategy and allows entry into
the Technology Development Phase during which warfighting requirements will be refined
to meet operational and affordability goals. Design, prototyping, and technology
development efforts will continue to ensure sufficient technological maturity for lead ship
procurement in 2019.30
Planned Procurement Quantity: 12 SSBN(X)s to Replace 14 Ohio-Class Boats
Navy plans call for procuring 12 SSBN(X)s to replace the current force of 14 Ohio-class SSBNs.
In explaining the planned procurement quantity of 12 boats, the Navy states that 10 operational
SSBNs—meaning boats not encumbered by lengthy maintenance actions—are needed to meet
strategic nuclear deterrence requirements for having a certain number of SSBNs at sea at any
given moment. The Navy states that a force of 14 Ohio-class boats was needed to meet this
requirement because, during the middle years of the Ohio class life cycle, three and sometimes
four of the boats are non-operational at any given moment on account of being in the midst of
lengthy mid-life nuclear refueling overhauls or other extended maintenance actions. The Navy
states that 12 rather than 14 SSBN(X)s will be needed to meet the requirement for 10 operational
boats because the mid-life overhauls of SSBN(X)s, which will not include a nuclear refueling,
will require less time (about two years) than the mid-life refueling overhauls of Ohio-class boats
(which require about four years from contract award to delivery),31 the result being that only two
SSBN(X)s (rather than three or sometimes four) will be in the midst of mid-life overhauls or
other extended maintenance actions at any given moment during the middle years of the
SSBN(X) class life cycle.32
Procurement and Replacement Schedule
Table 2 shows the Navy’s proposed schedule for procuring 12 SSBN(X)s, and for having
SSBN(X)s replace Ohio-class SSBNs. As shown in Table 2, under the Navy’s FY2012 budget,
the first Ohio replacement boat was scheduled to be procured in FY2019, and Ohio replacement
boats were to enter service on a schedule that would maintain the Navy’s SSBN force at 12 boats.
As also shown in Table 2, the Navy’s FY2013 budget deferred the procurement of the first Ohio
replacement boat by two years, to FY2021. The Navy’s proposed FY2014 budget maintains
FY2021 as the procurement date for the lead boat. As a result of the deferment of the procurement
of the lead boat from FY2019 to FY2021, the Navy’s SSBN force will drop to 11 or 10 boats for
the period FY2029-FY2041. The Navy states that the reduction to 11 or 10 boats during this
period is acceptable in terms of meeting strategic nuclear deterrence requirements, because during

30 Source: Email from Navy Office of Legislative Affairs to CRS, February 3, 2011.
31 Navy budget submissions show that Ohio-class mid-life nuclear refueling overhauls have contract-award-to-delivery
periods generally ranging from 47 months to 50 months.
32 Source: Navy update briefing on Ohio replacement program to CRS and Congressional Budget Office (CBO),
September 17, 2012. See also “Navy Responds to Debate Over the Size of the SSBN Force,” Navy Live, May 16, 2013,
accessed July 26, 2013, at http://navylive.dodlive.mil/2013/05/16/navy-responds-to-debate-over-the-size-of-the-ssbn-
force/, and Richard Breckenridge, “SSBN Force Level Requirements: It’s Simply a Matter of Geography,” Navy Live,
July 19, 2013, accessed July 26, 2013, at http://navylive.dodlive.mil/2013/07/19/ssbn-force-level-requirements-its-
simply-a-matter-of-geography/.
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these years, all 11 or 10 of the SSBNs in service will be operational (i.e., none of them will be in
the midst of a lengthy mid-life overhaul). The Navy acknowledges that there is some risk in
having the SSBN force drop to 11 or 10 boats, because it provides little margin for absorbing an
unforeseen event that might force an SSBN into an unscheduled and lengthy maintenance
action.33 (See also the discussion above in “Planned Procurement Quantity: 12 SSBN(X)s to
Replace 14 Ohio-Class Boats.”)
The minimum level of 10 boats shown in Table 2 for the period FY2032-FY2040 can be
increased to 11 boats (providing some margin for absorbing an unforeseen event that might force
an SSBN into an unscheduled and lengthy maintenance action) by accelerating by about one year
the planned procurement dates of boats 2 through 12 in the program. Under this option, the
second boat in the program would be procured in FY2023 rather than FY2024, the third boat in
the program would be procured in FY2025 rather than FY2026, and so on. Implementing this
option could affect the Navy’s plan for funding the procurement of Virginia-class attack
submarines during the period FY2022-FY2025.34


33 Source: Navy update briefing on Ohio replacement program to CRS and Congressional Budget Office (CBO),
September 17, 2012. A September 28, 2012, press report similarly quotes Rear Admiral Barry Bruner, the Navy’s
director of undersea warfare, as stating that “During this time frame, no major SSBN overhauls are planned, and a force
of 10 SSBNs will support current at-sea presence requirements,” and that “This provides a low margin to compensate
for unforeseen issues that may result in reduced SSBN availability. The reduced SSBN availability during this time
frame reinforces the importance of remaining on schedule with the Ohio Replacement program to meet future strategic
requirements. As the Ohio Replacement ships begin their mid-life overhauls in 2049, 12 SSBNs will be required to
offset ships conducting planned maintenance.” (Michael Fabey, U.S. Navy Defends Boomer Submarine Replacement
Plans,” Aerospace Daily & Defense Report, September 28, 2012: 3.)
34 For more on the Virginia-class program, see CRS Report RL32418, Navy Virginia (SSN-774) Class Attack
Submarine Procurement: Background and Issues for Congress
, by Ronald O'Rourke.
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Table 2. Navy Schedule for Procuring SSBN(X)s and Replacing Ohio-Class SSBNs

Schedule in FY2012 Budget
Schedule Under FY2013 and FY2014 Budgets
Combined
Combined
number of
number of
Number
Ohio-
Ohio-class
Number
Ohio-
Ohio-class
of
Cumulative
class
SSBNs
of
Cumulative
class
SSBNs
SSBN(X)s
number of
SSBNs
and
SSBN(X)s
number of
SSBNs
and
Fiscal
procured
SSBN(X)s
in
SSBN(X)s
procured
SSBN(X)s
in
SSBN(X)s
Year
each year
in service
service
in service
each year
in service
service
in service
2019 1

14 14


14
14
2020

14 14


14
14
2021

14 14
1

14
14
2022 1

14 14


14
14
2023

14 14


14
14
2024 1

14 14
1

14
14
2025 1

14 14


14
14
2026 1

14 14
1

14
14
2027 1

13 13
1

13
13
2028 1

12 13
1

12
12
2029 1
1
11 12
1

11
11
2030 1
2
10 12
1
1
10
11
2031 1
3
9 12
1
2
9
11
2032 1
4
8 12
1
2
8
10
2033 1
5
7 12
1
3
7
10
2034
6
6 12
1
4
6
10
2035
7
5 12
1
5
5
10
2036
8
4 12

6
4
10
2037
9
3 12

7
3
10
2038
10 2 12

8
2
10
2039
11 1 12

9
1
10
2040
12
12

10
0
10
2041
12
12

11
0
11
2042
12
12

12
0
12
Source: Navy FY2012, FY2013, and FY2014 budget submissions.
SSBN(X) Design Features
Although the design of the SSBN(X) has not yet been fully determined, the boat’s design will
reflect the following:
• The SSBN(X) is to be designed for a 40-year expected service life.35
• Unlike the Ohio-class design, which requires a mid-life nuclear refueling,36 the
SSBN(X) is to be equipped with a life-of-the-ship nuclear fuel core (a nuclear

35 U.S. Navy, Report to Congress on Annual Long-Range Plan for Construction of Naval Vessels for FY 2011,
February 2010, p. 24.
36 As mentioned earlier (see “Current Ohio-Class SSBNs”), the Ohio-class boats receive a mid-life nuclear refueling
(continued...)
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fuel core that is sufficient to power the ship for its entire expected service life).37
Although the SSBN(X) will not need a mid-life nuclear refueling, it will still
need a mid-life non-refueling overhaul (i.e., an overhaul that does not include a
nuclear refueling) to operate over its full 40-year life.
• The SSBN(X) is to be equipped with an electric-drive propulsion train, as
opposed to the mechanical-drive propulsion train used on other Navy
submarines. The electric-drive system is expected to be quieter (i.e., stealthier)
than a mechanical-drive system.38
• The SSBN(X) is to have SLBM launch tubes that are the same size as those on
the Ohio class (i.e., tubes with a diameter of 87 inches and a length sufficient to
accommodate a D-5 SLBM).
• The SSBN(X) will have a beam (i.e., diameter)39 of 43 feet, compared to 42 feet
on the Ohio-class design.40
• Instead of 24 SLBM launch tubes, as on the Ohio-class design, the SSBN(X) is to
have 16 SLBM launch tubes. (For further discussion of the decision to equip the
boat with 16 tubes rather than 20, see Appendix B.)
• Although the SSBN(X) is to have fewer launch tubes than the Ohio-class SSBN,
it is to have a submerged displacement about the same as that of the Ohio-class
design.41 As of late 2011, the design for the SSBN(X) reportedly had an
estimated submerged displacement of 19,737 tons, though that figure likely has
since changed.42

(...continued)
overhaul, called an Engineered Refueling Overhaul (ERO), which includes both a nuclear refueling and overhaul work
on the ship that is not related to the nuclear refueling.
37 U.S. Navy, Report to Congress on Annual Long-Range Plan for Construction of Naval Vessels for FY 2011,
February 2010, p. 5. The two most recent classes of SSNs—the Seawolf (SSN-21) and Virginia (SSN-774) class
boats—are built with cores that are expected to be sufficient for their entire 33-year expected service lives.
38 Source: Spoken testimony of Admiral Kirkland Donald, Deputy Administrator for Naval Reactors, and Director,
Naval Nuclear Propulsion, National Nuclear Security Administration, at a March 30, 2011, hearing before the Strategic
Forces Subcommittee of the Senate Armed Services Committee, as shown in the transcript of the hearing. See also
Dave Bishop, “What Will Follow the Ohio Class?” U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings, June 2012: 31; and Sam LaGrone
and Richard Scott, “Strategic Assets: Deterrent Plans Confront Cost Challenges,” Jane’s Navy International, December
2011: 16.
39 Beam is the maximum width of a ship. For Navy submarines, which have cylindrical hulls, beam is the diameter of
the hull.
40 Dave Bishop, “What Will Follow the Ohio Class?” U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings, June 2012: 31. (Bishop was
program manager for the Ohio replacement program.) See also Sam LaGrone and Richard Scott, “Strategic Assets:
Deterrent Plans Confront Cost Challenges,” Jane’s Navy International, December 2011: 15 and 16.
41 A May 2010 CBO report states that “in a recent briefing to CBO and the Congressional Research Service, the Navy
stated that an SSBN(X) would probably be about the same size and have roughly the same displacement as an Ohio
class submarine, even though it might have only 16 or 20 missile tubes.” (Congressional Budget Office, An Analysis of
the Navy’s Fiscal Year 2011 Shipbuilding Plan
, May 2010, p. 16.)
42 Sam LaGrone and Richard Scott, “Strategic Assets: Deterrent Plans Confront Cost Challenges,” Jane’s Navy
International
, December 2011: 15 and 16.
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• The Navy states that “owing to the unique demands of strategic relevance,
[SSBN(X)s] must be fitted with the most up-to-date capabilities and stealth to
ensure they are survivable throughout their full 40-year life span.”43
In an article published in June 2012, the program manager for the Ohio replacement program
stated that “the current configuration of the Ohio replacement is an SSBN with 16 87-inch-
diameter missile tubes, a 43-foot-diamater hull, fairwater planes,44 electric-drive propulsion, [an]
X-stern,45 accommodations for 155 personnel, and a common submarine radio room46 tailored to
the SSBN mission.”47
Acquisition Cost
A March 2013 GAO report assessing selected major DOD weapon acquisition programs states
that the estimated total acquisition cost of the SSBN(X) program is $93,062.4 million (about
$93.1 billion) in constant FY2013 dollars, including $11,466.7 million (about $11.5 billion) in
research and development costs and $81,595.7 million (about $81.6 billion) in procurement
costs.48
The Navy’s FY2014 30-year shipbuilding plan, submitted in May 2013, estimates the
procurement cost of the lead boat in the program at $12.0 billion in constant 2013 dollars,
including $4.6 billion in detailed design and nonrecurring engineering (DD/NRE) costs for the
entire class, and $7.4 billion in construction costs for the ship itself.49 (It is a traditional budgeting
practice for Navy shipbuilding programs to attach the DD/NRE costs for a new class of ships to
the procurement cost of the lead ship in the class.)
The Navy in February 2010 preliminarily estimated the procurement cost of each Ohio
replacement boat at $6 billion to $7 billion in FY2010 dollars.50 Following the Ohio replacement
program’s December 9, 2010, Milestone A acquisition review meeting (see “Program Origin and
Early Milestones”), DOD issued an Acquisition Decision Memorandum (ADM) that, among
other things, established a target average unit procurement cost for boats 2-12 in the program of

