France’s Triomphant Submarine Never Went to War, But Still Almost Got a Kill

France’s Triomphant Submarine Never Went to War, But Still Almost Got a Kill

The Triomphant-class replaced the Redoubtable-class, which entered service with the French Navy in 1971.

 

Here's What You Need to Remember: The class thankfully has never fired in anger, though it was involved in some unintentional action in 2009. The first of the Triomphant-class, Le Triomphant, collided with a British Navy sub, the HMS Vanguard while patrolling in the middle of the Atlantic.

Paris holds the world’s third-largest nuclear arsenal. Here is the sea-based component of France’s strategic deterrent.

 

Triomphant-class

France’s Triomphant-class is the French Navy’s Force de dissuasion, or strategic deterrent. Though France did have a nuclear triad of land, sea, and air-based nuclear weapons for most of the Cold War, the land-based component of the French nuclear triad was eliminated in the late 1990s after the fall of the Soviet Union. 

The Triomphant-class replaced the Redoubtable-class, which entered service with the French Navy in 1971. Compared to other ballistic-missile submarines, the Triomphant-class is relatively small in size, with just four boats, compared to the Soviet Typhoon-class, which was six hulls, or the American Ohio-class, which is a whopping eighteen-hull force.

The Triomphant-class is berthed at the secretive Île Longue near Brest in France’s west. Île Longue has been France’s sea-based nuclear deterrent base since 1965 and is reportedly one of the most heavily-defended places in France.

Armed to the Teeth

At least one Triomphant-class submarine is on patrol at any one time, while the other three hulls are either undergoing maintenance or working up for a deployment. Their mission is simple: leave port undetected, remain quietly at sea, and be prepared to carry out a nuclear strike at any time by order of the President of France.

In order to carry out this mission, the Triomphant-class is equipped with 16 missile silos arranged into two 8-missile groups aft of the sail. These silos house France’s ballistic missiles, either the M45 or its replacement, the M51.

The M45 is a three-stage rocket with a 6,000 kilometer, or about 3,700 mile range. The M51 is a similar ballistic missile with greater range and accuracy, and a significantly more powerful warhead. Its capabilities are similar to the Trident II ballistic missile in use with the American and British Navies, and it is currently replacing the M45.

In addition to ensuring France’s sea-based strategic deterrence, the Triomphant-class also carries anti-submarine and anti-surface weapons for defense at sea. Four 21-inch torpedo tubes allow the Triomphant-class to launch torpedoes, or Exocet SM39 anti-ship missiles from underwater while submerged.

Too Quiet

The class thankfully has never fired in anger, though it was involved in some unintentional action in 2009. The first of the Triomphant-class, Le Triomphant, collided with a British Navy sub, the HMS Vanguard while patrolling in the middle of the Atlantic. The Vanguard is part of the United Kingdom’s four-hull Vanguard class, ensuring the U.K.’s sea-based nuclear deterrence just like the Triomphant-class.

Neither submarine was aware of the other’s presence, and the accident was totally coincidental. Commentators highlighted the difficulty of two submarines colliding with each other—and how good their acoustic-reduction technology must be. Though small, the Triomphant-class is silent, and deadly.

Caleb Larson holds a Master of Public Policy degree from the Willy Brandt School of Public Policy. He lives in Berlin and writes on U.S. and Russian foreign and defense policy, German politics, and culture. This article is being republished due to reader interest.

Image: Reuters