World-Ending Maneuvers? Inside the Nuclear-Weapons Lobby Today

Yves here. This post describes the operations of a lobbying coalition most of you probably have not heard about: the ICBM lobby. The article describes how an initiative which is not all that large in influence-buying or job creation terms is effectively pushing for larger numbers of ICBM, which are not only redundant but also greatly increase the odds of advanced-civilization ending nuclear exchanges.

By Hekmat Aboukhater and William D. Hartung. Originally published at TomDispatch

The Pentagon is in the midst of a massive $2 trillion multiyear plan to build a new generation of nuclear-armed missiles, bombers, and submarines. A large chunk of that funding will go to major nuclear weapons contractors like Bechtel, General Dynamics, Honeywell, Lockheed Martin, and Northrop Grumman. And they will do everything in their power to keep that money flowing.

This January, a review of the Sentinel intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) program under the Nunn-McCurdy Act — a congressional provision designed to rein in cost overruns of Pentagon weapons programs — found that the missile, the crown jewel of the nuclear overhaul plan involving 450 missile-holding silos spread across five states, is already 81% over its original budget. It is now estimated that it will cost a total of nearly $141 billion to develop and purchase, a figure only likely to rise in the future.

That Pentagon review had the option of canceling the Sentinel program because of such a staggering cost increase. Instead, it doubled down on the program, asserting that it would be an essential element of any future nuclear deterrent and must continue, even if the funding for other defense programs has to be cut to make way for it. In justifying the decision, Deputy Defense Secretary William LaPlante stated: “We are fully aware of the costs, but we are also aware of the risks of not modernizing our nuclear forces and not addressing the very real threats we confront.”

Cost is indeed one significant issue, but the biggest risk to the rest of us comes from continuing to build and deploy ICBMs, rather than delaying or shelving the Sentinel program. As former Secretary of Defense William Perry has noted, ICBMs are “some of the most dangerous weapons in the world” because they “could trigger an accidental nuclear war.” As he explained, a president warned (accurately or not) of an enemy nuclear attack would have only minutes to decide whether to launch such ICBMs and conceivably devastate the planet.

Possessing such potentially world-ending systems only increases the possibility of an unintended nuclear conflict prompted by a false alarm. And as Norman Solomon and the late Daniel Ellsberg once wrote, “If reducing the dangers of nuclear war is a goal, the top priority should be to remove the triad’s ground-based leg — not modernize it.” 

This is no small matter. It is believed that a large-scale nuclear exchange could result in more than five billion of us humans dying, once the possibility of a “nuclear winter” and the potential destruction of agriculture across much of the planet is taken into account, according to an analysis by International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War.

In short, the need to reduce nuclear risks by eliminating such ICBMs could not be more urgent. The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists’ “Doomsday Clock” — an estimate of how close the world may be at any moment to a nuclear conflict — is now set at 90 seconds to midnight, the closest it’s been since that tracker was first created in 1947. And just this June, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a mutual defense agreement with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, a potential first step toward a drive by Moscow to help Pyongyang expand its nuclear arsenal further. And of the nine countries now possessing nuclear weapons, it’s hardly the only one other than the U.S. in an expansionist phase. 

Considering the rising tide of nuclear escalation globally, is it really the right time for this country to invest a fortune of taxpayer dollars in a new generation of devastating “use them or lose them” weapons? The American public has long said no, according to a 2020 poll by the University of Maryland’s Program for Public Consultation, which showed that 61% of us actually support phasing out ICBM systems like the Sentinel.

The Pentagon’s misguided plan to keep such ICBMs in the U.S arsenal for decades to come is only reinforced by the political power of members of Congress and the companies that benefit financially from the current buildup. 

