Order Code RS20162
April 20, 1999
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Cruise Missile Inventories and NATO Attacks
on Yugoslavia: Background Information
Ronald O’Rourke
Specialist in National Defense
Foreign Affairs, Defense, and Trade Division
Summary
Press reports suggest that, as of mid-April, there were less than 100 Conventional
Air-Launched Cruise Missiles (CALCMs) and between 1,000 and 1,100 Block III
Tomahawk land-attack cruise missiles (TLAMs) remaining in the U.S. military inventory.
No additional CALCMs will likely enter inventory for at least several months, and only
small numbers of additional TLAMs are scheduled for delivery in coming months.
Depending on the circumstances, other kinds of weapons can be substituted for
CALCMs and TLAMs, but in some cases, particularly for carrying out precision attacks
on heavily defended targets in bad weather, CALCMs or TLAMs may be the most (or
only) appropriate weapons. This report is intended primarily for Members and staffers
who are following Operation Allied Force or who track procurement of Air Force or
Navy weapons, particularly cruise missiles. It will be updated as events warrant. The
overall status of NATO military operations in and around Yugoslavia is covered in CRS
Issue Brief IB10027,
Kosovo: U.S. and Allied Military Operations.
Introduction
This short report provides background information on the Air Force’s Conventional
Air-Launched Cruise Missile (CALCM) and the conventionally armed version of the
Navy’s Tomahawk land-attack cruise missile (TLAM). The use of dozens of these
weapons in Operation Allied Force, the NATO air campaign against Yugoslavia that began
on March 24, 1999, has raised concerns in Congress and elsewhere about whether the U.S.
military has sufficient numbers of these weapons in inventory for the remainder of
Operation Allied Force and for other potential military operations that may be carried out
over the next few years.
Congressional Research Service ˜
The Library of Congress
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CALCM and TLAM
The CALCM and the conventionally armed version of the TLAM are the U.S.
military’s primary long-range, conventionally armed land-attack cruise missiles.
Essentially, these weapons are small (about 20-foot-long), pilotless aircraft propelled by
turbofan engines that guide themselves to their programmed targets using a combination
of satellite navigation data and on-board guidance systems.
CALCM. The CALCM (pronounced KAL-cum) is launched by Air Force B-52
bombers. It has a range of several hundred miles and reportedly can carry a warhead
weighing as much as 3,000 pounds. A single B-52 can carry as many as 20 CALCMs —
8 in a rotary launcher in the plane’s internal bomb bay, and 6 under each wing. B-52s in
recent combat operations reportedly have carried only 8 CALCMs each in their internal
launchers because the additional aerodynamic drag caused by underwing missiles increases
in-flight refueling requirements for long-distance missions.
CALCMs are produced by converting existing nuclear-armed air-launched cruise
missiles (ALCMs) into conventionally armed versions of the weapon. Procurement of
ALCMs began at the start of the 1980s and ended in FY1984; a total of more than 1,700
missiles were delivered between 1982 and 1986. Conversion of limited numbers of
ALCMs into CALCMs started in the latter 1980s; the first CALCM may have entered
service around 1988. Existence of the CALCM was not made public until Operation
Desert Storm in early 1991, when the weapon was first used in combat.
TLAM. The conventionally armed version of the TLAM (pronounced TEE-lam) is
launched from U.S. Navy cruisers, destroyers, and attack submarines. It has a range of
up to about 1,000 miles and carries either a single warhead of up to 1,000 pounds (TLAM-
C), a submunition dispenser with 166 bomblets (TLAM-D), or other specialized warheads.
A Navy cruiser or destroyer equipped with a vertical launch system can carry several
dozen TLAMs, the exact number depending on the particular class of ship in question,
while a Navy attack submarine can carry as many as three dozen TLAMs.1
Tomahawks entered service in the early to mid-1980s in several variants, including
a conventional anti-ship variant and a nuclear land-attack variant. The conventional land-
attack variant has been upgraded over time; the latest and most capable version is the
Block III, which entered service in 1993. The Block III upgrade added satellite navigation
(which permits easier and more flexible route planning), the ability to precisely control the
U.S.
1
Navy surface combatants use vertical launch systems to store and fire both TLAMs and other
weapons (primarily surface-to-air missiles). Depending on the mix of TLAMs and other weapons
loaded, Ticonderoga (CG-47) class Aegis cruisers with hull number CG-52 and higher (the final
22 ships in the 27-ship class) can carry as many as 122 TLAMs, Arleigh Burke (DDG-51) class
Aegis destroyers can carry as many as 90, and most Spruance (DD-963) class destroyers can carry
as many as 61. Sturgeon (SSN-637) and Los Angeles (SSN-688) class attack submarines can
carry up to two dozen TLAMs in their internal torpedo magazines, depending on the mix of
TLAMs and other weapons loaded. Los Angeles class submarines with hull numbers SSN-719 and
higher (the final 31 ships in the class) can carry an additional 12 TLAMs in a Tomahawk-only
vertical launch system installed in their forward ballast tanks. The Navy’s three Seawolf (SSN-21)
class attack submarines can carry as many as 50 TLAMs in their internal torpedo magazines,
depending on the mix of TLAMs and other weapons loaded.
