The Air Force's New Nuclear Missile System Will Now Cost $131.5 Billion
It's just one reason the program should likely be terminated altogether.

The U.S. Air Force's LGM-35 Sentinel, the program in development that has promised a new intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) to support nuclear deterrence, has already exceeded cost projections so significantly that it will have to undergo a Pentagon review.
The price tag on the Sentinel—which, according to the government, will reportedly "recapitalize or modernize" 400 missiles, 450 silos, and over 600 facilities—has jumped from $96 billion to about $131.5 billion, a 37 percent increase that qualifies as a "critical breach" of the Nunn-McCurdy Act, legally obligating the secretary of defense to justify the increase or terminate the program.
Also known as Ground Based Strategic Deterrent (GBSD), the Sentinel was initially scheduled to start operating in 2029 with a $13.3 billion contract given to Northrop Grumman, one of the world's largest defense technology corporations. Compounding the stratospheric increase in cost are protracted scheduling delays and concerns about the program's utility altogether.
When Northrop Grumman was awarded the contract on September 8, 2020, the cost per unit was slated to be $118 million. New estimates demand $162 million per unit. In January, the Air Force also predicted an operational delay of two years.
"Sentinel is behind schedule due to staffing shortfalls, delays with clearance processing, and classified information technology infrastructure challenges," a June 2023 report by the U.S. Government Accountability Office said. "Additionally, the program is experiencing supply chain disruptions, leading to further schedule delays."
The red flags raise a few questions for taxpayers. Most notably, if the Sentinel passes the mandatory review, set in motion by the Nunn-McCurdy Act, will the program—which is expected to cost $264 billion until the end of its life cycle in 2075—stick to the total allotted budget or run rampant with reckless spending? Skeptics will likely take little comfort in the fact that the estimated budget for the Sentinel in 2015 was about $62 billion. It is now more than double that.
In the modern nuclear world, a defense budget emphasizing deterrence is a valid strategic initiative. After all, the U.S. currently has only one functioning ICBM, in comparison to Russia's six, China's four, and North Korea's five.
With LGM-30 Minuteman III—the U.S.'s lone ICBM in service—approaching the end of its life cycle, it's understandable that U.S. defense leaders want to be up to date and prepared for the worst. But notwithstanding its unsustainable cost projections, it's not at all clear the Sentinel program is even the optimal way to address these concerns.
According to critics, land-based ICBMs are the weakest and least useful of the nuclear triad, with submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBM) and strategic bombers being far superior. The SLBM, along with the 14 operational ballistic missile submarines, are particularly effective because of their ability to stay undetected underwater. ICBMs, in contrast, are vulnerable to easy attacks.
William J. Houston, the director of the Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program, said in 2022, "[Ballistic missile submarines are] the one portion of our deterrent that will always be available if needed." He also referred to the submarines as "the most powerful force in the world right now." In that vein, the Pentagon review should, at a minimum, thoroughly consider alternatives that are not only cheaper but also more effective.
Special interest supporters of the Sentinel will likely not go down without a fight.
Along with Northrop Grumman, Lockheed Martin and General Dynamics are only some of the well-known corporations who have lobbied hard in favor of the program. A bipartisan coalition has also formed in the U.S. Senate, which includes Sens. Mitt Romney (R–Utah) and Jon Tester (D–Mont.), two major beneficiaries of contributions from ICBM contractors. Many detractors, however, contest the need for land-based ICBMs altogether when considering submarine-launched ballistic missiles essentially render them obsolete.
Public opinion is on their side. A 2021 report by ReThink Media for the Federation of American Scientists found that 60 percent of respondents supported alternatives to the GBSD. Sixty-four percent supported delaying and reviewing the program and favored extension of the LGM-30 Minuteman III.
A mere 8 percent said they felt safer with increased government defense spending. Of course, many in the public are not experts on defense needs and capabilities. But with the cost and complications of the Sentinel continuing to rise dramatically, it would serve taxpayers well to consider smarter options at a less offensive price.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
The democrats will just give the damn things away, so why bother.
I'd love ke to have one. Just sayin'.
A lesson from the war in Ukraine, that I figure most politicians will interpret the wrong way, is that the cost of high tech munitions add up real quick.
The lesson from the war in Ukraine should be to never disarm. Disarming is how you get invaded and end up begging someone else to send you weapons to defend yourself.
That lesson should have been learned in 2011 when NATO helped overthrow Ghadaffi after he gave up his WMDs.
The West saw its chance to get rid of a bad, bad guy and it took it.
Ghadaffi was directly responsible for murdering many, many people in terrorist attacks, including hundreds of Americans.
"Wouldn't it be great if schools had all the funding they want and the military had to hold a bake sale to buy weapons?"
Such a cute slogan. Don't hear it so much these days.
Anyone know what happened to the people who used to say it?
They've learned that cutting the military budget to zero would have no impact on the long-term fiscal health of the country?
They realized how much it got them off to send money to Ukraine.
Planes can be shot down and submarines sank.