Who Decides? The Role of the ICBM Lobby

A prime example of the power of the nuclear weapons lobby is the Senate ICBM Coalition. That group is composed of senators from four states — Montana, North Dakota, Utah, and Wyoming — that either house major ICBM bases or host significant work on the Sentinel. Perhaps you won’t be surprised to learn that the members of that coalition have received more than $3 million in donations from firms involved in the production of the Sentinel over the past four election cycles.  Nor were they alone. ICBM contractors made contributions to 92 of the 100 senators and 413 of the 435 house members in 2024. Some received hundreds of thousands of dollars.

The nuclear lobby paid special attention to members of the armed services committees in the House and Senate. For example, Mike Turner, a House Republican from Ohio, has been a relentless advocate of “modernizing” the nuclear arsenal. In a June 2024 talk at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, which itself has received well over a million dollars in funding from nuclear weapons producers, he called for systematically upgrading the nuclear arsenal for decades to come, while chiding any of his congressional colleagues not taking such an aggressive stance on the subject.

Although Turner vigorously touts the need for a costly nuclear buildup, he fails to mention that, with $305,000 in donations, he’s been the fourth-highest recipient of funding from the ICBM lobby over the four elections between 2018 and 2024. Little wonder that he pushes for new nuclear weapons and staunchly opposes extending the New START arms reduction treaty.

In another example of contractor influence, veteran Texas representative Kay Granger secured the largest total of contributions from the ICBM lobby of any House member. With $675,000 in missile contractor contributions in hand, Granger went to bat for the lobby, lending a feminist veneer to nuclear “modernization” by giving a speech on her experience as a woman in politics at Northrop Grumman’s Women’s conference. And we’re sure you won’t be surprised that Granger has anything but a strong track record when it comes to keeping the Pentagon and arms makers accountable for waste, fraud, and abuse in weapons programs. Her X account is, in fact, littered with posts heaping praise on Lockheed Martin and its overpriced, underperforming F-35 combat aircraft.

Other recipients of ICBM contractor funding, like Alabama Congressman Mike Rogers, have lamented the might of the “far-left disarmament community,” and the undue influence of “anti-nuclear zealots” on our politics. Missing from the statements his office puts together and the speeches his staffers write for him, however, is any mention of the $471,000 in funding he’s received so far from ICBM producers. You won’t be surprised, we’re sure, to discover that Rogers has pledged to seek a provision in the forthcoming National Defense Authorization Act to support the Pentagon’s plan to continue the Sentinel program.

Lobbying Dollars and the Revolving Door

The flood of campaign contributions from ICBM contractors is reinforced by their staggering investments in lobbying. In any given year, the arms industry as a whole employs between 800 and 1,000 lobbyists, well more than one for every member of Congress. Most of those lobbyists hired by ICBM contractors come through the “revolving door” from careers in the Pentagon, Congress, or the Executive Branch. That means they come with the necessary tools for success in Washington: an understanding of the appropriations cycle and close relations with decision-makers on the Hill.

During the last four election cycles, ICBM contractors spent upwards of $226 million on 275 extremely well-paid lobbyists. For example, Bud Cramer, a former Democratic congressman from Alabama who once sat on the defense subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee, netted $640,000 in fees from Northrop Grumman over a span of six years. He was also a cofounder of the Blue Dog Democrats, an influential conservative faction within the Democratic Party. Perhaps you won’t be surprised to learn that Cramer’s former chief of staff, Jefferies Murray, also lobbies for Northrop Grumman.

While some lobbyists work for one contractor, others have shared allegiances. For example, during his tenure as a lobbyist, former Senate Appropriations Committee Chair Trent Lott received more than $600,000 for his efforts for Raytheon, Textron Inc., and United Technologies (before United Technologies and Raytheon merged to form RX Technologies). Former Virginia Congressman Jim Moran similarly received $640,000 from Northrop Grumman and General Dynamics.

Playing the Jobs Card

The argument of last resort for the Sentinel and similar questionable weapons programs is that they create well-paying jobs in key states and districts. Northrop Grumman has played the jobs card effectively with respect to the Sentinel, claiming it will create 10,000 jobs in its development phase alone, including about 2,250 in the state of Utah, where the hub for the program is located. 