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time of arrival at the target, an improved warhead, and greater range. U.S. military theater
commanders tend to prefer the Block III version over the older and less capable Block II
version of the weapon; the Navy testified to the Senate Armed Services Committee in
March 1999 that of TLAMs used in recent military operations, about 90% have been
Block IIIs.
Procurement of Tomahawks began in the early 1980s and concluded in FY1997; a
total of about 4,200 Tomahawks of various kinds were procured during this period. The
final 120 new-production Tomahawks procured in FY1997 were scheduled to enter
inventory at a rate of 10 per month during the 12 months of FY1999 (October 1999-
September 2000).
Recent uses of CALCM and TLAM
Table 1 below shows the unclassified numbers of CALCMs and TLAMs believed to
have been fired in Operation Desert Storm (the first combat use for both weapons) and in
subsequent combat operations.
Table 1. Numbers of CALCMs and TLAMs fired in combat, 1991-present
Date
Operation name
Location of
Number of missiles
targets
fired
CALCM
TLAM
Jan.-Feb. 1991
Desert Storm
Iraq
35
288
Jan. 17, 1993
Southern Watch
Iraq
0
45
June 26, 1993
Bushwhacker
Iraq
0
23
Sep. 10, 1995
Deliberate Force
Bosnia
0
13
Sep. 3-4, 1996
Desert Strike
Iraq
13
31
Aug. 20, 1998
Resolute Response
Afghan., Sudan
0
79
Dec. 17-20, 1998
Desert Fox
Iraq
~90
~325
Mar. 24-Apr. 16, 1999*
Allied Force
Yugoslavia
~60?
~150?
Sources: For operations prior to Resolute Response: For CALCM: Information supplied to CRS
by U.S. Air Force Office of Legislative Affairs, April 2, 1999. For TLAM: U.S. Congress.
House. Committee on National Security. Hearings on National Defense Authorization Act for
Fiscal Year 1999 — H.R. 3616, and Oversight of Previously Authorized Programs. 105th Cong.,
2nd Sess., Title I — Procurement [and] Title II — Research, Development, Test and Evaluation,
Hearings Held February 26, March 4, 5, 10, April 1, and June 11, 1998. Washington, 1999. p.
263. For Resolute Response and subsequent operations: newspaper and trade press reports.
* Operation Allied Force still ongoing as of April 16, 1999; data presented are estimated numbers
fired through April 16, 1999.
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Inventory levels of CALCM and TLAM2
CALCM. Prior to Operation Desert Fox, the Air Force reportedly had an inventory
of about 238 CALCMs. Subtracting the 90 or so reportedly fired in Desert Fox would
leave about 148 in inventory prior to Operation Allied Force. This is consistent with trade
press reports stating that the Air Force had a total of about 150 CALCMs at the start of
Operation Allied Force. If about 60 CALCMs have been used to date in Operation Allied
Force, this would leave a total of about 90 still in inventory. Again, this figure is
consistent with recent press reports.
TLAM. Press reports vary somewhat, but prior to Operation Desert Fox, the Navy
reportedly was aiming to have a total of about 3,000 Tomahawks in inventory by the end
of 1998, including roughly 1,500 Block III TLAMs. Subtracting the 325 or so TLAMs
fired in Operation Desert Fox, would leave something less than 2,700 Tomahawks in
inventory, including perhaps something less than 1,200 Block III TLAMs. If about 150
TLAMs have been used in Operation Allied Force, this might leave a total of roughly
2,500 to 2,600 Tomahawks in inventory, including perhaps about 1,000 to 1,100 Block
III TLAMs. The figure of 1,100 missiles appears in at least one early-April press report.
The Navy also has hundreds of older Block II TLAMs in inventory.
Plans for additional CALCMS and Block III TLAMs
CALCM. In February 1999, the Air Force submitted to Congress a request to
reprogram $51.5 million in FY1999 funding to finance the conversion of 92 ALCMs into
CALCMs — 90 to replace the missiles fired in Operation Desert Fox, and 2 for use as test
missiles. Also in February 1999, the Air Force submitted to Congress an “unfunded
priorities” letter — the service’s so-called “wish list” — for FY2000 which included, as
the first item among 20 unfunded modernization priorities, a $140.2-million proposal to
convert an additional 230 ALCMs into CALCMs over the 4-year period FY2000-
FY2003.
3 Given the work involved in converting ALCMs into CALCMs, if Congress acts
quickly to approve the FY1999 reprogramming request, it likely will be at least several
months before any additional CALCMs enter inventory. (The Air Force testified to
Congress in late March that it might take about a year.)
TLAM. The Navy is now developing a substantially modified and updated version
of the Tomahawk known as the Tactical Tomahawk (TACTOM). Compared to the
original Tomahawk produced over the years in many versions, TACTOM is to be both
more capable and significantly less expensive to procure. Procurement of TACTOM is
scheduled to begin in FY2002; a total of 1,353 missiles are to be procured during the
period FY2002-FY2008. The first TACTOMs will enter inventory in around 2004.
