What You Need to Know About the U.S. Navy's Ohio-Class Submarines

What You Need to Know About the U.S. Navy's Ohio-Class Submarines

The Ohio-class submarines form the backbone of the U.S. Navy's portion of the nuclear triad.

 

Here's What You Need to Remember: The Ohios are often referred to as the Navy’s “boomers” owing to their extended patrol and nuclear-tipped intercontinental ballistic missile capability. However, not all of the Navy’s Ohios are nuclear-armed.

Much ink has been spilled over the U.S. Navy’s new Columbia-class submarines, the successors to the Cold War-era Ohio-class ballistic missile submarines — and for good reason. Once in service, they’ll be the most survivable leg of the United States’ nuclear triad: able to lie in wait, underwater and undetected and ready to launch nuclear-tipped intercontinental ballistic missiles virtually anywhere, at a moment’s notice by order of the Commander-in-Chief.

 

Still, the Columbia-class has yet to enter service with the United States Navy for another decade. Until then, the Ohio-class reigns supreme.

Ohio-class, Explained

The Ohios are often referred to as the Navy’s “boomers” owing to their extended patrol and nuclear-tipped intercontinental ballistic missile capability. However, not all of the Navy’s Ohios are nuclear-armed: in 1994, the four oldest Ohio-class submarines underwent a conversion process to equip them with a special operations support and land attack capability in place of their nuclear payload. To that end, those submarines had their Trident nuclear missiles removed and replaced with shorter range, non-nuclear Tomahawk cruise missiles, which freed up space to support up to 66 special operations personnel, in general Navy SEALs or Marine Raiders.

As a part of the 2010 New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, each of the 14 Trident missile-carrying Ohios had four of their missile tubes deactivated, bringing the number of onboard missiles down to 20 from 24.

As the Ohio-class is nuclear powered, they can operate for over a decade without needing to refuel or without requiring any major overhaul. The Ohios are usually underway conducting deterrence patrols for about 77 days. After completion the submarines then stay in port for just over a month for provisions and routine maintenance. The longest known Ohio patrol, conducted by the USS Pennsylvania in 2014, lasted for 140 days, a Navy record.

More recently, one of the Navy’s boomers, the USS Alaska, made a publicized port stop at Gibraltar, though the submarine’s home port is in Kings Bay, Georgia. The Navy described the stop in Gibraltar as a “brief stop” that “strengthens cooperation between the United States and the United Kingdom-Gibraltar, and demonstrates U.S. capability, readiness, flexibility, and continuing commitment as part of NATO.”

It is rather unusual for one of the United States Navy’s most powerful weapon platforms to be so publicly announced, though when considering the USS Alaska’s awesome payload, it is probably better to be completely publicly forthright: enemies beware, there is a boomer out and about.

Caleb Larson is a Defense based in Europe. He holds a Master of Public Policy and covers U.S. and Russian security, European defense issues, and German politics and culture.

This article is being republished due to reader interest.

 

Image: Reuters