October 7, 2008

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SS-17 Mod 1

Country:  Russian Federation
Alternate Name:  Spanker, RS-16
Class:  ICBM
Basing:  Silo based
Length:  20.90 m
Diameter:  2.25 m
Launch Weight:  71100 kg
Payload:  4 MIRV warheads, 2550 kg
Warhead:  Nuclear selectable 300 to 750 kT
Propulsion:  2-stage liquid
Range:  10200 km
Status:  Obsolete
In Service:  1975-1991

Details

Russian Designation:RS-16

The SS-17 was an intercontinental-range, silo-based, liquid propellant ballistic missile. The missile was planned to replace the SS-11 and to be deployed in converted and hardened SS-11 silos. This was the first Soviet system that had independent targeting for the multiple reentry vehicles and achieved true Multiple-Independent Reentry Vehicle (MIRV) status. The SS-17 required the cold-launch system due to its limited volume, requiring it to be launched before complete ignition. It uses a purely inertial guidance and carries 4 MIRVs equipped with penetration aids to increase the missile’s effectiveness against US silos. Two different versions were created, the Mod 1 and the Mod 2.

 

MIRV technology enabled the SS-17 to accurately strike multiple targets in a large area, distributing its payload among multiple targets. This system greatly increases a missile’s effectiveness against military targets where accuracy matters far more than the size of the payload. The use of the Post-Boost Vehicle, required for MIRV systems, gave the SS-17 MIRV warheads a high degree of accuracy compared to older systems. This significantly increased the effectiveness of a Russian pre-emptive strike, as a single missile could be used to eliminate a number of missile silos.

 

The application of MIRV technology and penetration aids resulted in the SS-17 being a highly effective pre-emptive strike weapon. It could deploy several medium yield nuclear warheads against a number of silos in an area and was accurate enough to have a chance at damaging the missiles. With the numbers and the penetration aids, existing anti-missile defenses would have been overwhelmed. It was also highly effective against cities, able to effectively strike multiple cities or targets with a single missile.

 

The SS-17 Mod 1 had a maximum range of 10,200 km (6,338 miles) and carried a payload of 2,550 kg. It deployed 4 MIRVs with a variable nuclear yield between 300 and 750 kT that were accurate to within 470 m CEP. It had a launch weight of 71,100 kg. The missile used a two-stage liquid propellant and was 20.9 m long with a width of 2.25 m.

 

The SS-17 development reportedly began in 1970, with the first flight tests taking place in 1972. The SS-17 Mod 1 missiles were deployed in the Soviet Union in 1975, initially within converted SS-11 silos. The Mod 2 was deployed five years later and by 1991, only MIRVed Mod 2 SS-17 missiles remained operational. In December 1994, only 11 SS-17 Mod 2 missiles remained and by July 1996 all the missiles and silos had been destroyed.(1)

 

 

Footnotes

 

  1. Duncan Lennox, Jane’s Strategic Weapons Systems 46 (Surrey: Jane’s Information Group, January 2007), 574-575.

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