B61 nuclear bomb

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Template:Use American English Template:Infobox weapon

The B61 nuclear bomb is the primary thermonuclear gravity bomb in the United States Enduring Stockpile following the end of the Cold War. It is a low-to-intermediate yield strategic and tactical nuclear weapon featuring a two-stage radiation implosion design.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The B61 is of the variable yield ("dial-a-yield" in informal military jargon) design with a yield of 0.3 to 340 kilotons in its various mods ("modifications"). It is a Full Fuzing Option (FUFO) weapon, meaning it is equipped with the full range of fuzing and delivery options, including air and ground burst fuzing, and free-fall, retarded free-fall and laydown delivery.<ref name=b61history>Template:Cite report</ref> It has a streamlined casing capable of withstanding supersonic flight and is Template:Cvt long, with a diameter of about Template:Convert. The basic weight of the B-61 is about Template:Convert, although the weights of individual weapons may vary depending on version and fuze/retardation configuration. As of 2020, the weapon was undergoing a 12th modification. According to the Federation of American Scientists in 2012, the roughly 400 B61-12s will each cost "more than its weight in gold" - $28 million apiece.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="FAS12">Template:Cite web</ref>

Development

File:NukesGulf B-61.jpg
A B61 bomb undergoing disassembly.
File:B61 nuclear bomb.jpg
B61 bomb casing; MAPS Air Museum, North Canton, Ohio.

In 1961, a report was issued indicating Navy and Air Force interest in a lightweight bomb to replace existing weapons, but that both services had considerably different military requirements for such a weapon.Template:Citation needed However, the authorsTemplate:Who? of the reportTemplate:Which? believed that due to advances in technology it was possible for a single weapon to fulfill both requirements. This was followed by a report from Sandia in mid-1962, that believed that a lightweight nuclear bomb with full fuzing option was possible and that such a program could be completed in a short time-span, possibly by 1965 or 1966.<ref name=b61history/>

Development of the weapon that would become the B61 was authorized in December 1962. The justification for the program was that the new weapon would modernize the nuclear arsenal, improve the capability of aircraft and simplify the nuclear weapons inventory by replacing lower-yield versions of the B28 and B43 nuclear bombs. The desired production date was June 1965.<ref name=b61history/>

The weapon was designated the TX-61 in January 1963. Due to the short time-scales, it was decided to make maximum use of off-the-shelf components such as those developed for the B57 nuclear bomb. Environmental conditions specified included an indefinite temperature range of Template:Convert to Template:Convert, shocks of up to 40g, and in flight temperatures of up to Template:Convert for up to 40 minutes. Parachute deployment was specified to produce a maximum load of Template:Convert.<ref name=b61history/>

The weapon was designed and built by the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico. Production engineering began in 1965, with the first war-reserve B61-0 weapon accepted by the AEC in December 1966. However production was halted in May 1967 for design modifications to be made before resuming in January 1968.<ref name=b61history/> Shot Flintlock Halfbeak in June 1966 may have been a full yield test of the weapon with other tests conducted between 1963 and 1968 at the Nevada Test Site.<ref name=NukeNotebook/>

During testing, spin motors were added to the weapon to produce a spin of 5 revolutions per second. This was to improve stability and decoupling during high speed delivery. Three alternatives to the weapon were also explored for still-classified reasons. The first alternative was halted due to its similarity to the original TX-61 design, and the Department of Defense was unfavorable to the second option which halted its exploration. The TX-61 design was ordered to "proceed along the lines" of the third alternative in May 1964, though it is unclear what that means.<ref name=b61history/>

Total production of all versions was approximately 3,155, of which approximately 540 remain in active service, 415 in inactive service and 520 are awaiting dismantlement Template:As of.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Fourteen versions of the B61 have been designed, known as Mod 0 through Mod 13 (See table below). Each shares the same physics package, with different yield options. One variant is the Mod 11, deployed in 1997, which is a ground-penetrating bunker busting weapon. The Russian Continuity of Government facility at Kosvinsky Kamen, finished in early 1996, was designed to resist US earth-penetrating warheads and serves a similar role as the American Cheyenne Mountain Complex.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Citation</ref> The timing of the Kosvinsky completion date is regarded as one explanation for U.S. interest in a new nuclear bunker buster and the declaration of the deployment of the Mod 11 in 1997: Kosvinsky is protected by about Template:Convert of granite.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The B61 unguided bomb should not be confused with the MGM-1 Matador cruise missile, which was originally developed under the bomber designation B-61.