43 U.S. Navy, Report to Congress on Annual Long-Range Plan for Construction of Naval Vessels for FY 2011,
February 2010, p. 24.
44 The term fairwater planes means that the submarine’s forward diving planes are mounted on the ship’s hull, near the
bow, rather than on the ship’s sail (aka “conning tower”).
45 The term X-stern means that the steering and diving fins at the stern of the ship are, when viewed from the rear, in
the diagonal pattern of the letter X, rather than the vertical-and horizontal pattern of a plus sign (which is referred to as
a cruciform stern).
46 The common submarine radio room is a standardized (i.e., common) suite of submarine radio room equipment that is
being installed on other U.S. Navy submarines.
47 Dave Bishop, “What Will Follow the Ohio Class?” U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings, June 2012: 31. See also Sam
LaGrone and Richard Scott, “Strategic Assets: Deterrent Plans Confront Cost Challenges,” Jane’s Navy International,
December 2011: 15 and 16.
48 Government Accountability Office, Defense Acquisitions[:] Assessments of Selected Weapons Programs, GAO-13-
294SP, March 2013, p. 145.
49 Department of the Navy, Report to Congress on the Long-Range Plan for Construction of Naval Vessels for FY2014,
May 2013, p. 15.
50 Department of the Navy, Report to Congress on Annual Long-Range Plan for Construction of Naval Vessels for FY
2011
, February 2010, p. 20.
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$4.9 billion in constant FY2010 dollars.51 The Navy is working to achieve this target cost. In
2011, the Navy estimated that its cost-reduction efforts had reduced the estimated average unit
procurement cost of boats 2-12 to $5.6 billion each in constant FY2010 dollars.52 In May 2013,
the Navy stated that its continued cost-reduction efforts had reduced the estimated average unit
procurement cost of boats 2-12 to about $5.4 billion each in constant FY2010 dollars.53 The Navy
continues examining potential further measures to bring the cost of boats 2-12 closer to the $4.9
billion target cost.54
The above cost figures do not include costs for refurbishing D-5 SLBMs so as to extend their
service lives to 2042.
Operation and Support (O&S) Cost
The Navy is working to reduce the estimated operation and support (O&S) cost of each SSBN(X)
from $124 million per year to $110 million per year in constant FY2010 dollars.55
Common Missile Compartment (CMC)
Current U.S. and UK plans call for the SSBN(X) and the UK’s Successor SSBN to use a missile
compartment—the middle section of the boat with the SLBM launch tubes—of the same general
design.56 As mentioned earlier (see “U.S.-UK Cooperation on SLBMs”), the UK’s SSBN is to be
armed with eight SLBMs, or half the number to be carried by the SSBN(X). The modular design
of the CMC will accommodate this difference. Since the UK’s first Vanguard-class SSBN was
originally projected to reach the end of its service life in 2024—three years before the first Ohio-
class SSBN is projected to reach the end of its service life—design work on the CMC began
about three years sooner than would have been required to support the Ohio replacement program
alone. This is the principal reason why the FY2010 budget included a substantial amount of
research and development funding for the CMC. The UK is providing some of the funding for the
design of the CMC, including a large portion of the initial funding.
A March 2010 Government Accountability office (GAO) report stated:

51 Christopher J. Castelli, “DOD: New Nuclear Subs Will Cost $347 Billion To Acquire, Operate,” Inside the Navy,
February 21, 2011; Elaine M. Grossman, “Future U.S. Nuclear-Armed Vessel to Use Attack-Submarine Technology,”
Global Security Newswire, February 24, 2011; Jason Sherman, “Navy Working To Cut $7.7 Billion From Ohio
Replacement Program,” Inside the Navy, February 28, 2011. See also Christopher J. Castelli, “DOD Puts ‘Should-Cost’
Pressure On Major Weapons Programs,” Inside the Navy, May 2, 2011.
52 Source: Navy briefing for CRS and Congressional Budget Office on Navy submarine programs, March 16, 2012.
53 Source: Navy meeting with CRS and CBO to discuss Navy acquisition issues, May 17, 2013.
54 See, for example, Dave Bishop, “Two Years In And Ground Strong, The Ohio Replacement Program,” Undersea
Warfare
, Spring 2012: 5-7.
55 Dave Bishop, “Two Years In And Ground Strong, The Ohio Replacement Program,” Undersea Warfare, Spring
2012: 5; Megan Eckstein, “Ohio-Replacement Sub Technology To Drop O&S Costs To $110M A Year,” Inside the
Navy
, March 1, 2013.
56 Statement of Rear Admiral Stephen Johnson, USN, Director, Strategic Systems Programs, Before the Subcommittee
on Strategic Forces of the Senate Armed Services Committee [on] FY2011 Strategic Systems, March 17, 2010, p. 6,
which states: “The OHIO Replacement programs includes the development of a common missile compartment that will
support both the OHIO Class Replacement and the successor to the UK Vanguard Class.”
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According to the Navy, in February 2008, the United States and United Kingdom began a
joint effort to design a common missile compartment. This effort includes the participation
of government officials from both countries, as well as industry officials from Electric Boat
Corporation and BAE Systems. To date, the United Kingdom has provided a larger share of
funding for this effort, totaling just over $200 million in fiscal years 2008 and 2009.57
A March 2011 GAO report stated:
The main focus of OR [Ohio Replacement program] research and development to date has
been the CMC. The United Kingdom has provided $329 million for this effort since fiscal
year 2008. During fiscal years 2009 and 2010, the Navy had allocated about $183 million for
the design and prototyping of the missile compartment.58
A May 2010 press report stated that “the UK has, to date, funded the vast majority of [the CMC’s]
upfront engineering design activity and has established a significant presence in Electric Boat’s
Shaw’s Cove CMC design office in New London, CT.”59
Under the October 2010 UK defense and security review report (see “U.S.-UK Cooperation on
SLBMs”), the UK now plans to deliver its first Successor class SSBN in 2028, or about four
years later than previously planned.
Program Funding
Table 3 shows funding for the Ohio replacement program. The table shows U.S. funding only; it
does not include funding provided by the UK to help pay for the design of the CMC. As can be
seen in the table, the Navy’s proposed FY2014 budget requests $1,083.7 million for continued
research and development work on the program.
Table 3. Ohio Replacement Program Funding
(Millions of then-year dollars, rounded to nearest tenth; totals may not add due to rounding)
FY13
FY14
FY15
FY16
FY17
FY18
FY08
FY09
FY10
FY11

FY12
(req.)
(req.)
(proj.)
(proj.)
(proj.)
(proj.)
PE0101221N/Project
3198
0
9.7
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
PE0603561N/Project
3220 0 0
363.4 431.4 761.2 483.1 787.6 859.6
1,037.2 709.1 721.0
PE0603561N/Project
9999
4.9
3.2
4.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
PE0603570N/Project
3219 0 0
107.5 178.3 285.4 81.8 296.1 361.8 422.5 411.4 401.5
Total R&D funding
4.9 12.9 474.9 609.7 1,046.6 564.9 1,083.7 1,221.4 1,459.7 1,120.5 1,122.5
Procurement funding 0
0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0
777.8
791.8
TOTAL
all
funding
4.9 12.9 474.9 609.7 1.046.6 564.9 1,083.7 1,221.4 1,459.7 1,898.3 1,914.3

57 Government Accountability Office, Defense Acquisitions[:] Assessments of Selected Weapon Programs, GAO-10-
388SP, March 2010, p. 152.
58 Government Accountability Office, Defense Acquisitions[:] Assessments of Selected Weapon Programs, GAO-11-
233SP, March 2011, p. 147.
59 Sam LaGrone and Richard Scott, “Deterrent Decisions: US and UK Wait on Next Steps for SSBN Replacements,”
Jane’s Navy International, May 2010, pp. 10-11.
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Source: Navy FY2014 budget and prior-year budgets.
Notes: The figures shown for FY2013 are taken from the FY2014 budget, which simply shows the requested
figures for FY2013. These requested figures do not reflect the final FY2013 appropriated figure. In addition, the
figures shown for FY2013 and prior years do not reflect the March 1, 2013, sequester on FY2013 funding and
prior-year unobligated balances. PE means Program Element, that is, a research and development line item. A
Program Element may include several projects. PE0101221N/Project 3198 is Underwater Launch Missile
System (ULMS) project within the PE for Strategic Submarine and Weapons System Support.
PE0603561N/Project 3220 is Sea-Based Strategic Deterrent (SBSD) project within the PE for Advanced
Submarine System Development. PE0603561N/Project 9999 is Congressional funding additions within the PE
for Advanced Submarine System Development. PE0603570N/Project 3219 is SSBN(X) reactor plant project
within the PE for Advanced Nuclear Power Systems. Procurement funding shown in FY2017 and FY2018 is
advance procurement funding for first SSBN(X), which is scheduled to be procured in FY2021.
Issues for Congress
Impact of March 1, 2013, Sequester on FY2013 Funding
One issue for Congress concerns the impact on the Ohio replacement program of the March 1,
2013, sequester on FY2013 funding (and unobligated prior-year funding) for the program,
particularly in terms of potentially slowing research and development work needed to support the
scheduled procurement of the lead boat in FY2021. Navy officials stated on May 22, 2013, that
actions taken to accommodate the reduction in funding for the Ohio replacement program
resulting from the March 1, 2013, sequester have not altered the Navy’s plan to procure the lead
boat in FY2021, but have added schedule and technical risk to the program.60 A May 10, 2013,
press report based on a statement from the Navy stated that work on the Common Missile
Compartment reportedly was not impacted.61 An April 10, 2013, press report stated:
The Ohio-class replacement program has been working through multiple levels, from the
nuclear reactors to the strategic systems and construction of the ships, to mitigate the impact
of sequestration and stay on schedule, the Navy’s program manager for the SSBN(X) said
yesterday.
Capt. Bill Brougham said he believes the construction start of the first ship of the next
generation of ballistic missile submarines will remain on track for 2021, despite the across
the board budget cuts that took effect March 1, as Congress was unable to overcome the long
running budget stalemate.
“There’s no caveats,” he said at the Navy League’s Sea-Air-Space exposition just outside
Washington. “The lead ship is still on track to start in 2021.”