As a start, however, those 10,000 jobs will help a miniscule fraction of the 167-million-member American workforce. Moreover, Northrop Grumman claims facilities tied to the program will be set up in 32 states. If 2,250 of those jobs end up in Utah, that leaves 7,750 more jobs spread across 31 states — an average of about 250 jobs per state, essentially a rounding error compared to total employment in most localities.

Nor has Northrop Grumman provided any documentation for the number of jobs the Sentinel program will allegedly create. Journalist Taylor Barnes of ReThink Media was rebuffed in her efforts to get a copy of the agreement between Northrop Grumman and the state of Utah that reportedly indicates how many Sentinel-related jobs the company needs to create to get the full subsidy offered to put its primary facility in Utah.

A statement by a Utah official justifying that lack of transparency suggested Northrop Grumman was operating in “a competitive defense industry” and that revealing details of the agreement might somehow harm the company. But any modest financial harm Northrop Grumman might suffer, were those details revealed, pales in comparison with the immense risks and costs of the Sentinel program itself.

There are two major flaws in the jobs argument with respect to the future production of nuclear weapons. First, military spending should be based on security considerations, not pork-barrel politics. Second, as Heidi Peltier of the Costs of War Project has effectively demonstrated, virtually any other expenditure of funds currently devoted to Pentagon programs would create between 9% and 250% more jobs than weapons spending does. If Congress were instead to put such funds into addressing climate change, dealing with future disease epidemics, poverty, or homelessness — all serious threats to public safety — the American economy would gain hundreds of thousands of jobs. Choosing to fund those ICBMs instead is, in fact, a job killer, not a job creator.

Unwarranted Influence in the Nuclear Age

Advocates for eliminating ICBMs from the American arsenal make a strong case.  (If only they were better heard!) For example, former Representative John Tierney of the Center for Arms Control and Nonproliferation offered this blunt indictment of ICBMs:

“Not only are intercontinental ballistic missiles redundant, but they are prone to a high risk of accidental use…They do not make us any safer. Their only value is to the defense contractors who line their fat pockets with large cost overruns at the expense of our taxpayers. It has got to stop.”

The late Daniel Ellsberg made a similar point in a February 2018 interview with the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists:

“You would not have these arsenals, in the U.S. or elsewhere, if it were not the case that it was highly profitable to the military-industrial complex, to the aerospace industry, to the electronics industry, and to the weapons design labs to keep modernizing these weapons, improving accuracy, improving launch time, all that. The military-industrial complex that Eisenhower talked about is a very powerful influence. We’ve talked about unwarranted influence. We’ve had that for more than half a century.”

Given how the politics of Pentagon spending normally work, that nuclear weapons policy is being so heavily influenced by individuals and organizations profiting from an ongoing arms race should be anything but surprising. Still, in the case of such weaponry, the stakes are so high that critical decisions shouldn’t be determined by parochial politics. The influence of such special interest groups and corporate weapons-makers over life-and-death issues should be considered both a moral outrage and perhaps the ultimate security risk.

Isn’t it finally time for the executive branch and Congress to start assessing the need for ICBMs on their merits, rather than on contractor lobbying, weapons company funding, and the sort of strategic thinking that was already outmoded by the end of the 1950s? For that to happen, our representatives would need to hear from their constituents loud and clear.

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15 comments

  1. John

    Is this correct? The “modernization project will spend trillions … I assume massive ‘cost over-runs.’ … to produce shiny spiffy new nuclear weapons, which if used have a high probability of ending human civilization and a medium probability of ending human life and that of all higher animals. A few large companies with a narrow point of view and no concern for anything but profit are buying the support of congress critters to further their aims. Have it got it right? If so, all who in whatever position support this are dangerous maniacs and potential mass murderers.