Yep. Airways can be cratered before the bombers can be launched. If a submarine is sunk, it is extremely difficult to replace it. The port facilities take years to crank out a single sub. And even if they didn't, they could easily be targeted. Meanwhile, missiles can be cranked out relatively quickly and stored in hardened underground silos until they're needed. If you're concerned about the enemy knowing exactly where they are, make them road mobile or movable between silos. There's a reason that every nuclear power who has to rely on themselves (Britain and France have US backing and don't count) has a land-based nuclear deterrent.
Oh, and who gives a shit about the cited survey or Federation of Atomic Scientists? The American public does not understand the concept of mutually assured destruction, let alone how best to assure it. The FAS is an anti-nuclear organization in general. Of course they'd be in favor of getting rid of one third of our nuclear options.
Nukes are expensive in general. Well, not the nukes themselves - those are pretty cheap. The delivery systems, whether SSBN, ICBM, or stealth bomber, are very expensive. The author cites $264 billion over 50 years as the lifetime cost of the Sentinel ICBM program. Note that this is all of $5.28 billion per year, or 0.6% of the military's annual budget. For comparison, the lifetime cost of the Columbia class nuclear submarine program is $347 billion over 50 years. The B-21 stealth bomber program is $203 billion over 30 years ($338 billion over 50 years). The cost for the Sentinel program hardly seems out of place.
I think you're confusing the entirety of Federal spending with the DoD Budget, which is still under $1Trillion per year; factoring in future inflation, it's likely that total military spending over 50 years will come out to $50Trillion or more though, which would put a $264Billion program at around the percentage of the total that you came up with, assuming it's not increased further by future inflation if the government keeps adding $1-2Trillion to the national debt every year over all of that time.
Nope, he's got the math right. All numbers below in $USD Billion.
$264 / 50 years = $5.28 / year
FY 2024 US Military budget = $842
So, one year of this program is $5.28 out of $864, or 0.62% of the yearly total.
I believe you may have missed him dividing the total cost of the program by the run time of 50 years.
I somehow misread the $5.28Bil/year he calculated for the missile program as having said that the military budget was $5.28Tril/year (closer to the full federal budget). Thanks for the correction.
No idea how I made that misinterpretation, I guess I got twisted around something because he didn't mention the DoD full budget number maybe? However it happened, it does explain how he still go to the correct percentage of total defense spending in the calculation.
There's a counter-move for every portion of any strategy. The point of the "Trident" plan is that it's extremely hard to effectively counter all three components simultaneously enough to prevent at least one of them from being effective.
True. The strongest argument against the land-based leg of the trident strategy is that we humans share the land. Sinking a sub doesn't require nukes and even if you use one, the fallout to humans is comparatively limited. Ditto for bombers. Hardened bunkers, on the other hand, generally take other nukes to neutralize and are, by comparison, very close to where we live and eat. Focusing on the other two legs reduces the likelihood of collateral damage.
Part of why the silos are located in remote and sparsely populated parts of the country. Anything incoming that's targeted at the silos can't also be targeted at any major cities or other command centers.
Also, as long as it's possible to launch the ground-based missiles in less than the flight time of the incoming threat, attempting to disable those with bombers is likely pointless, and with ICBMs is more likely to initiate a "total war" scenario if it leads to a counter-launch of any targeted missile sites.
And Democrats say they’ve resolved inflation.
The primary question I'd have as to whether the ICBMs can be replaced with SSBMs is if the warheads they're planning on refurbishing will fit in submarine tubes.
Costs aside, the biggest reason the Sentinels are being brought online is because the Boomers and Gen-Xers who worked on them have either died or long retired at this point, and because of their age, the supply chains for parts simply aren’t there anymore.
People would actually be shocked at how much military infrastructure and weapons are old as fuck, and all these systems are largely repaired on an ad hoc basis. One of the reasons these replacements are so expensive is because, believe it or not, the military is cheap as hell with what they have (appropriations is another matter altogether) and they tend to run shit into the ground WAY past its point of obsolescence. By the time they actually replace this shit, the cost for the replacement has gone through the roof. The Air Force is still using Hueys from the 60s, for fuck’s sake, and I’ve personally known about HVAC guys getting parts off of eBay to repair 40-50 year old HVAC units, because the manufacturer went out of business 10-20 years prior. Or look at the Abrams and Bradleys, which are based off of 40-50 year old platforms themselves that just get marginal modifications. When those are ultimately replaced, the cost is going to be astronomical.
Don’t forget the venerable B52! Older than its aircrew and maintainers, it flew in combat as recently as 2021.
Redirect the money away from education, environment, and public healthcare.
There, I just found you a kajillion bajillion dollars that are otherwise being 100% wasted. Go nuts. Do something useful with government spending for a change.
Heck, even you waste $100,000,000 on writing, "USA! USA!" in bedazzled bling on the side of the rockets, I'll still consider it money better spent than on anything the education, environmental, public health sinkholes are doing.
It's about 1 Ukraine. Hey, I know where we could get the money!
Reduce conventional forces to bare minimum. Build up nuclear arsenal. Tell everyone that if they fuck with us, we have no other option.
Yeah, 'reason' has been a huge supporter of the Columbia program to replace the Ohio class boomers, with articles like, um...
I hope that someday Reason holds an introductory finance course for its writers, where they will be taught about inflation adjustments, discounting and present value.
Until then, I will just have to chuckle at Reason's attempts to talk about money.