60 Source: Navy briefing for CRS and CBO on submarine acquisition programs, May 22, 2013.
61 A May 10, 2013, press report stated:
The Common Missile Compartment... has not been impacted by the recent continuing resolution
nor sequestration cuts in fiscal year 2013, the Navy said last week....
“The CMC design and prototyping efforts have been prioritized during FY-13 program execution
and were maintained on schedule to support the U.K. Successor SSBN program,” Navy spokesman
Chris Johnson wrote in a May 3 email.
(Lee Hudson, “Common Missile Compartment Not Impacted By Sequestration, CR,” Inside the Navy, May 10, 2013.)
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The Navy had announced last year it was delaying the construction of the first ship by two
years to cope with budget constraints and to allow the design to mature. Brougham said he
expects there will not be additional delays because of sequestration.
Brougham said his office worked through the various areas of the program to identify
priorities and coordinated it throughout the Navy and with industry teams to be sure
everyone was on the same page. He said he submitted plans to the Navy’s leadership that
would mitigate the impact into 2015 in the event Congress does not find a way to lift
sequestration.
Brougham told reporters he prepared for an approximate 10 percent cut, but the actual
number came in lower than anticipated.
“We prepared for it to be a certain number,” he said. “It came in as less. We're in better
shape but we're still impacted.”62
Potential Impact of Possible Late 2013/Early 2014 Sequester on
FY2014 Funding

Another potential issue for Congress concerns the potential impact on the Ohio replacement
program of a possible sequester on FY2014 funding (and unobligated prior-year funding) for the
program that might occur in late 2013 or early 2014 under the terms of the Budget Control Act of
2011 (S. 365/P.L. 112-25 of August 2, 2011). On September 18, 2013, the Navy testified that
Investment accounts will be particularly impacted by sequestration in FY 2014, and we will
not be able to use prior-year funds to mitigate shortfalls as we did in FY 2013. Without
Congressional action or mitigating circumstances, the reductions imposed by sequestration
and the limitations of a CR [continuing resolution] will compel us to [among other things]:...
• Delay the planned start of construction on the first SSBN(X) from FY 2021 to FY 2022.
This would cause us to be unable to meet U.S. Strategic Command presence requirements
when the Ohio-class SSBN retires....
In order to avoid or remedy some of the FY 2014 impacts described above, we need
Congress to approve authorization and appropriations bills. This would enable Navy to
transfer funds, pursue innovative acquisition approaches, start new projects, increase
production quantities, and complete ships. This would [among other things]:
• Keep SSBN(X) on schedule to sustain required SSBN capacity after the Ohio class begins
to retire.63
Likelihood That Navy Will Reach $4.9 Billion Target Cost
Another issue for Congress is the likelihood that the Navy will be able to achieve DOD’s goal of
reducing the average unit procurement cost of boats 2-12 in the program to $4.9 billion each in

62 Mike McCarthy, “SSBN(X) Coping With Sequestration,” Defense Daily, April 10, 2013.
63 Statement of Admiral Jonathan Greenert, U.S. Navy, Chief of Naval Operations, Before the House Armed Services
Committee on Planning for Sequestration in FY 2014 and Perspectives of the Military Services on the Strategic
Choices and Management Review, September 18, 2013, pp. 12 and 13.
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FY2010 dollars. As mentioned earlier, as of May 2013, the Navy estimated that its cost-reduction
efforts had reduced the average unit procurement cost of boats 2-12 to about $5.4 billion each in
FY2010 dollars, leaving another $500 million or so in cost reduction to reach the $4.9 billion
target cost.
Measures that the Navy has taken to reduce the average unit procurement cost of boats 2-12 to
about $5.4 billion include, among other things, reducing the number of SLBM launch tubes from
20 to 16,64 and making the launch tubes no larger in diameter than those on the Ohio-class
design.65 The Navy is examining potential further measures to bring the cost of boats 2-12 closer
to the $4.9 billion target cost. An October 19, 2012, press report quoted Rear Admiral David
Johnson, the program executive officer for submarines, as stating that in achieving the additional
$700 million reduction in per-boat procurement cost, “I think one of the biggest effectors we can
do is buying the ship smartly.... We can probably get somewhere in the range of $300 million-plus
per ship out [of the estimated cost], just by buying the ships smartly, encouraging a long
production run in industry and the vendor base.”66 A May 20, 2013, press report stated:
In order for the Navy to achieve its $4.9-billion cost target (calculated in FY-10 dollars) for
the Ohio-class [replacement] submarine program, [a] joint multiyear [procurement contract]
deal for both ship classes must take place, [Rear. Adm. David] Johnson [program executive
officer for submarines] stated.
“That will take some work with Congress,” Johnson said. “We have briefed this concept
before [congressional] staffers for about three years now.”...
A multiyear contract can save the Navy anywhere from about 8 to 15 percent collectively
across the two ship classes, Johnson said.67
Potential oversight questions include the following:
• How did DOD settle on the figure of $4.9 billion in FY2010 dollars as the target
average unit procurement cost for boats 2-12 in the program? On what analysis
was the selection of this figure based?
• How difficult will it be for the Navy to reach this target cost? What options is the
Navy examining to achieve the additional $500 million or so in unit procurement
cost savings needed to reach it?
• Would a boat costing $4.9 billion have sufficient capability to perform its
intended missions?

64 For further discussion of the decision to equip the boat with 16 tubes rather than 20, see Appendix B.
65 The Navy had examined the option of equipping the SSBN(X) with tubes greater in diameter than those on the Ohio-
class design, so as to support an option of arming the boats many years from now with a new SLBM that is larger in
diameter than the D-5 SLBM.
66 As quoted in Lee Hudson, “Navy Plans To Award Ohio Replacement R&D Contract In December,” Inside the Navy,
October 22, 2012.
67 Lee Hudson, “Lower Ohio-Class Replacement Cost Tied To VA-Class Multiyear Deal,” Inside the Navy, May 20,
2013. The word “congressional” appears in brackets in the original; the other bracketed words were added here for
clarity. For more on multiyear procurement contracting, see CRS Report R41909, Multiyear Procurement (MYP) and
Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition: Background and Issues for Congress
, by Ronald O'Rourke and Moshe
Schwartz.
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• What, if anything, does DOD plan to do if the Navy is unable to achieve the $4.9
billion target cost figure? If $4.9 billion is the target figure, is there a
corresponding “ceiling” figure higher than $4.9 billion, above which DOD would
not permit the Ohio replacement program to proceed? If no such figure exists,
should DOD establish one?
Accuracy of Navy’s Estimated Unit Procurement Cost
Overview
Another oversight issue for Congress concerns the accuracy of the Navy’s estimate of the
procurement cost of each SSBN(X). The accuracy of the Navy’s estimate is a key consideration in
assessing the potential affordability of the Ohio replacement program, including its potential
impact on the Navy’s ability to procure other kinds of ships during the years of SSBN(X)
procurement. Some of the Navy’s ship designs in recent years, such as the Gerald R. Ford (CVN-
78) class aircraft carrier,68 the San Antonio (LPD-17) class amphibious ship69 and the Littoral
Combat Ship (LCS),70 have proven to be substantially more expensive to build than the Navy
originally estimated.
The accuracy of the Navy’s estimate can be assessed in part by examining known procurement
costs for other recent Navy submarines—including Virginia (SSN-774) class attack submarines
(which are currently being procured), Seawolf (SSN-21) class attack submarines (which were
procured prior to the Virginia class), and Ohio (SSBN-726) class ballistic missile submarines—
and then adjusting these costs for the Ohio replacement program so as to account for factors such
as differences in ship displacement and design features, changes over time in submarine
technologies (which can either increase or reduce a ship’s procurement cost, depending on the
exact technologies in question), advances in design for producibility (i.e., design features that are
intended to make ships easier to build), advances in shipyard production processes (such as
modular construction), and changes in submarine production economies of scale (i.e., changes in
the total number of attack submarines and ballistic missile submarines under construction at any
one time).
The Navy’s estimated unit procurement cost for the program at any given point will reflect
assumptions on, among other things, which shipyard or shipyards will build the boats, and how
much Virginia-class construction will be taking place in the years when SSBN(X)s are being
built. Changing the Navy’s assumption about which shipyard or shipyards will build SSBN(X)s
could reduce or increase the Navy’s estimated unit procurement cost for the boats. If shipbuilding
affordability pressures result in Virginia-class boats being removed from the 30-year shipbuilding
plan during the years of SSBN(X) procurement, the resulting reduction in submarine production
economies of scale could make SSBN(X)s more expensive to build than the Navy estimates.

68 For more on the CVN-78 program, see CRS Report RS20643, Navy Ford (CVN-78) Class Aircraft Carrier Program:
Background and Issues for Congress
, by Ronald O'Rourke.
69 For more on the LPD-17 program, see CRS Report RL34476, Navy LPD-17 Amphibious Ship Procurement:
Background, Issues, and Options for Congress
, by Ronald O'Rourke.
70 For more on the LCS program, see CRS Report RL33741, Navy Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) Program: Background
and Issues for Congress
, by Ronald O'Rourke.
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October 2013 CBO Report
An October 2013 Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report on the cost of the Navy’s
shipbuilding programs stated:
The design, cost, and capabilities of the SSBN(X)—the submarine class slated to replace the
Ohio class—are among the most significant uncertainties in the Navy’s and CBO’s analyses
of the cost of future shipbuilding....
The recent history of cost estimates for the SSBN(X) illustrates both the high expected costs
of the program and the uncertainty regarding those costs. The Navy’s 2007 and 2008
shipbuilding plans included a projection that the SSBN(X) would cost an average of $3.8
billion (in 2013 dollars) per ship. The 2011 plan estimated the costs of the SSBN(X) class at
an average of $7.9 billion apiece, while under the 2012 plan, the cost was lowered to $6.7
billion. The Navy currently estimates the cost of the lead SSBN(X) at $12.0 billion. The
estimated average cost of follow-on ships is now $5.9 billion, and the Navy has stated an
objective of reducing that cost to $5.4 billion in 2013 dollars. All told, the Navy estimates
that building 12 submarines will cost $77 billion, an average of $6.4 billion each.
Between the 2011 and 2012 plans, the Navy redefined its SSBN(X) design with the primary
goal of reducing the cost. The Navy’s cost estimate in the 2011 plan was based on a design
similar in size to the Ohio class and on the cost of building Ohio class submarines using
contemporary technology and under current conditions of the shipbuilding industry (such as
the number of shipbuilders and vendors and the amount of other business in the shipyards).
The Navy states that it was able to reduce the estimated cost of the SSBN(X) to the current
projection by making the following changes:
-- Using a less expensive and more specific basic design (eliminating some costs in the
estimate for the 2011 plan that were associated with uncertainty);
-- Reducing the number of missile tubes from 20 to 16;
-- Reducing the diameter of the missile tubes from 97 inches to 87 inches, which is the
minimum needed to launch the Trident D-5 submarine-launched ballistic missile;
-- Reducing the capability of the torpedo room and various sensor arrays and reducing the
size of the sail mast;
-- Increasing the use of components from the Virginia class attack submarines; and
-- Simplifying many small elements in the design of the new submarine.
While the Navy estimates that the lead SSBN(X) will cost $12.0 billion, CBO estimates that
it will cost $13.0 billion. Estimating the cost of the first submarine of a class is particularly
difficult because it is not clear how much the Navy will spend on nonrecurring engineering
and detailed design. The Navy spent about $2 billion on those items for the lead Virginia
class attack submarine. The historical record for the lead ship of new classes of submarines
in the 1970s and 1980s indicates that there is little difference in those items on a per-ton
basis between a lead attack submarine and a lead SSBN. Therefore, CBO projects that the
cost of nonrecurring engineering and detailed design is proportional to the weight of
submarines, which implies that nonrecurring items would cost about $5 billion for the lead
SSBN(X)—a submarine that will be somewhat larger than an Ohio class submarine and
about 2½ times the size of a Virginia class submarine. The Navy’s estimate for the lead
SSBN(X) takes into account nonrecurring costs of an estimated $4.5 billion.
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All told, 12 SSBN(X)s would cost about $87 billion in CBO’s estimation, or an average of
$7.2 billion each—$0.8 billion higher per boat than the Navy’s estimate. That average
includes the $13.0 billion estimated cost of the lead submarine and a $6.7 billion average
estimated cost for the 2nd through 12th submarines. Research and development would cost
an additional $10 billion to $15 billion, for a total program cost of $97 billion to $102
billion, CBO estimates.71
Program Affordability and Impact on Other Navy
Shipbuilding Programs

Overview
Another oversight issue for Congress concerns the prospective affordability of the Ohio
replacement program and its potential impact on funding available for other Navy shipbuilding
programs. Even with the Navy’s current effort to reduce the estimated unit procurement cost of
the SSBN(X) toward DOD’s target figure, observers are concerned that the Ohio replacement
program could crowd out funding for other Navy shipbuilding programs in the 2020s and early
2030s. The Navy’s report on the FY2014 30-year shipbuilding plan states:
The Department [of the Navy] will encounter several challenges in executing this
shipbuilding plan; perhaps the most important is funding and delivering the Ohio-
replacement (OR) program SSBN. The OR SSBN is projected to cost about $6 billion each
[in constant FY2013 dollars]. Therefore, during the procurement and construction of OR
SSBN between FY2021 and FY2035 an average of $19.2 billion per year is projected to be
required for shipbuilding, which will be a key resourcing challenge for the Department....
The cost of the OR SSBN is significant relative to the [annual ship procurement] resources
available to DoN in any given year. At the same time, the Department will have to address
the block retirement of ships procured in large numbers during the 1980s which are reaching
the end of their service lives. The confluence of these events prevents DoN from being able
to shift resources within the shipbuilding account to accommodate the cost of the OR SSBN.
If DoN funds the OR SSBN from within its own resources, OR SSBN construction will take
away from construction of other ships in the battle force such as attack submarines,
destroyers, aircraft carriers and amphibious warfare shps. The resulting battle force will not
meet the requirements of the FSA [the Force Structure Assessment that led to the Navy’s
current goal for achieving and maintianing a 306-ship fleet] and will therefore not be
sufficient to implement the DSG [Defense Strategic Guidance]. In addition there will be
significant impact to the shipbuilding industrial base.72
A May 2, 2013, press report states:

71 Congressional Budget Office, An Analysis of the Navy’s Fiscal Year 2014 Shipbuilding Plan, October 2013, pp. 23-
24.
72 Report to Congress on the Annual Long-Range Plan for Construction of Naval Vessels for FY2014, May 2013, pp.
11, 18-19.
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[Vice Admiral William Burke, Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for Warfare Systems], who
is set to retire in the next few weeks,73 spoke frankly about the undersea portion of the U.S.
strategic nuclear triad “and its intersection with our shipbuilding plan.”
His conclusion: “If we buy the [the 12 planned Ohio replacement (SSBNX) ballistic missile
submarines] within existing [Navy] funds, we will not reach 300 ships. In fact, we'll find
ourselves closer to 250. At these numbers, our global presence will be reduced such that
we'll only be able to visit some areas of the world episodically.”
Sequestration will only make the situation worse. Burke said it would cause the Navy “to
both reduce procurement as well as retire existing ships, leaving us with a Navy in the
vicinity of 200 ships, at which point we may not be considered a global navy.”74
September 2013 Navy Testimony
As noted earlier, on September 18, 2013, Admiral Jonathan Greenert, the Chief of Naval
Operations, testified that the Ohio replacement program “is the top priority program for the
Navy.” Greenert made the statement as part of a discussion of implications for Navy programs if
DOD spending were reduced to the revised cap levels (i.e., the lower caps) in the Budget Control
Act. In such a budget scenario, Greenert testified, “We would still be able to sustain today’s
ballistic missile submarine (SSBN) force. The SSBN(X) would still deliver in 2030 to replace
retiring Ohio class SSBN while meeting requirements for SSBN presence and surge. This is the
top priority program for the Navy.”75
Prior to September 2013, Navy officials had suggested that if the Navy does not receive
additional funding to help pay for the Ohio replacement program, the Navy might need to reduce
funding for other shipbuilding programs. At a September 12, 2013, hearing before the Seapower
and Projection Forces subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee on undersea
warfare, a Navy official made this point more definitively, stating:
The CNO has stated, his number one priority as the chief of Naval operations, is our—our
strategic deterrent—our nuclear strategic deterrent. That will trump all other vitally
important requirements within our Navy, but if there’s only one thing that we do with our
ship building account, we—we are committed to sustaining a two ocean national strategic
deterrent that protects our homeland from nuclear attack, from other major war aggression
and also access and extended deterrent for our allies.76
At this same hearing, Navy officials also testified more specifically than they have in the past on
the amount of supplemental funding they are seeking for the Ohio replacement program, and on
the potential consequences for other shipbuilding programs if this funding is not received. The
Navy testified that the service is seeking about $4 billion per year over 15 years in supplemental
funding—a total of about $60 billion—for the Ohio replacement program.77 The 15 years in

73 Vice Admiral Burke retired on May 20, 2013.
74 Walter Pincus, “Budget Cuts Could Reshape Country’s Ship Supply,” Washington Post, May 2, 2013: 15.
75 Statement of Admiral Jonathan Greenert, U.S. Navy, Chief of Naval Operations, Before the House Armed Services
Committee on Planning for Sequestration in FY 2014 and Perspectives of the Military Services on the Strategic
Choices and Management Review, September 18, 2013, p. 10.
76 Transcript of hearing. (Spoken remarks of Rear Admiral Richard Breckenridge. The other witness at the hearing was
Rear Admiral David Johnson).
77 Transcript of hearing. (Spoken remarks of Rear Admiral Richard Breckenridge.)
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question, Navy officials suggested in their testimony, are the years in which the Ohio replacement
boats are to be procured (FY2021-FY2035, as shown in Table 2).78 The $60 billion in additional
funding equates to an average of $5 billion for each of the 12 boats, which is close to the Navy’s
target of an average unit procurement cost of $4.9 billion in constant FY2010 dollars for boats 2-
12 in the program. The Navy stated at the hearing that the $60 billion in supplemental funding
that the Navy is seeking would equate to less than 1% of DOD’s budget over the 15-year period.
The Navy also suggested that the 41 pre-Ohio class SSBNs that were procured in the 1950s and
1960s (see Table 1) were partially financed with funding that was provided as a supplement to
the Navy’s budget.79
The Navy officials stated at the September 12 hearing that if the Navy were to receive about $30
billion in supplemental funding for the Ohio replacement program—about half the amount that
the Navy is requesting—then the Navy would need to eliminate from its 30-year shipbuilding
plan a notional total of 16 other ships, including, notionally, four Virginia-class attack
submarines, four destroyers, and eight other combatant ships (which might mean ships such as
Littoral Combat Ships or amphibious ships). Navy officials stated, in response to a question, that
if the Navy were to receive none of the supplemental funding that it is requesting, then these
figures could be doubled—that is, that the Navy would need to eliminate from its 30-year
shipbuilding plan a notional total of 32 other ships, including, notionally, eight Virginia-class
attack submarines, eight destroyers, and 16 other combatant ships.80
Some Options for Addressing the Issue
In addition to making further changes and refinements in the design of the SSBN(X), options for
reducing the cost of the Ohio replacement program and the program’s potential impact on funding
available for other Navy shipbuilding programs include the following:
• reducing the planned number of SSBN(X)s;
• altering the schedule for procuring the SSBN(X)s so as to create additional
opportunities for using incremental funding for procuring the ships; and
• funding the procurement of SSBN(X)’s outside the Navy’s shipbuilding budget.
Each of these options is discussed below.

78 Transcript of hearing. (Spoken remarks of Rear Admiral Richard Breckenridge.)
79 Transcript of hearing (Spoken remarks of Rear Admiral Richard Breckenridge.) Regarding supplemental funding for
the 41 earlier SSBNs, Breckenridge stated:
The—just a little backstep and history to talk about the two other times that we've had to, as a
nation, build the strategic deterrent. So in—in the ‘60s we built 41 SSBNs; they were called the 41
For Freedom. We did that in a seven-year period, which again is just an incredible—only in
America could you go ahead and put out 41 ballistic missile submarines in a seven-year period.
There was an impact to other shipbuilding accounts at that time, but the priority was such for
national survival that we had to go ahead and—and make that a—an imperative and a priority.
There was a supplement to the Navy’s top line at that time when we—when we fielded the class,
but it did leave—cast quite a shadow over the rest of the shipbuilding in the ‘60s.
We recapitalized those 41 For Freedom with 18 Ohio-class SSBNs in the ‘80s. It was the Reagan
years. There was a major naval buildup. And underneath the umbrella of that buildup we were able
to afford as a nation the recapitalization of building 18 SSBNs.
80 Transcript of hearing. (Spoken remarks of Rear Admiral Richard Breckenridge.)
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Reducing the Planned Number of SSBN(X)s
Some observers over the years have advocated or presented options for an SSBN force of fewer
than 12 SSBNs. CBO, for example, has at times in the past presented options for reducing the
SSBN force to 10 boats as a cost-reduction measure.81 A June 2010 report by a group known as
the Sustainable Defense Task Force recommends reducing the SSBN force to seven boats;82 a
September 2010 report from the Cato Institute recommends reducing the SSBN force to
six boats,83 and a September 2013 report from a group organized by the Stimson Center
recommends reducing the force to 10 boats.84
Views on whether a force of fewer than 12 SSBN(X)s would be adequate could depend on,
among other things, assessments of strategic nuclear threats to the United States and the role of
SSBNs in deterring such threats as a part of overall U.S. strategic nuclear forces, as influenced by
the terms of strategic nuclear arms control agreements.85 Reducing the number of SSBNs below
12 could also raise a question as to whether the force should continue to be homeported at both
Bangor, WA, and Kings Bay, GA, or consolidated at a single location.
U.S. strategic nuclear deterrence plans require a certain number of strategic nuclear warheads to
be available for use on a day-to-day basis. After taking into account warheads on the other two
legs of the strategic nuclear triad, the number of warheads on an SSBN’s SLBMs, and factors
independent of the number of warheads on the SLBMs, this translates into a requirement for a
certain number of SSBNs to be on station (i.e., within range of expected targets) in Pacific and
Atlantic waters at any given moment. The SSBN force is sized to support this requirement. Given
the time needed for at-sea training operations, restocking SSBNs with food and other
consumables, performing maintenance and repair work on the SSBNs, and transiting to and from
deterrent patrol areas, only a fraction of the SSBN force can be on patrol at any given moment.
The Navy’s position (see “Planned Procurement Quantity: 12 SSBN(X)s to Replace 14 Ohio-
Class Boats” in “Background”) is that the requirement for having a certain number of SSBNs on
patrol at any given moment translates into a need for a force of 14 Ohio-class boats, and that this
requirement can be met in the future by a force of 12 SSBN(X)s.
Altering Procurement Schedule to Make More Use of Incremental Funding
Another option for managing the potential impact of the Ohio replacement program on other
Navy shipbuilding programs would be to stretch out the schedule for procuring SSBN(X)s and
make greater use of split funding (i.e., two-year incremental funding) in procuring them.86 This

81 See, for example, Congressional Budget Office, Rethinking the Trident Force, July 1993, 78 pp.; and Congressional
Budget Office, Budget Options, March 2000, p. 62.
82 Debt, Deficits, and Defense, A Way Forward[:] Report of the Sustainable Defense Task Force, June 11, 2010, pp.
19-20.
83 Benjamin H. Friedman and Christopher Preble, Budgetary Savings from Military Restraint, Washington, Cato
Institute, September 23, 2010 (Policy Analysis No. 667), pp. 8.
84 Strategic Agility: Strong National Defense for Today’s Global and Fiscal Realities, Stimson, Washington, DC, 2013,
p. 29. (Sponsored by the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, Prepared by Stimson, September 2013.)
85 For further discussion, see CRS Report RL33640, U.S. Strategic Nuclear Forces: Background, Developments, and
Issues
, by Amy F. Woolf.
86 Under split funding, a boat’s procurement cost is divided into two parts, or increments. The first increment would be
provided in the fiscal year that the boat is procured, and the second would be provided the following fiscal year.
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option would not reduce the total procurement cost of the Ohio replacement program—to the
contrary, it might increase the program’s total procurement cost somewhat by reducing
production learning curve benefits in the Ohio replacement program.87 This option could,
however, reduce the impact of the Ohio replacement program on the amount of funding available
for the procurement of other Navy ships in certain individual years. This might reduce the amount
of disruption that the Ohio replacement program causes to other shipbuilding programs in those
years, which in turn might avoid certain disruption-induced cost increases for those other
programs. The annual funding requirements for the Ohio replacement program might be further
spread out by funding some of the SSBN(X)s with three- or four-year incremental funding.88
Table 4 shows the Navy’s currently planned schedule for procuring 12 SSBN(X)s and a notional
alternative schedule that would start two years earlier and end two years later than the Navy’s
currently planned schedule. Although the initial ship in the alternative schedule would be
procured in FY2019, it could be executed as it if were funded in FY2021. Subsequent ships in the
alternative schedule that are funded earlier than they would be under the Navy’s currently planned
schedule could also be executed as if they were funded in the year called for under the Navy’s
schedule. Congress in the past has funded the procurement of ships whose construction was
executed as if they had been procured in later fiscal years.89 The ability to stretch the end of the
procurement schedule by two years, to FY2035, could depend on the Navy’s ability to carefully
husband the use of the nuclear fuel cores on the last two Ohio-class SSBNs, so as to extend the
service lives of these two ships by one or two years. Alternatively, Congress could grant the Navy
the authority to begin construction on the 11th boat a year before its nominal year of procurement,
and the 12th boat two years prior to its nominal year of procurement.

