Posted on 08/05/2009 6:14:55 AM PDT by sukhoi-30mki
French Aircraft Carrier Sails Without Nukes
The French nuclear-powered aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle with air wing on deck.
By Hans M. Kristensen
France no longer deploys nuclear weapons on its aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle under normal circumstances but stores the weapons on land, according to French officials.
President Nicolas Sarkozy declared in March 2008 that France could and should be more transparent with respect to its nuclear arsenal than anyone ever has been. But while the other nuclear powers declared long ago that their naval weapons were offloaded or scrapped after the Cold War ended, a similar announcement has to my knowledge been lacking from France.
The French acknowledgment marks the end of peacetime deployment of short-range nuclear weapons at sea.
It is not clear when the French offload occurred; it may have been instigated years ago. But it completes a worldwide withdrawal of short-range nuclear weapons from the worlds oceans that 20 years ago included more than 6,500 British, French, Russian, and U.S. cruise missiles, anti-submarine rockets, anti-aircraft missiles, depth bombs, torpedoes and bombs.
Nuclear Charles de Gaulle
The nuclear-powered aircraft carrier Charles de Gaulle carries a squadron of Super Étendard bombers equipped with the ASMP nuclear cruise missile. From 2010 these aircraft will be replaced with the Rafale MK3 (navy version) equipped with a new nuclear cruise missile known as the ASMP-A. The weapon will enter service with air forces Mirage 2000Ns this fall and next year with the Rafale F3.
A Super Étendard prepares to take off from an aircraft carrier with an ASMP nuclear cruise missile shape under its right wing.
France previously operated two aircraft carriers, the Clemenceau and Foch, with nuclear capability. Initially armed with nuclear bombs, the ships were upgraded to the ASMP in the late 1980s, but decommissioned in 1997 and 2000, respectively. Plans to replace them with two nuclear-powered carriers did not materialize; only the Charles de Gaulle has been built.
A Rafale F3 aircraft with an ASMP-A nuclear cruise missile shape installed on the center pylon.
With a range of only 300 km (500 km for the ASMP-A), the cruise missile strictly speaking falls into the category of U.S. and Russian non-strategic weapons, but France calls its cruise missile strategic or pre-strategic. Technically, the range of the aircraft delivering the cruise missile extends the range to 2,000-2,500 km, similar to the U.S. nuclear Tomahawk land-attack cruise missile and the Russian SS-N-21. But that assumes the aircraft will be able to penetrate the air defenses of the target country. Regardless, potential adversaries probably care less about the category terminology than the fact that the weapon is nuclear.
During normal circumstances the cruise missiles are stored on land, perhaps in a weapons storage area close to the carriers homeport in Toulon. The weapons storage spaces onboard the Charles de Gaulle are maintained and the crew periodically trained and certified to store and handle the missiles so they can quickly be brought onboard if a decision is made to deploy the them.
As for the Charles de Gaulles nuclear strike mission, it can hardly be said to be essential; During the extended time periods the carrier is in overhaul (18 months), France does not have a sea-based nuclear cruise missile capability.
No nukes, but plenty of surrender flags.
As if we have any room to talk with the Kenyan Usurper in the White House.
Sort of like TV deputy Barney Fife who had to keep his revolver unloaded and had one bullet in his pocket that he could load if the Sheriff said it was OK. France is the world’s Mayberry?
When I saw the headline, I thought maybe it was powered by wind and solar.
I suppose that’s next ... course ... it will be dead in the water. But the French will prolly be OK with that.
Nerf Navies seem to be gaining in popularity...
Don’t want anyone getting hurt ya know...
Well, they’re not likely to need ‘em. The Etenards and Rafales are formidable enough.
Didn’t the Charles de Gaulle once sail without a prop?
Dropped it into the Atlantic, IIRC.
Exactly.
I wounder how you say "NIP IT!" en Français?
Exactly.
I wonder how you say "NIP IT!" en Français?
I guess our carriers are loaded with apologies for any tin-horn dictator they come across.
Hey, at least the props worked this time.
At least they remembered the airplanes!
No red dots on the LCP? What fun is that? :-(
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http://www.gerline.de/wb/media/dokumente/Presidential%20Nuclear%20Initiative%201991.pdf
France under Sarkosky is showing more balls than we are. I think we should give them a break for a while.
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