Deployment

File:B-61 bomb (DOE).jpg
B61 bomb components. The physics package is contained in the silver cylinder center-left

The B61 has been deployed by a variety of US military aircraft. US aircraft cleared for its use have included the B-1 Lancer, B-2 Spirit, B-52 Stratofortress, F/A-18 Hornet, A-6 Intruder, A-4 Skyhawk, F-111, F-15E Strike Eagle and F-16 Fighting Falcon and the F-35A. As part of NATO Nuclear Weapons Sharing, German and Italian Panavia Tornado aircraft can also carry B61s.<ref name=NukeArchive/> The B61 can fit inside the F-22 Raptor's weapons bays.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

B61 tactical variants are deployed with NATO allies in Europe as part of the NATO Nuclear Weapons Sharing Program.<ref>"The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists", 26 October 2013</ref> About 150 bombs are stored at six bases: Kleine Brogel in Belgium, Büchel Air Base in Germany, Aviano and Ghedi Air Base in Italy, Volkel Air Base in the Netherlands and Incirlik in Turkey.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2012, NATO agreed to improve the capabilities of this force with the increased accuracy of the Mod 12 upgrade and the delivery of the F-35 aircraft.<ref>Kristensen, Hans M. "New Report: US and Russian Non-Strategic Nuclear Weapons." Template:Webarchive Federation of American Scientists, 2 May 2012.</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> This added a modest standoff capability to the B61.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The F-35A was certified to carry the B61-12 in October 2023, marking the first time an American fifth generation fighter has been certified as nuclear capable, and the first new platform in the NATO inventory to achieve such status since the early 1990s.<ref>EXCLUSIVE: F-35A officially certified to carry nuclear bomb. Breaking Defense. 8 March 2024.</ref>

In June 2025, The UK announced that it will purchase 12 F-35A fighter jets and formally join NATO’s Dual Capable Aircraft (DCA) nuclear sharing mission and will also buy the B61-12. The F-35A, a conventional take-off variant, is nuclear-capable and interoperable with US B61-12 gravity bombs, which already forms the core of NATO’s air-delivered nuclear capability.<ref >Template:Cite newspaper</ref>

Design

File:B61 nuclear bomb - inert training version.jpg
Inert training version of a B61 in an underground Weapons Storage and Security System (WS3) vault at Volkel Air Base, Netherlands. An access panel on the warhead is open, showing the interface for actions such as PAL (safety/arming) and variable yield setting

The B61 is a variable yield ("dial-a-yield" colloquially) dual use tactical and strategic bomb equipped with Full Fuzing Option (FUFO)<ref name=b61history/> designed for external carriage by high-speed aircraft. It has a streamlined casing capable of withstanding supersonic flight. The original B61-0 weapon was Template:Convert long, with a diameter of Template:Convert and a basic weight of Template:Convert<ref name=b61history/> with most later weapons having approximately the same dimensions and weight,<ref name=NukeArchive/> except for the Mod 11 version which has a weight of approximately Template:Convert.<ref name=Nuke2005>Template:Cite web</ref>

Ground operations

The B61 is armed by ground-based personnel via an access panel located on the side of the bomb, which opens to reveal nine dials, two sockets, and a T-handle which manually triggers the "command disable" function. One of the sockets is for a MC4142 "strike enable" plug which must be inserted in order to complete critical circuits in the safety/arming and firing mechanisms. The other socket is the PAL connector, which has 23 pins marked with alphabetic letter codes.<ref name=Glenn>Template:Cite web</ref>

The B61 "command disable" mechanism functions as follows: after entering the correct three-digit numeric code it is then possible to turn a dial to "DI" and pull back a T-shaped handle which comes away in the user's hand. This action releases a spring-loaded firing pin which fires the percussion cap on an MC4246A thermal battery, powering it up. Electrical power from the thermal battery is sufficient to "fry" the internal circuitry of the bomb, destroying critical mechanisms without causing detonation. This makes the bomb incapable of being used. Any B61 which has had the command disable facility activated must be returned to Pantex for repair.<ref name=Glenn/>