87 Procuring one SSBN(X) every two years rather than at the Navy’s planned rate of one per year could result in a loss
of learning at the shipyard in moving from production of one SSBN to the next.
88 The Navy, with congressional support, currently uses split funding to procure large-deck amphibious assault ships
(i.e., LHAs). The Navy currently is permitted by Congress to use four-year incremental funding for procuring the first
three Ford (CVN-78) class carriers (i.e., CVN-78, CVN-79, and CVN-80); the authority was granted in §121 of the
FY2007 defense authorization act [H.R. 5122/P.L. 109-364 of October 17, 2006]).
89 Congress funded the procurement of two aircraft carriers (CVNs 72 and 73) in FY1983, and another two (CVNs 74
and 75) in FY1988. Although CVN-73 was funded in FY1983, it was built on a schedule consistent with a carrier
funded in FY1985; although CVN-75 was funded in FY1988, it was built on a schedule consistent with a carrier funded
in FY1990 or FY1991.
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Table 4. Navy SSBN(X) Procurement Schedule and a Notional Alternative Schedule
Boat might be
Boat might be
particularly suitable
Notional
particularly suitable
Fiscal
Navy’s
for 2-, 3-, or 4-year
alternative
for 2-, 3-, or 4-year
year
Schedule
incremental funding
schedule
incremental funding
2019

1
X
2020



2021 1
X
1
X
2022



2023

1
X
2024 1
X


2025

1
X
2026 1



2027 1

1

2028 1

1

2029 1

1

2030 1

1

2031 1

1
X
2032 1



2033 1
X
1
X
2034 1
X


2035 1
X
1
X
2036



2037

1
X
Total
12 12
Source: Navy’s current plan is taken from the Navy’s FY2014 budget submission. Potential alternative plan
prepared by CRS.
Notes: Notional alternative schedule could depend on Navy’s ability to carefully husband the use of the nuclear
fuel cores on the last two Ohio-class SSBNs, so as to extend the service lives of these two ships by one or two
years. Alternatively, Congress could grant the Navy the authority to begin construction on the 11th boat a year
before its nominal year of procurement, and the 12th boat two years prior to its nominal year of procurement.
Under Navy’s schedule, the boat to be procured in FY2033 might be particularly suitable for 4-year incremental
funding, and boat to be procured in FY2034 might be particularly suitable for 3- or 4-year incremental funding.
A December 19, 2011, press report states:
The Office of Management and Budget’s Nov. 29[, 2011,] passback memorandum to the
Defense Department [regarding the FY2013 DOD budget] warns that the effort to build
replacements for aging Ohio-class submarines is not exempt from rules requiring each new
vessel to be fully funded in a single year....
Spreading the cost of a big-ticket ship over more than one year—an approach referred to as
“incremental funding”—is only allowed when a program meets three criteria, OMB writes....
“OMB does not anticipate that the OHIO Replacement program will meet these criteria,” the
passback memo states.90

90 Christopher J. Castelli, “White House Opposes Incremental Funding For Multibillion-Dollar Sub,” Inside the Navy,
December 19, 2011.
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Procuring SSBN(X)s Outside Navy’s Shipbuilding Budget
Some observers have suggested funding the procurement of SSBN(X)s outside the Navy’s
shipbuilding budget, so as to preserve Navy shipbuilding funds for other Navy shipbuilding
programs. Among those who have raised this idea was Admiral Gary Roughead, the Chief of
Naval Operations (CNO) until September 2011.91 There would be some precedent for such an
arrangement:
• DOD sealift ships and Navy auxiliary ships are funded in the National Defense
Sealift Fund (NDSF), a part of DOD’s budget that is outside the Shipbuilding and
Conversion, Navy (SCN) appropriation account, and also outside the
procurement title of the DOD appropriations act.
• Most spending for ballistic missile defense (BMD) programs (including
procurement-like activities) is funded through the Defense-Wide research and
development account rather than through the research and development and
procurement accounts of the individual military services.
A rationale for funding DOD sealift ships in the NDSF is that DOD sealift ships perform a
transportation mission that primarily benefits services other than the Navy, and therefore should
not be forced to compete for funding in a Navy budget account that funds the procurement of
ships central to the Navy’s own missions. A rationale for funding BMD programs together in the
Defense-Wide research and development account is that this makes potential tradeoffs in
spending among various BMD programs more visible and thereby helps to optimize the use of
BMD funding.
As a reference tool for better understanding DOD spending, DOD includes in its annual budget
submission a presentation of the DOD budget reorganized into 11 program areas, of which one is
strategic forces. The FY2014 budget submission, for example, shows that about $10.8 billion is
requested for the program area for FY2014.92
Supporters of funding the procurement of SSBN(X)s outside the Navy’s shipbuilding budget
might argue that this could help protect funding for other Navy shipbuilding programs. They
could also argue that creating a new budget account for strategic nuclear forces of all kinds could
help DOD better view potential tradeoffs in spending for various strategic nuclear forces
programs and thereby help DOD better optimize the use of strategic forces funding.
Skeptics of funding the procurement of SSBN(X)s outside the Navy’s shipbuilding budget could
argue that it might do little to protect funding for other Navy shipbuilding programs, because if
DOD were to move the SSBN(X)s out of the Navy’s shipbuilding budget, DOD might also
remove the funding that was there for the SSBN(X)s. They might also argue that shifting
SSBN(X)s out of the Navy’s shipbuilding budget would make it harder to track and maintain

91 See, for example, Jason Sherman, “Roughead Wants SSBN(X) Program Funding Outside Shipbuilding Budget,”
Inside the Navy, February 14, 2011.
92 Department of Defense, National Defense Budget Estimates For FY 2014, May 2013, Table 6-4, “Department of
Defense TOA by Program,” page 111. See also Table 6-5 on page 113, which presents the same data in constant
FY2013 dollars. The other 10 program areas in addition to strategic forces are general purpose forces; C3, intelligence
and space; mobility forces; guard and reserve forces; research and development; central supply and management;
training, medical and other; administration and associated; support of other nations; and special operations forces. (A
12th category—other—shows relatively small amounts of funding.)
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oversight over Navy shipbuilding activities, and that creating a new budget account for strategic
nuclear forces of all kinds could endanger the Ohio replacement program by making it more
visible to those who might support reduced spending on nuclear-weapon-related programs.
A March 11, 2010, press report stated: “The massive cost of replacing the Navy’s nuclear ballistic
missile submarines will be shouldered in the coming years by diverting funds from other naval
and Pentagon programs and perhaps by boosting the defense budget, but the program should not
get its own special funding stream, according to Deputy Defense Secretary William Lynn.”93
A March 28, 2011, press report stated that SSBN(X)s
will be funded within the shipbuilding account, not in a separate account as the sea service’s
top admiral has advocated, according to Pentagon acquisition chief Ashton Carter.
“It’s been in the shipbuilding account and our plan is it’s going to stay in the shipbuilding
account,” Carter told Inside the Pentagon March 21 in a brief interview. “We just have to
make it so that it is digestible for the Navy in the context of other shipbuilding needs. And
we want the same things they want. We can manage through that path for decades.”94
At an April 13, 2011, hearing on DOD acquisition before the Defense subcommittee of the House
Appropriations Committee, the following exchange took place:
REPRESNTATIVE CRENSHAW: Dr. Carter, I want to ask about Abrams tanks, kind of the
modification of the start and stop. But – but real quick, we – we talked about the ballistic
missiles submarines and was encouraged to hear that we’ve got a handle on the cost. We
spent a lot of money on the development. I think we start construction in 2019.
But even – even if we – you end up with a boat that costs $5 billion and we have 12 of those,
that’s $60 billion. And we talked about the difficult choices that’s going to present in terms
of surface ships, I just want to pose the question, if – is it under consideration to consider
those submarines like a national asset?
For instance, we – we fund the ballistic missile defense outside of the budget of the services
because it’s truly a national asset. And I wondered, it’s a lot of money. And – and it’s – those
– those submarines are one-third of our nuclear triad. Is consideration being given to
consider those being funded as a national asset outside the ship-building program which
would take away some of the difficult choice in terms of the service ships versus the
submarines?
ASHTON CARTER, UNDER SCRETARY OF DEFENSE FOR ACQUISITON,
TECHNOLOLGY, AND LOGISTICS: The – the best I can do is cite something that
Secretary Gates said which is that he had considered that, then was not attracted to that idea.
I’m paraphrasing, but I think their basic reason was, “Look, the money is going to show up
somewhere anyway. And we’re not going to hide $60 billion by re-labeling. So, let’s keep it
in a way we’ve – we’ve done it.”

93 Christopher J. Castelli, “Lynn: Navy, DOD To Shoulder SSBN(X) Cost Without Separate Fund,” Inside the
Pentagon
, March 11, 2010.
94 Christopher J. Castelli, “Carter: Multibillion-Dollar Nuclear Subs Will Stay In Shipbuilding Account,” Inside the
Navy
, March 28, 2011.
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And I think it was the gist of the secretary’s response. So – so, Secretary Gates had
considered it and was not attracted to the idea. Although he – he thoroughly recognizes the
premise of your question which is there’s a lot of money. And as a practical matter it will
compete with those things in the defense budget.
And that’s one of the reasons why we’ve got to get the cost down.95
An August 1, 2011, press report stated:
[Admiral Jonathan Greenert, who became the Chief of Naval Operations in September 2011,
told] Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.) discussions are still underway in the Pentagon to have the
defense-wide budget share with the Navy some of the costs of the Ohio-class SSBN(X) next-
generation ballistic missile submarine, which is projected to dominate the Navy’s
shipbuilding budget starting at the end of this decade. “If confirmed, I intend to try to
continue those discussions,” Greenert [said] during his confirmation hearing. “In the [2020s],
we have a phenomenon, an unfortunate one, where many of the ships built in the [1980s] will
now come due for retirement. That’s right when the Ohio replacement comes in. So we’ll
work very hard to make sure we got the requirements right. We’ll work very hard with the
acquisition community to drive that cost down but we may even so need some assistance, I
believe, in the shipbuilding budget if we’re going to meet our goals.”96
At a March 29, 2012, hearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee to consider the
nominations of several people for various DOD positions, the following exchange occurred:
SENATOR JACK REED: Secretary Kendall, one of the issues that we have talked about is
the nuclear infrastructure to create and maintain nuclear devices. There is another big part of
that. That is the delivery platforms. And where you are facing a significant set of challenges,
the lead procurement item is the Ohio class replacement submarine, but the Air Force is
talking about the need ultimately to replace their fleet. You have to make, I presume,
improvements in ground-based systems.
When the services look individually at the cost—and I have got more fidelity with respect to
the Navy—these are very, very expensive platforms. They crowd out spending for other
necessary ships in the Navy’s case. And I think there is a very compelling case because this
is a strategic issue that the services alone should not fundamentally share the burden, that in
fact there has to be some DOD defense money because of the strategic nature committed to
help the services. And I think the most immediate situation is in the Navy.
Can you reflect on that and share your views?
Mr. FRANK KENDALL III.97 Yes, Senator Reed. The Department [of Defense] basically
builds its budget as a budget for the entire Department, and we do make tradeoffs that
sometimes cut across the Services? [sic] lines in order to do that. Last fall, what we went
through was a period where we formulated the strategy, the Strategic Guidance that we
published, and that was used to guide the budget process. So that was all done with regard to
priorities to support the strategy. It was not about the service portfolio specifically. At the
end, we came to a decision about the best mix of systems to do that, and we tried to take into

95 Source: Transcript of hearing.
96 “Boomer Sharing,” Defense Daily, August 1, 2011: 1-2.
97 Kendall at the time of the hearing was nominated for the position of Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition,
Technology and Logistics (USD ATL)—the DOD acquisition executive. He was subsequently confirmed for the
position.
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account the long-term issues that you alluded to which include the 30-year shipbuilding plan
which we just sent over which does show that the Ohio replacement does add substantially to
that account. We are going to have to find some other way besides the shipbuilding account
obviously to pay that bill.
We have put cost caps on both the SSBN–X, the Ohio replacement, and on the new bomber
in order to try to control the costs and keep them within an affordable range. But there is
going to be a challenge to us to do this, and it has to be done on a defense-wide DOD basis.98
At an April 24, 2013, hearing before the Defense subcommittee of the Senate Appropriations
Committee, the following exchange occurred:
SENATOR JACK REED (continuing): Let me just shift to another program which is critical
to our national security. That’s the Ohio-class replacement. And in fact, given its recognized
ability to avoid detection, its invulnerability, it becomes more and more critical to the triad.
And I'm wondering, Mr. Secretary and CNO, if you can comment on its growing importance
in terms of the—of the need for it at sea, the replacement?
SECRETARY OF THE NAVY RAY MABUS: Well, that need has been amply documented,
justified. We are on track with all the R&D and early development work to begin
construction in 2021 for the first boat to put to sea in 2029, which would be exactly on
schedule. We're also working very closely with—with our partners, the British, on the
common missile compartment, since they—they are buying for their successor class the
same missile compartment using the same missiles.
But the—one word of caution. We are on track today. It’s a large program. It’s an expensive
program. And actually two words of caution. One is sequestration holds the potential to—to
upset this timeline in a fairly dramatic way.
And second, as we get closer to time, we—there will have to be, as I believe Deputy
Secretary of Defense Carter said in his transmittal of the shipbuilding report last year, a
discussion in terms of the Ohio-class replacement and the rest of our shipbuilding programs
in terms of how we finance this. Because for a period of time there, building these Ohio-class
replacements, as I said, very expensive, incredibly important program, but we need to keep
the rest of our shipbuilding base intact.
REED: If I can follow up, and Admiral Greenert, is there a possibility that if we slip this, it
will have a point at which we cannot have as many ballistic missile submarines at sea as we
need for deterrence, and for strategic posturing?
ADMIRAL JONATHAN GREENERT, CHIEF OF NAVAL OPERATIONS: That’s feasible
but unacceptable, I'd say, Senator. Yes, we—so we can't slip it. And the secretary had it
right. People ask me what is my number-one program of concern, and I would tell you it’s
the Ohio replacement program. I look at that more than any other one.
REED: Well thank you, Admiral. Just one point is that this is part of a strategic—in fact, I
would say the—the most survivable leg of the triad. And it—it’s not just a Navy program.
It’s a national program. And I wonder if there’s any consideration of supporting the Navy’s
efforts with—with funds that are more generically defense rather than more specifically
Navy.