    1. responseTwo

      Mass murderers? Nah. They are capitalist politicians serving capitalists. It’s America.

  2. John Steinbach

    You can thank Obama for initiating the multi-trillion nuclear weapons “modernization” program, continued under Trump & Biden.

    1. Ashburn

      Thanks, JS.
      Yes, Obama, the guy who won the Nobel Peace Prize 9 months after taking office for his “promotion of nuclear non-proliferation.”

  3. AG

    The problem with this entire issue is the the sphere of “realism” which can be observed e.g. with WMD scientists who might be in favour of an WMD-free world but seeing the world as it is are argueing in favour of WMDs on the basis of MAD. They basically argue we will never be able to give up on them. So we have to find a modus vivendi.
    I don´t share this at all. And I really believe that – in a realistic scenario – the only impediment to an ideal Ellsbergian world, one without this at all, are the US – but how do you dismantle that behemoth? It would come down to the equal of abolishing capitalism in the US.
    What is so sad and infuriating over this is the mere fact that of all people it´s scientists who say it can´t be done. I guess we have to be satisfied with baby steps for now. If anything at all.
    p.s. and with the superiority of RU/CHINA probably becoming evident to the broad public sooner or later the US will identify enough leeway to justify mega spending in order to close the gap which NATO´s Kerstin Huber regarding hypersonics has put at 20 years.

    1. Susan the other

      In 20 years the Chinese and the Russians will probably have hyper light speed missiles. Or faster, they will have hyper entangled missiles that arrive the moment they are sent. If war is politics by other means that will ironically be the point when politics is dead. So where will that leave war? The absurdity of war is so casually accepted. Especially when we could be doing something evolutionary, like taking the massive industrial capacity of the MIC and adapting it to serve and protect the environment. It is such a no-brainer. Right? Everybody on the planet could agree to that idea.

      1. AG

        Sitting in Germany what shocked me for several months was the fact that of all parties the GREENS (I since had a very steep learning curve to accomplish) after February 2022 did not seize the opportunity of doing the opposite of what they did do:

        The world had offered us the mercy of experiencing the three curses without eliminating us:
        We saw what a real pandemic would look like but were spared.
        The climate reports came out in the very same period ever more alarming. Offering a window to act.
        We had avoided WMD misunderstandings so far and have enough simulations making clear what nuclear war of any size would mean.

        We were given the chance to look into possible futures. And took – the wrong turn in all three cases.

        Regardless of how much one agrees with the terms climate change, pandemic, nuclear war (the least debated I assume). The proper response should have been obvious.

        p.s. Since you mention end of war: German junior nuclear scientist during WWII, Carl-Friedrich von Weizsäcker from an influential German family, had initially tried to unsuccessfully build a bomb together with his German seniors (some of whom are mentioned in the Oppenheimer movie.) Weizsäcker was the typical RAND type of guy. But he figured that becoming a “peacenick” in Germany would be the better solution. And may be he even was honest (I will never figure that out). Anyway after August 6th 1945 he told his colleagues that the nuke would be the end of war. In a very narrow sense he might have been correct but only as far as world destruction is concerned. Everything below that threshold was going on unabated.

        You could argue it was the peace of an utterly elitist group who would never be touched by the conventional wars.

        So did nukes abolish war? World wars may be. But eventually what did that mean to the real world? Nothing. I was never sure what to think about that notion of his. After all he was involved into every major German anti-WMD initiative after 1945. That´s something I could only agree with. But did he ever get arrested for protesting WMD sites? Not that I know of…

  4. HH

    As long as U.S. politicians can be bought cheaply, the war machine will rumble on, raising the chances of our destruction. The great flaw of capitalism is the dismissal of externalities. The risk of global nuclear war does not show up in the financial statements of the arms makers, so it does not affect their pursuit of maximum financial returns. Thanks to corrupt politicians, myopic capitalists, and religious eschatological death cults, our chances of survival are dwindling rapidly.