As part of its FY2000 budget submission and FY2000-FY2005 Future Years Defense
Plan (FYDP), the Navy requested about $50.9 million in FY2000 to remanufacture 148
Block II TLAM-Ds into Block III TLAM-Cs, and plans to request $59.6 million in
FY2001 to remanufacture an additional 176 Block II TLAM-Ds into Block III TLAM-Cs.
2Information in this section is based on newspaper and trade press reports.
Ryan’s Unfunded Priority Letter.
3
Inside the Air Force, February 26, 1999: 5.
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These requests, if approved, would not increase the total number of Tomahawks in
inventory, but they would increase the number of Block III TLAMs within the inventory
by a total of 324 missiles — about enough to replace those used in Operation Desert Fox.
The 148 remanufactured missiles requested for FY2000 would be delivered at a rate of 12
or 13 missiles per month during the 12 months of FY2002 (October 2001-September
2002); the 176 remanufactured missiles that are to be requested for FY2001 would be
delivered at a rate of 14 or 15 missiles per month during the 12 months of FY2003
(October 2002-September 2003).
In mid-April, it was reported that the Navy has expanded this plan to include the
remanufacturing of an additional 300 Tomahawks — 100 Block II TLAM-Cs and 200
Tomahawk anti-ship missiles — into Block III TLAMs. According to the report, the total
cost for the expanded, 624-missile remanufacturing plan would be about $420 million.4
Discussion
Given the time needed to convert ALCMs into CALCMs, the Air Force for at least
the next several months must manage a fixed inventory of CALCMs. Similarly, given the
time needed to remanufacture Block II TLAMs into Block III TLAMs, the only additional
TLAMs that will enter inventory over the next several months are the final 120
Tomahawks procured in FY1997, which, as discussed earlier, are to be delivered to the
Navy at a rate of 10 per month.
Cloudy, foggy, or rainy weather can make it difficult or impossible to carry out
precision air attacks using laser- or video-guided bombs. For conducting precision air
attacks in bad weather, the U.S. military consequently is relying on the CALCM, the Block
III TLAM, and a third weapon known as the Joint Direct Attack Munition (JDAM). The
JDAM is a precision-guided glide bomb dropped from manned aircraft. It has a range of
about 15 miles and, like the CALCM and the Block III TLAM, is guided to the target by
the satellite Global Positioning System (GPS), which is not affected by bad weather.5
Unlike the relatively short-ranged JDAM, CALCMs and TLAMs, with their long
standoff ranges, are particularly useful for attacking heavily defended targets that would
pose an unacceptable risk of loss of a manned aircraft and the loss or capture of its crew.
CALCMs, with warheads reportedly of up to 3,000 pounds in weight (as opposed to 1,000
pounds for Tomahawks or 500, 1,000, or 2,000 pounds for bombs dropped by aircraft),
are particularly useful in attacking strengthened targets whose destruction is best
accomplished with one or more very large warheads.
If the weather is clear, or if the target is not time-urgent and planners can wait for the
weather to clear, laser- or video-guided bombs can be used instead of CALCMs, TLAMs,
U.S. Navy Scrambles for Tomahawk Missiles.
4
Defense News, April 19, 1999: 2.
Compared
5
to traditional, unguided (i.e., “dumb”) gravity bombs, precision-guided weapons can
destroy many kinds of targets more thoroughly, at less cost, or with less risk of collateral damage
to nearby buildings or populations whose destruction is not desired. Unguided gravity bombs,
however, are adequate or more cost-effective for attacking some kinds of targets, particularly wide-
area targets. About 90% of the weapons used in Operation Allied Force have been precision-
guided weapons.
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or JDAMs. If the weather is bad and the target is time-urgent, but the risk to manned
aircraft is deemed acceptable, JDAMs can be used instead of CALCMs and TLAMs. If
the weather is bad, the target is time-urgent, the risk of aircraft loss unacceptably high, but
the target can be destroyed with a combination of 1,000-pound warheads, TLAMs might
be used instead of CALCMs. If the weather is bad, the target is time-urgent, the risk to
manned aircraft is unacceptably high, and the target cannot be effectively destroyed with
something less than a 3,000-pound warhead, then CALCM may be the only appropriate
weapon. It is not clear how many such CALCM-specific situations might arise during the
remainder of Operation Allied Force.
Although the remaining inventory of Tomahawks, including Block III TLAMs, is
much larger than the remaining inventory of CALCMs, Tomahawks are loaded aboard
Navy cruisers, destroyers, and attack submarines that are routinely forward-deployed
overseas. The cruisers, destroyers, and attack submarines in a forward-deployed Navy
aircraft carrier battle group might carry a total of 300 or more Tomahawks in their missile
launchers. Since the Navy normally maintains 2 or 3 forward-deployed carrier battle
groups at any one point, a total of 600, 900, or more Tomahawks might be forward-
deployed at any given moment. When viewed against this number, as well as
commanders’ preference for using Block III TLAMs and the need for a certain percentage
of Tomahawks to be in the factory at any point for recertification and maintenance, the
Tomahawk inventory situation, particularly for Block III TLAMs, may be tighter on a
fleet-wide basis than total numbers might suggest at first.