98 Transcript of hearing.
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MABUS: I think that was the conversation I was referring to.99
At a May 8, 2013, hearing on Navy shipbuilding programs before the Seapower subcommittee of
the Senate Armed Services Committee, the following exchange occurred:
SENATOR JACK REED, CHAIRMAN: Senator McCain pointed out, I think, appropriately
that we've got several—many challenges. One is to have an affordable SSBN replacement
for the Ohio class and the other is to maintain carrier production better at a level that we can
afford.
With respect to the Ohio class specifically replacement, since it is a strategic asset because of
its contact with the—it’s part of a triad, are there any attempts to provide—supplement a
funding to the Navy shipbuilding budget because of the strategic dimension or are those talks
progressed or are they have been undertaken in DOD?
SEAN STACKLEY, ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF THE NAVY FOR RESEARCH,
DEVELOPMENT, AND ACQUISITION: Sir, I can answer straightly as those talks have not
progressed. (Inaudible) of that.
REED: OK, that’s an interesting comment. Thank you very much.
STACKLEY: Let me go ahead and expand then.
REED: Yeah.
STACKLEY: The...
REED: That’s a wrap. That was...
STACKLEY: Well, the Navy’s plan in the fit-up [sic: FYDP], we think that the budget that
we have assigned to the numbers that we plan on procuring in the fit-up [sic: FYDP] is
within our reach if you park sequestration momentarily.
But when you get outside of the fit-up [FYDP], now you're quickly answering into the period
where the Ohio Replacement dominates our shipbuilding plan. We spent a lot of effort over
the last couple of years to go after the requirements to drive affordability through the
requirements process and also through the design process. So it’s something that started at
about a $7 billion a unit cost for the Ohio Replacement.
Current estimate is in the $5.6 billion [range]. We are working through the design process to
get it down with an objective of about $5 billion—$4.9 billion. That by itself does not bring
the shipbuilding plan within the reach of affordability.
So if you look at that period of time and you look at the budget of forecast in that period of
time, you have to go back to the period of the 80’s when we are building up the 600-ship
Navy to see those type of shipbuilding budget levels that are projected for the force that is
laid out in the shipbuilding plan. And that is beyond our shipbuilding TOA by any method of
extrapolation.
REED: And that is assuming that we can stabilize the cost in the other shipbuilding
programs.

99 Transcript of hearing.
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STACKLEY: Yes, Sir.100
At a September 12, 2013, hearing before the Seapower and Projection Forces subcommittee of
the House Armed Services Committee on undersea warfare, a Navy official testified that
... I do think it’s important for the country to look at this [Ohio replacement effort] as a
requirement above the Navy’s [own requirements], [as] a strategic level requirement[,] and
we ought to give it the gravity of attention and focus and insulation from the pressures of
sequestration.
That said, the control of those resources must remain resident within the Navy with the
control of our acquisition community. We know how to build submarines, we know how to
oversee the building of submarines, [and] Electric Boat, (inaudible) [and Huntington Ingalls
Industries/Newport News Shipbuilding are the?] best submarine ship builders in the world.
We need to be able to make sure that if we come up with a creative, you know, strategic
account [in the budget] for this [effort] that it’s still the Navy and the ship building team that
has the control and authority over those moneys as we—as we do this recapitalization to
make it as affordable as possible.101
Construction Shipyard(s)
Another potential issue for Congress regarding the Ohio replacement program is which shipyard
or shipyards would build SSBN(X)s. Two U.S. shipyards are capable of building nuclear-powered
submarines—General Dynamics’ Electric Boat Division (GD/EB) of Groton, CT, and Quonset
Point, RI, and Newport News Shipbuilding (NNS), of Newport News, VA, which forms part of
Huntington Ingalls Industries (HII). GD/EB’s primary business is building nuclear-powered
submarines; it can also perform submarine overhaul work. NNS’s primary lines of business are
building nuclear-powered aircraft carriers, building nuclear-powered submarines, and performing
overhaul work on nuclear-powered aircraft carriers.
Table 5 shows the numbers of SSBNs built over time by GD/EB, NNS, and two government-
operated naval shipyards (NSYs)—Mare Island NSY, located in the San Francisco Bay area, and
Portsmouth NSY of Portsmouth, NH, and Kittery, ME. Mare Island NSY is no longer in
operation. NSYs have not built new Navy ships since the early 1970s; since that time, they have
focused solely on overhauling and repairing Navy ships.

100 Transcript of hearing.
101 Transcript of hearing. (Spoken remarks of Rear Admiral Richard Breckenridge. The other witness at the hearing was
Rear Admiral David Johnson).
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Table 5. Construction Shipyards of U.S. SSBNs
George
Lafayette/
Washington
Ethan Allen
Benjamin
Ohio
(SSBN-598)
(SSBN-608)
Franklin (SSBN-
(SSBN-726)

class
class
616/640) class
class
Fiscal years procured
FY58-FY59
FY59 and FY61
FY61-FY64
FY77-FY91
Number built by GD/EB
2
2
13
18
Number built by NNS
1
3
10

Number built by Mare Island NSY
1

6

Number built by Portsmouth NSY
1

2

Total number in class
5
5
31
18
Source: Prepared by CRS based on data in Norman Polmar, The Ships and Aircraft of the U.S. Fleet, Annapolis,
Naval Institute Press, various editions. NSY means naval shipyard.
Notes: GD/EB was the builder of the first boat in all four SSBN classes. The George Washington-class boats
were procured as modifications of SSNs that were already under construction. A total of 18 Ohio-class SSBNs
were built; the first four were converted into SSGNs in 2002-2008, leaving 14 in service as SSBNs.
As can be seen in the table, the Ohio-class boats were all built by GD/EB, and the three previous
SSBN classes were built partly by GD/EB, and partly by NNS. GD/EB was the builder of the first
boat in all four SSBN classes. The most recent SSBNs built by NNS were the George C.
Marshall
(SSBN-654) and George Washington Carver (SSBN-656), which were
Lafayette/Benjamin Franklin-class boats that were procured in FY1964 and entered service in
1966.
There are at least five basic possibilities for building SSBN(X)s:
build all SSBN(X)s at GD/EB—the approach that was used for building the
Ohio-class SSBNs;
build all SSBN(X)s at NNS;
build some SSBN(X)s GD/EB and some at NNS—the approach that was used
for building the George Washington-, Ethan Allen-, and Lafayette/Benjamin
Franklin-class SSBNs;
build each SSBN(X) jointly at GD/EB and NNS, with final assembly of the
boats alternating between the yards—the approach currently being used for
building Virginia-class SSNs;102 and

102 Under the joint-production arrangement for Virginia-class boats, GD/EB builds certain parts of each boat, NNS
builds certain other parts of each boat, and the two yards take turns building the reactor compartment and performing
final assembly work. GD/EB is the final assembly yard for the first Virginia-class boat, the third one, and so on, while
NNS is the final assembly yard for the second boat, the fourth one, and so on. The arrangement provides a roughly 50-
50 split in profits between the two firms for the production of Virginia-class SSNs. The agreement governing the joint-
production arrangement cannot be changed without the consent of both firms. Virginia-class SSNs are the first U.S.
nuclear-powered submarines to be built jointly by two shipyards; all previous U.S. nuclear-powered submarines were
built under the more traditional approach of building an entire boat within a single yard.
The Virginia-class joint-production arrangement was proposed by the two shipyards, approved by the Navy, and then
approved by Congress as part of its action on the FY1998 defense budget. A principal goal of the arrangement is to
preserve submarine-construction skills at two U.S. shipyards while minimizing the cost of using two yards to build a
(continued...)
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build each SSBN(X) jointly at GD/EB and NNS, with one yard—either
GD/EB or NNS—performing final assembly on every boat.
In assessing these five approaches, policymakers may consider a number of factors, including
their potential costs, their potential impacts on employment levels at GD/EB and NNS, and the
relative value of preserving SSBN-unique construction skills (such as those relating to the
construction and installation of SLBM compartments) at one shipyard or two. The relative costs
of these five approaches could depend on a number of factors, including the following:
• each yard’s share of SSBN(X) production work (if both yards are involved);
• the number of SSNs procured during the years of SSBN(X) procurement (which
can affect economies of scale in submarine production);
• whether the current joint-production arrangement for the Virginia class remains
in effect during those years;103 and
• the volume of non-submarine-construction work performed at the two shipyards
during these years, which would include in particular aircraft carrier construction
and overhaul work at NNS.
A January 12, 2011, press report stated:
While the [SSBN(X)] submarine-building contracts would likely be competitively bid,
[Electric Boat President John] Casey says he doubts any other company—even its attack-
submarine-building partner Northrop Grumman [now NNS]—can secure the work. Electric
Boat built the existing Ohio-class fleet.
“We have every intention of building every one of those ships,” he says. “There’s no one
else [who was] involved in designing and building that [Ohio-class] platform.104 It’s up to us
to convince people we can do it at the right price.”105