  5. Jams O'Donnell

    “the only impediment to an ideal Ellsbergian world, one without this at all, are the US”

    I agree. In most other countries such weapons are a drain on resources. Only in the UK (and perhaps England) are nuclear weapons a ‘contribution’ to the economy. Although I disagree with “It would come down to the equal of abolishing capitalism in the US.” This would only be the case if the weapons industry was the only one in the USA. I don’t think that’s the case just yet, though it might be getting close to it.

  6. ilsm

    I continue to pray for peace each day. I started while an active cold warrior, mid 1970’s.

    So much to say!

    Nuclear war is both immoral and illogical. Maybe insane better definition than illogical.

    Time for one idea. Sentinel must be killed with no replacement. Look to MX/Peacekeeper, Minuteman ICBM replacement already mothballed, and F35, US is not technically or managerially capable!

    Morals says: planning for mutual suicide is wrong.

    All this investing is based on game theory which is illogical and in case of death immoral.

  7. WillD

    With such projects and people pushing them, what chance does the world have of NOT being destroyed by these maniacs and their missiles?

    Even if they actually understood the true risks of building and deploying them, they do not understand the many variables and possibilities that can lead to both intentional and unintentional use.

    They can’t possibly predict all the scenarios and build in safeguards. Therefore, they can’t possibly prevent their eventual use.

  8. AG

    From Alex Wellerstein´s Blog “Doomsday Machines”

    “Strange games
    Even if you can “win” some nuclear video games, maybe it’s still good advice “not to play”
    https://doomsdaymachines.net/p/strange-games#footnote-anchor-2-147345902

    About the relationship between the origins of war-gaming with RAND and early computer games of nuclear war.
    This relationship was made popular through “WarGames” in 1983 although it replaced the reflecting intellectual part and replaced it with action/arcade elements along starting the career of US-actor Matthew Broderick.

  9. Yaiyen

    I can never understand people in USA, why they love so much war. Sometimes i think best hope for mankind is that civil war start in USA at least then they would leave the rest of the world alone, some say they would take the whole world with them but in my opinion its not 100% but if USA continue the way the they are going it will be the end of us all.

  10. Jeffrey Mason

    The Senate ICBM coalition receiving millions of kickbacks and the super rich investors profiting rom the N production complex running corporations say this is just how America works as they play the old ad jingle, “Baseball, hot dogs, applie pie & Chevrolet.” These special interests celebrate their election successes & pull a fast one over their constituency. Because they don’t work in or reside near the silos & extensive nationwide N production complex that leak toxins & radioactivity & ships N waste across the nation’s roads/railways engandering the public who live or use those transport networks – to probably unsafe storage facilities. And they keep a closed mind to the fact that N deterrence has almost failed many times & when it eventually does they’ll be the ones speeding themselves & their families to deep underground US government bunkers while their constituents & the rest of us die horribly. But even the Musks & superrich must realize the dramatically increasing risk that they will end up living in their own deep underground bunker, which sucks. So, that’s why we global citizenry are in an uphill battle to change the minds of this mil.-industrial-intelligence-congressional complex before it is too late. Capitalists will come onboard when they realize post Armageddon bunker living sucks & they can still make a lot of money redirecting spending to cleaning up a huge global N waste mess incl.eliminating N bomb plant complexes & shutdown & cleanup civilian N plants, make concrete climate change CO2 reductions and reinvest in green energies & expensive outer space industries like cleaning up orbital space debris & deploying robotic/manned assets to the gas giant moons to increase our warning time to find and deflect asteroids & comets threatening to impact our planet. We will probably need a global WWIII scare that rivals Cuban Crisis of ’62 or worse to change the paradigm. Hope our species luck holds out for this almost Armageddon event & that we avoid N escalation & that it triggers the right response for long-term Homo sapien survival.

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