Fuzing and delivery

The B61 can be set for airburst or groundburst detonation, and by free fall, retarded free fall or laydown delivery through the use of a parachute to slow down the weapon during release from the delivery aircraft.<ref name=b61history/> Only the Mod 0 to 10 versions of the B61 are equipped with a parachute retarder (currently a 24-ft (7.3 m) diameter nylon/Kevlar chute). This offers the aircraft a chance to escape the blast in its retarded delivery modes, or allows the weapon to survive impact with the ground in laydown delivery mode. Contact preclusion can also be selected by the pilot. The weapon can be released at speeds up to Mach 2 and altitudes as low as Template:Convert. In one of the weapon's laydown modes, it detonates 31 seconds after weapon release.<ref>Template:Cite AV media</ref>

The Mod 11 is a hardened penetration bomb with a reinforced casing and a delayed-action fuze; this allows the weapon to penetrate several metres into the ground before detonating, damaging fortified structures further underground. Developed from 1994, the Mod 11 went into service in 1997 replacing the older megaton-yield B53 bomb. About 50 Mod 11 bombs have been produced, their warheads converted from Mod 7 bombs. At present,Template:When the primary carrier for the Mod 11 is the B-2 Spirit.<ref name=Nuke2005/>

Variants

Template:As of the B61 has 14 variants, referred to as Mod 0 through Mod 13.

Mod Status Date<ref group=Note>In this context, date means from the start of Phase 6 full scale production to the retirement of the final weapon at the end of Phase 7.</ref> Number produced Role Yields PAL type Notes
0 Retired 1/67 to 9/93<ref name=SandiaHistory/> 500<ref name=Kristensen2015>Template:Cite journal</ref> Tactical<ref name=B61-7Dev>Template:Cite report</ref> 10 to 300Template:Nbspkt<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Cat B<ref name=NukeNotebook>Template:Cite journal</ref> First production weapons
1 Retired 2/69 to 9/89<ref name=SandiaHistory/> 700<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Strategic<ref name=B61-7Dev/> 10 to 340Template:Nbspkt<ref name=Kristensen2015/> None<ref name=NukeNotebook/><ref name=Kristensen2015/>
2 Retired 6/75 to 9/94<ref name=SandiaHistory/> 235<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Tactical<ref name=B61-7Dev/> 10 to 150Template:Nbspkt<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Cat D<ref name=Kristensen2015/>
3 Active 10/79 to present<ref name=SandiaHistory/> 545<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Tactical<ref name=Kristensen2015/> 0.3, 1.5, 60, or 170Template:Nbspkt<ref name=NukeArchive/> Cat F<ref name=Kristensen2015/>
4 Active 8/79 to present<ref name=SandiaHistory/> 695<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Tactical<ref name=Kristensen2015/> 0.3, 1.5, 10, or 45Template:Nbspkt<ref name=NukeArchive/> Cat F<ref name=Kristensen2015/>
5 Retired 6/77 to 9/93<ref name=SandiaHistory/> 265<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Tactical<ref name="Reliability">Template:Cite report</ref><ref name=B61-7Dev/> 10 to 150Template:Nbspkt<ref name=NukeNotebook/> Cat D<ref name=Kristensen2015/>
6 Never entered production 10 to 150Template:Nbspkt<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Cat D<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Conversion of Mod 0.<ref name=NukeNotebook/> Cancelled February 1992.<ref name=SandiaHistory/>
7 Active 9/85 to present<ref name=SandiaHistory/> 600<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Strategic Allegedly 4 yield settings, including 10, or 340Template:Nbspkt.<ref name=NukeArchive/> Cat D<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Conversion of Mod 1, conversion completed by April 1990<ref name=NukeNotebook/>
8 Never entered production 10 to 150Template:Nbspkt<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Cat D<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Conversion of Mod 2 and Mod 5.<ref name=NukeNotebook/> Cancelled February 1992.<ref name=SandiaHistory/>
9 Never entered production 10 to 300Template:Nbspkt<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Cat F<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Conversion of Mod 0.<ref name=NukeNotebook/> Cancelled September 1991.<ref name=SandiaHistory/>
10 Inactive stockpile 8/90 to present<ref name=SandiaHistory/> 215<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Tactical 0.3, 5, 10, or 80Template:Nbspkt<ref name=NukeArchive/> Cat F<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Remanufactured from retired Pershing II W85 warheads.<ref name=NukeNotebook/>
11 Active 12/96 to present<ref name=SandiaHistory/> 50<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Strategic Disputed, either same as Mod 7<ref name=NukeArchive/> or 400Template:Nbspkt<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Cat F<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Conversion of Mod 7, earth penetrating weapon.<ref name=NukeNotebook/>
12 Active First production unit 11/21<ref name=FPU>Template:Cite web</ref> 400 to 500 weapons planned Tactical/Strategic<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> 0.3, 1.5, 10, or 50Template:Nbspkt<ref name=Kristensen2015/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Cat F<ref name=Kristensen2015/> Conversion of Mod 4.<ref name=Kristensen2015/> To replace the Mods 3, 4 and 7.<ref name=FPU/>
13 Active First production unit 5/25<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> "a few dozen" Tactical/Strategic Allegedly 4 yield settings, including 10, or 340Template:Nbspkt. Conversion of Mod 7, earth penetrating weapon.<ref name=NukeNotebook/>