(...continued)
class of submarines that is procured at a relatively low rate of one or two boats per year. Preserving submarine-
construction skills at two yards is viewed as a hedge against the possibility of operations at one of the yards being
disrupted by a natural or man-made disaster.
The joint-production arrangement is more expensive than single-yard strategy of building all Virginia-class boats at one
shipyard (in part because the joint-production strategy splits the learning curve for reactor compartment construction
and final assembly work on Virginia-class SSNs), but it is less expensive than a separate-yard strategy of building
complete Virginia-class separately at both yards (in part because a separate-construction strategy splits the learning
curve for all aspects of Virginia-class construction work, and because, in the absence of other submarine-construction
work, a procurement rate of one or two Virginia-class boats per year is viewed as insufficient to sustain a meaningful
competition between the two yards for contracts to build the boats).
103 The agreement governing the joint-production arrangement for the Virginia class cannot be changed without the
consent of both yards.
104 The bracketed words in this sentence were inserted by CRS following a February 8, 2011, telephone call to CRS
from Electric Boat in which Electric Boat stated that sentence in Mr. Casey’s quote refers to Electric Boat being the
sole designer and builder of the current Ohio-class SSBNs.
105 Michael Fabey, “Electric Boat Recruits Engineers For Ohio-Class Sub Replacement,” Aerospace Daily & Defense
Report
, January 12, 2011: 1-2.
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Legislative Activity for FY2014
FY2014 Funding Request
As shown in Table 3, the Navy’s proposed FY2014 budget requests $1,083.7 million in research
and development funding for the Ohio replacement program, including $787.6 million for Project
3220 (SBSD—sea-based strategic deterrent) in PE0603561N (Advanced Submarine System
Development), and $296.1 million for Project 3219 (SSBN[X] reactor plant) in PE0603570N
(Advanced Nuclear Power Systems).
FY2014 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 1960/S. 1197)
House
The House Armed Services Committee, in its report (H.Rept. 113-102 of June 7, 2013) on H.R.
1960, recommends approval of the Navy’s request for FY2014 research and development funding
for the Ohio replacement program in PE0603561N (Advanced Submarine System Development)
and PE0603570N (Advanced Nuclear Power Systems). (Page 428, lines 042 and 046.)
Section 223 of H.R. 1960 as reported states:
SEC. 223. SENSE OF CONGRESS ON IMPORTANCE OF ALIGNING COMMON
MISSILE COMPARTMENT OF OHIO-CLASS REPLACEMENT PROGRAM WITH THE
UNITED KINGDOM’S VANGUARD SUCCESSOR PROGRAM.
(a) Findings- Congress finds the following:
(1) The Polaris Sales Agreement of 1963 formally arranged for the Polaris missile system to
be purchased by the United Kingdom for its submarines. It was extended in 1982 to include
the Trident missile system and this agreement continues to underpin the independent nuclear
deterrent of the United Kingdom.
(2) April 2013 marked the 50-year anniversary of the agreement.
(3) Since the inception of the agreement, the agreement has been a tremendous success and
provided great benefits to both nations by creating major cost savings, stronger nuclear
deterrence, and a stronger alliance.
(4) The Ohio-class ballistic missile submarine replacement of the United States and the
Vanguard-class ballistic missile successor of the United Kingdom will share a common
missile compartment and the Trident II/D5 strategic weapon system.
(b) Sense of Congress- It is the sense of Congress that the Secretary of Defense and the
Secretary of the Navy should make every effort to ensure that the common missile
compartment associated with the Ohio-class ballistic missile submarine replacement program
stays on schedule and is aligned with the Vanguard-successor program of the United
Kingdom in order for the United States to fulfill its longstanding commitment to our ally and
partner in sea-based strategic deterrence.
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Regarding Section 223, H.Rept. 113-102 states:
Section 223—Sense of Congress on Importance of Aligning Common Missile Compartment
of Ohio-Class Replacement Program with the United Kingdom’s Vanguard Successor
Program
This section would make a series of findings and express the sense of Congress regarding the
importance of aligning the common missile compartment of the Ohio-class ballistic missile
submarine program with the Vanguard-class successor program of the United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
The Polaris Sales Agreement of 1963 has been a cornerstone of the U.S. alliance with the
United Kingdom for 50 years and has brought significant benefits to both parties. Under a
1982 extension of the agreement, the United Kingdom purchases the Trident missile system
from the United States for use in its submarines. Both Nations will field the Trident II/D5
strategic weapon system in their respective next generation of submarines. These new
submarines will share a common missile compartment that is currently being developing
through a cost-shared program conducted by the Navy. In fiscal year 2013, the Navy delayed
the Ohio-class replacement program by 2 years due to fiscal constraints, but decided to keep
the common missile program on the original schedule to meet its obligation to provide the
compartment to the United Kingdom in time for insertion into the Vanguard-class successor.
The committee applauds this decision and encourages the Secretary of Defense and the
Secretary of the Navy to continue to prioritize the common missile compartment such that it
stays aligned with the Vanguard-successor program. The committee believes that keeping
this common missile compartment program aligned with the Vanguard-successor program is
critical to ensuring the United States fulfills its longstanding obligation to a crucial ally.
(Pages 106-107)
Senate
The Senate Armed Services Committee, in its report (S.Rept. 113-44 of June 20, 2013) on S.
1197, recommends approval of the Navy’s request for FY2014 research and development funding
for the Ohio replacement program in PE0603561N (Advanced Submarine System Development)
and PE0603570N (Advanced Nuclear Power Systems). (Page 336, lines 42 and 46.)
FY2014 DOD Appropriations Act (H.R. 2397/S. 1429)
House (Committee Report)
The House Appropriations Committee, in its report (H.Rept. 113-113 of June 17, 2013) on H.R.
2397, recommends reducing by $2.795 million the Navy’s request for FY2014 research and
development funding for PE0603561N (Advanced Submarine System Development), with the
reduction being for “Test and evaluation support funding ahead of need.” (Page 224, line 42, and
page 231, line 42.) This reduction would appear to apply to Project 3220 (SBSD—sea-based
strategic deterrent) in PE0603561N, since the funding request for Project 3220 includes, among
other things, a request for $2.795 million for test and evaluation support.106 H.Rept. 113-113

106 Department of Defense Fiscal Year (FY) 2014 President’s Budget Submission, Navy, Justification Book Volume 2 of
5, Research, Development, Test & Evaluation, Navy, Budget Activity 4
, April 2013, p. 332 (pdf page 364 of 932).
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recommends approval of the Navy’s request for FY2014 research and development funding for
PE0603570N (Advanced Nuclear Power Systems). (Page 224, line 46.)
House (Floor Consideration)
On July 23, 2013, as part of its consideration of H.R. 2397, the House rejected, 49-372, H.Amdt.
357, which would have reduced FY2014 research and development funding for the Ohio
replacement program by $85 million. The sponsor of the amendment, Representative
Blumenauer, stated that the amendment was intended to “help the Navy plan for the likely effects
of sequestration by cutting Cold War weapons rather than what the military really needs.”
(Congressional Record, daily edition, July 23, 2013, p. H4918). The amendment was listed as No.
15 in H.Rept. 113-170 of July 22, 2013, on H.Res. 312, which provided for the consideration of
H.R. 2397.
Senate
The Senate Appropriations Committee, in its report (S.Rept. 113-85 of August 1, 2013) on S.
1429, recommends reducing by $25 million the Navy’s request for FY2014 research and
development funding for PE0603561N (Advanced Submarine System Development), with the
reduction being for “Improving funds management: Unobligated balances for early to need
affordability initiatives.” (Page 155, line 42, and page 158, line 42.) S.Rept. 113-85 recommends
approval of the Navy’s request for FY2014 research and development funding for PE0603570N
(Advanced Nuclear Power Systems). (Page 155, line 46.)

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Appendix A. June 2013 Navy Blog Post Regarding
Ohio Replacement Options

This appendix presents the text of a June 26, 2013, blog post by Rear Admiral Richard
Breckenridge, the Navy’s Director for Undersea Warfare (N97), discussing options that were
examined for replacing the Ohio-class SSBNs. The text is as follows:
Over the last five years, the Navy – working with U.S. Strategic Command, the Joint Staff
and the Office of the Secretary of Defense – has formally examined various options to
replace the Ohio ballistic missile submarines as they retire beginning in 2027. This analysis
included a variety of replacement platform options, including designs based on the highly
successful Virginia-class attack submarine program and the current Ohio-class ballistic
missile submarine. In the end, the Navy elected to pursue a new design that leverages the
lessons from the Ohio, the Virginia advances in shipbuilding and improvements in cost-
efficiency.
Recently, a variety of writers have speculated that the required survivable deterrence could
be achieved more cost effectively with the Virginia-based option or by restarting the Ohio-
class SSBN production line. Both of these ideas make sense at face value – which is why
they were included among the alternatives assessed – but the devil is in the details. When we
examined the particulars, each of these options came up short in both military effectiveness
and cost efficiency.
Virginia-based SSBN design with a Trident II D5 missile. An SSBN design based on a
Virginia-class attack submarine with a large-diameter missile compartment was rejected due
to a wide range of shortfalls. It would:

Not meet survivability (stealth) requirements due to poor hull streamlining and lack of a
drive train able to quietly propel a much larger ship

Not meet at-sea availability requirements due to longer refit times (since equipment is
packed more tightly within the hull, it requires more time to replace, repair and retest)

Not meet availability requirements due to a longer mid-life overhaul (refueling needed)

Require a larger number of submarines to meet the same operational requirement

Reduce the deterrent value needed to protect the country (fewer missiles, warheads at-
sea)

Be more expensive than other alternatives due to extensive redesign of Virginia systems
to work with the large missile compartment (for example, a taller sail, larger control surfaces
and more robust support systems)
We would be spending more money (on more ships) to deliver less deterrence (reduced at-
sea warhead presence) with less survivability (platforms that are less stealthy).
Virginia-based SSBN design with a smaller missile. Some have encouraged the
development of a new, smaller missile to go with a Virginia-based SSBN. This would carry
forward many of the shortfalls of a Virginia-based SSBN we just discussed, and add to it a
long list of new issues. Developing a new nuclear missile from scratch with an industrial
base that last produced a new design more than 20 years ago would be challenging, costly
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and require extensive testing. We deliberately decided to extend the life of the current missile
to decouple and de-risk the complex (and costly) missile development program from the new
replacement submarine program. Additionally, a smaller missile means a shorter
employment range requiring longer SSBN patrol transits. This would compromise
survivability, require more submarines at sea and ultimately weaken our deterrence
effectiveness. With significant cost, technical and schedule risks, there is little about this
option that is attractive.
Ohio-based SSBN design. Some have argued that we should re-open the Ohio production
line and resume building the Ohio design SSBNs. This simply cannot be done because there
is no Ohio production line. It has long since been re-tooled and modernized to build state-of-
the-art Virginia-class SSNs using computerized designs and modular, automated
construction techniques. Is it desirable to redesign the Ohio so that a ship with its legacy
performance could be built using the new production facilities? No, since an Ohio-based
SSBN would:

Not provide the required quieting due to Ohio design constraints and use of a propeller
instead of a propulsor (which is the standard for virtually all new submarines)

Require 14 instead of 12 SSBNs by reverting to Ohio class operational availability
standards (incidentally creating other issues with the New START treaty limits)

Suffer from reduced reliability and costs associated with the obsolescence of legacy
Ohio system components
Once again, the end result would necessitate procuring more submarines (14) to provide the
required at-sea presence and each of them would be less stealthy and less survivable against
foreseeable 21st century threats.
The Right Answer: A new design SSBN that improves on Ohio: What has emerged from
the Navy’s exhaustive analysis is an Ohio replacement submarine that starts with the
foundation of the proven performance of the Ohio SSBN, its Trident II D5 strategic weapons
system and its operating cycle. To this it adds:

Enhanced stealth as necessary to pace emerging threats expected over its service life

Systems commonality with Virginia (pumps, valves, sonars, etc.) wherever possible,
enabling cost savings in design, procurement, maintenance and logistics

Modular construction and use of COTS equipment consistent with those used in today’s
submarines to reduce the cost of fabrication, maintenance and modernization. Total
ownership cost reduction (for example, investing in a life-of-the-ship reactor core enables
providing the same at-sea presence with fewer platforms). Although the Ohio replacement is
a “new design,” it is in effect an SSBN that takes the best lessons from 50 years of undersea
deterrence, from the Ohio, from the Virginia, from advances in shipbuilding efficiency and
maintenance, and from the stern realities of needing to provide survivable nuclear deterrence.
The result is a low-risk, cost-effective platform capable of smoothly transitioning from the
Ohio and delivering effective 21st century undersea strategic deterrence.107

107 “Facts We Can Agree Upon About Design of Ohio Replacement SSBN,” Navy Live, accessed July 3, 2013, at
http://navylive.dodlive.mil/2013/06/26/facts-we-can-agree-upon-about-design-of-ohio-replacement-ssbn/.
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Appendix B. Earlier Oversight Issue:
A Design with 16 vs. 20 SLBM Tubes

Overview
An earlier oversight issue for Congress concerned the plan to design the SSBN(X) with 16 SLBM
tubes rather than 20—one of several decisions made to reduce the estimated average procurement
cost of boats 2 through 12 in the program to $5.6 billion in FY2010 dollars.108 Some observers
were concerned that designing the SSBN(X) with 16 tubes rather than 20 would create a risk that
U.S. strategic nuclear forces might not have enough capability in the 2030s and beyond to fully
perform their deterrent role. These observers noted that to comply with the New Start Treaty
limiting strategic nuclear weapons, DOD plans to operate in coming years a force of 14 Trident
SSBNs, each with 20 operable SLBM tubes (4 of the 24 tubes on each boat are to be rendered
inoperable), for a total of 240 tubes, whereas the Navy in the Ohio replacement program is
planning a force of 12 SSBNs each with 16 tubes, for a total of 192 tubes, or 20% less than 240.
These observers also cited the uncertainties associated with projecting needs for strategic
deterrent forces out to the year 2080, when the final SSBN(X) is scheduled to leave service.
These observers asked whether the plan to design the SSBN(X) with 16 tubes rather than 20 was
fully supported within all parts of DOD, including U.S. Strategic Command (STRATCOM).
In response, Navy and other DOD officials stated that the decision to design the SSBN(X) with
16 tubes rather than 20 was carefully considered within DOD, and that they believe a boat with
16 tubes will give U.S. strategic nuclear forces enough capability to fully perform their deterrent
role in the 2030s and beyond.

108 At a March 30, 2011, hearing before the Strategic Forces subcommittee of the Senate Armed Services Committee,
Admiral Kirkland Donald, Deputy Administrator for Naval Reactors and Director, Naval Nuclear Propulsion, National
Nuclear Security Administration, when asked for examples cost efficiencies that are being pursued in his programs,
stated:
The—the Ohio replacement [program] has been one that we’ve obviously been focused on here
for—for several years now. But in the name of the efficiencies, and one of the issues as we work
through the Defense Department’s acquisition process, we were the first program through that new
process that Dr. [Aston] Carter [the DOD acquisition executive] headed up.
But we were challenged to—to drive the cost of that ship down, and as far as our part was
concerned, one of the key decisions that was made that—that helped us in that regard was a
decision to go from 20 missile tubes to 16 missile tubes, because what that allowed us to do was to
down rate the—the propulsion power that was needed, so obviously, it’s a – it’s a small[er] the
reactor that you would need.
But what it also allowed us to do was to go back [to the use of existing components]. The size [of
the ship] fell into the envelope where we could go back and use components that we had already
designed for the Virginia class [attack submarines] and bring those into this design, not have to do
it over again, but several of the mechanical components, to use those over again.
And it enabled us to drive the cost of that propulsion plant down and rely on proven technology
that’s—pumps and valves and things like that don’t change like electronics do.
So we’re pretty comfortable putting that in ship that’ll be around ‘til 2080. But we were allowed to
do that.
(Source: Transcript of hearing.)
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Testimony in 2011
At a March 1, 2011, hearing before the House Armed Services Committee, Admiral Gary
Roughead, then-Chief of Naval Operations, stated:
I’m very comfortable with where we're going with SSBN-X. The decision and the
recommendation that I made with regard to the number of tubes—launch tubes are consistent
with the new START treaty. They’re consistent with the missions that I see that ship having
to perform. And even though it may be characterized as a cost cutting measure, I believe it
sizes the ship for the missions it will perform.109
At a March 2, 2011, hearing before the Strategic Forces subcommittee of the House Armed
Services Committee, the following exchange occurred:
REPRESENTATIVE TURNER:
General Kehler, thank you so much for your continued thoughts and of course your
leadership. One item that we had a discussion on was the triad, of looking to—of the Navy
and the tube reductions of 20 to 16, as contained in other hearings on the Hill today. I would
like your thoughts on the reduction of the tubes and what you see driving that, how you see it
affecting our strategic posture and any other thoughts you have on that?
AIR FORCE GENERAL C. ROBERT KEHLER, COMMANDER, U.S. STRATEGIC
COMMAND
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Well, first of all, sir, let me say that the—in my mind anyway, the
discussion of Trident and Ohio-class replacement is really a discussion in the context of the
need to modernize the entire triad. And so, first of all, I think that it’s important for us to
recognize that that is one piece, an important piece, but a piece of the decision process that
we need to go through.
Second, the issue of the number of tubes is not a simple black-and-white answer. So let me
just comment here for a minute.
First of all, the issue in my mind is the overall number of tubes we wind up with at the end,
not so much as the number of tubes per submarine.
Second, the issue is, of course, we have flexibility and options with how many warheads per
missile per tube, so that’s another consideration that enters into this mixture.
Another consideration that is important to me is the overall number of boats and the
operational flexibility that we have with the overall number of boats, given that some
number will need to be in maintenance, some number will need to be in training, et cetera.
And so those and many other factors—to include a little bit of foresight here, in looking
ahead to 20 years from now in antisubmarine warfare environment that the Navy will have to
operate in, all of those bear on the ultimate sideways shape configuration of a follow-on to
the Ohio.

109 Source: Transcript of hearing.
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At this point, Mr. Chairman, I am not overly troubled by going to 16 tubes. As I look at this,
given that we have that kind of flexibility that I just laid out; given that this is an element of
the triad and given that we have some decision space here as we go forward to decide on the
ultimate number of submarines, nothing troubles me operationally here to the extent that I
would oppose a submarine with 16 tubes.
I understand the reasons for wanting to have 20. I understand the arguments that were made
ahead of me. But as I sit here today, given the totality of the discussion, I am—as I said, I am
not overly troubled by 16. Now, I don’t know that the gavel has been pounded on the other
side of the river yet with a final decision, but at this point, I am not overly troubled by 16.110
At an April 5, 2011, hearing before the Strategic Forces subcommittee of the House Armed
Services Committee, the following exchange occurred:
REPRESENTATIVE LARSEN:
General Benedict, we have had this discussion, not you and I, I am sorry. But the
subcommittee has had a discussion in the past with regards to the Ohio-class replacement
program.
The new START, though, when it was negotiated, assumed a reduction from 24 missile
tubes per hole to, I think, a maximum a maximum of 20.
The current configuration [for the SSBN(X)], as I understand it, would move from 24 to 16.
Can you discuss, for the subcommittee here, the Navy’s rationale for that? For moving from
24 to 16 as opposed to the max of 20?
NAVY REAR ADMIRAL TERRY BENEDICT, DIRECTOR, STRATEGIC SYSTEMS
PROGRAMS (SSP):
Sir, as part—excuse me, as part of the work-up for the milestone A [review for the SSBN(X)
program] with Dr. Carter in OSD, SSP supported the extensive analysis at both the OSD
level as well as STRATCOM’s analysis.
Throughout that process, we provided, from the SWS [strategic weapon system] capability,
our perspective. Ultimately that was rolled up into both STRATCOM and OSD and senior
Navy leadership and in previous testimony, the secretary of the Navy, the CNO, and General
Chilton have all expressed their confidence that the mission of the future, given their
perspectives, is they see the environment today can be met with 16.
And so, as the acquisition and the SWS provider, we are prepared to support that decision by
leadership, sir.
REPRESENTATIVE LARSEN:
Yes.
And your analysis supports—did your analysis that fed into this, did you look at specific
numbers then?

110 Source: Transcript of hearing.
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REARD ADMIRAL BENEDICT:
Sir, we looked at the ability of the system, again, SSP does not look at specific targets with...
REPRESENTATIVE LARSEN:
Right. Yes, yes, yes.
REAR ADMIRAL BENEDICT:
Our input was the capability of the missile, the number of re-entry bodies and the throw
weight that we can provide against those targets and based on that analysis, the leadership
decision was 16, sir.111
At an April 6, 2011, hearing before the Strategic Forces subcommittee of the Senate Armed
Services Committee, the following exchange occurred:
SENATOR SESSIONS:
Admiral Benedict, according to recent press reports, the Navy rejected the recommendations
of Strategic Command to design the next generation of ballistic missile submarines with 20
missile tubes instead of opting for only 16 per boat.
What is the basis for the Navy’s decision of 16? And I'm sure cost is a factor. In what ways
will that decision impact the overall nuclear force structure associated with the command?
NAVY REAR ADMIRAL TERRY BENEDICT, DIRECTOR, STRATEGIC SYSTEMS
PROGRAMS (SSP):
Yes, sir. SSP supported the Navy analysis, STRATCOM’s analysis, as well as the OSD
analysis, as we proceeded forward and towards the Milestone A decision [on the SSBN(X)
program] that Dr. Carter conducted.
Based on our input, which was the technical input as the—as the director of SSP, other
factors were considered, as you stated. Cost was one of them. But as the secretary, as the
CNO, and I think as General Kehler submitted in their testimony, that given the threats that
we see today, given the mission that we see today, given the upload capability of the D-5,
and given the environment as they saw today, all three of those leaders were comfortable
with the decision to proceed forward with 16 tubes, sir.
SENATOR SESSIONS:
And is that represent your judgment? To what extent were you involved—were you involved
in that?
REAR ADMIRAL BENEDICT:
Sir, we were involved from technical aspects in terms of the capability of the missile itself,
what we can throw, our range, our capability. And based on what we understand the

111 Source: Transcript of hearing.
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capability of the D-5 today, which will be the baseline missile for the Ohio Replacement
Program, as the director of SSP I’m comfortable with that decision.112
Section 242 Report
Section 242 of the FY2012 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 1540/P.L. 112-81 of
December 31, 2011) required DOD to submit a report on the Ohio replacement program that
includes, among other things, an assessment of various combinations of boat quantities and
numbers of SLBM launch tubes per boat. The text of the section is as follows:
SEC. 242. REPORT AND COST ASSESSMENT OF OPTIONS FOR OHIO-CLASS
REPLACEMENT BALLISTIC MISSILE SUBMARINE.
(a) Report Required- Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the
Secretary of the Navy and the Commander of the United States Strategic Command shall
jointly submit to the congressional defense committees a report on each of the options
described in subsection (b) to replace the Ohio-class ballistic submarine program. The report
shall include the following:
(1) An assessment of the procurement cost and total life-cycle costs associated with each
option.
(2) An assessment of the ability for each option to meet—
(A) the at-sea requirements of the Commander that are in place as of the date of the
enactment of this Act; and
(B) any expected changes in such requirements.
(3) An assessment of the ability for each option to meet—
(A) the nuclear employment and planning guidance in place as of the date of the enactment
of this Act; and
(B) any expected changes in such guidance.
(4) A description of the postulated threat and strategic environment used to inform the
selection of a final option and how each option provides flexibility for responding to changes
in the threat and strategic environment.
(b) Options Considered- The options described in this subsection to replace the Ohio-class
ballistic submarine program are as follows:
(1) A fleet of 12 submarines with 16 missile tubes each.
(2) A fleet of 10 submarines with 20 missile tubes each.
(3) A fleet of 10 submarines with 16 missile tubes each.
(4) A fleet of eight submarines with 20 missile tubes each.

112 Source: Transcript of hearing.
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(5) Any other options the Secretary and the Commander consider appropriate.
(c) Form- The report required under subsection (a) shall be submitted in unclassified form,
but may include a classified annex.
Subsection (c) above states the report “shall be submitted in unclassified form, but may include a
classified annex.”
The report as submitted was primarily the classified annex, with a one-page unclassified
summary, the text of which is as follows (underlining as in the original):
The National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2012 (FY12) directed the
Secretary of the Navy and the Commander of U.S. Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM) to
jointly submit a report to the congressional defense committees comparing four different
options for the OHIO Replacement (OR) fleet ballistic missile submarine (SSBN) program.
Our assessment considered the current operational requirements and guidance. The four
SSBN options analyzed were:
1. 12 SSBNs with 16 missile tubes each
2. 10 SSBNs with 20 missile tubes each
3. 10 SSBNs with 16 missile tubes each
4. 8 SSBNs with 20 missile tubes each
The SSBN force continues to be an integral part of our nuclear Triad and contributes to
deterrence through an assured second strike capability that is survivable, reliable, and
credible. The number of SSBNs and their combined missile tube capacity are important
factors in our flexibility to respond to changes in the threat and uncertainty in the strategic
environment.
We assessed each option against the ability to meet nuclear employment and planning
guidance, ability to satisfy at-sea requirements, flexibility to respond to future changes in the
postulated threat and strategic environment, and cost. In general, options with more SSBNs
can be adjusted downward in response to a diminished threat; however, options with less
SSBNs are more difficult to adjust upward in response to a growing threat.
Clearly, a smaller SSBN force would be less expensive than a larger force, but for the
reduced force options we assessed, they fail to meet current at-sea and nuclear employment
requirements, increase risk in force survivability, and limit flexibility in response to an
uncertain strategic future. Our assessment is the program of record, 12 SSBNs with 16
missile tubes each, provides the best balance of performance, flexibility, and cost meeting
commander’s requirements while supporting the Nation’s strategic deterrence mission goals
and objectives.
The classified annex contains detailed analysis that is not releasable to the public.113


113 Report and Cost Assessment of Options for OHIO-Class Replacement Ballistic Missile Submarine, Unclassified
Summary, received from Navy Legislative Affairs Office, August 24, 2012. See also Christopher J. Castelli,
“Classified Navy Assessment On SSBN(X) Endorses Program Of Record,” Inside the Navy, September 10, 2012.
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Author Contact Information

Ronald O'Rourke

Specialist in Naval Affairs
rorourke@crs.loc.gov, 7-7610


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