B61 Mod 3 and 4

File:B61internals.png
Internal nuclear components of the B61 bomb. The bomb was assembled at the Burlington AEC Plant and Pantex.

A Sandia document on the dates of the development phases of the US nuclear stockpile describes the B61-3 as an "improved Mod 2 w/IHE" and the B61-4 as "same as Mod 3 ex. Hi-Y".<ref name=SandiaHistory>Template:Cite report</ref>

The B61 Mod 3 and 4 bombs do not contain beryllium.<ref name=Beryllium>Template:Cite report</ref>

B61 Mod 5

A 1978 report on reducing or substituting beryllium in nuclear weapons noted that the B61-5 contained beryllium and that if the use of beryllium were to be restricted, the B61-5 could probably be replaced by the B61 Mod 3.<ref name=Beryllium/>

B61 Mod 6 and 8

The B61 Mod 6 and Mod 8 bombs were developed for use by the US Navy beginning in March 1987<ref name=Mod68>Template:Cite report</ref> and cancelled at the end of the Cold War.<ref name=Kristensen2015/> The weapons weighed Template:Convert, had a length of Template:Convert and a diameter of Template:Convert, and were one-point safe, used insensitive high explosives (IHE) in their primary stages and utilized enhanced electrical safety (EES).Template:Sfn

The weapons were to be built by converting existing B61-0, −2 and −5 weapons into Mod 6 and 8 weapons and the weapons were to use B61-7 weapon parts where possible.Template:Sfn By mass, the largest deviations from the B61-7 were the Acorn assembly, MC4137 TSSG (trajectory sensing signal generator) and the JTA (described as "ballast for WR").Template:Sfn

Electrical systems

The weapon's computer was the MC4139 Programmer, two of which are used on independent channels, and is identical to the programmer used on the B61-7.Template:Sfn The MC3656 Main Battery is identical to the battery used on the B61-7 and is thermally operated, providing 120 seconds of power for the weapon,Template:Sfn but initial power is supplied by the MC2238 Pulse Batteries which are activated by the weapon's pullout switches during separation from the aircraft.Template:Sfn

The weapon contained two neutron generators for initiation,Template:Sfn using a 2400 volt 0.6 μF capacitor for neutron generator firing and a 3300 volt 2.0 μF capacitor for the firing set.Template:Sfn If neither the radar fuze or the contact crystals actuated, the weapon would detonate at 120 seconds from arming.Template:Sfn

The weapons were to initially use the MC4175 Trajectory Sensing Signal Generators which are identical to the TSSG found in the B61-7, but starting from 1991, the Mod 6 was to get a new MC4137 Trajectory Sensing Signal Generator. The MC4175 stored the arming signal for the trajectory stronglink in its memory, so it featured a pair of rolamite acceleration switches designed to prevent the possibility of the signal being transferred to the stronglink before the rolamites were actuated by the spinning of the weapon in flight.Template:Sfn The MC4137 instead is provided the unique signal from the MC4139 Programmer, which stores it in a volatile memory that erases after approximately seven seconds of lost power, meaning that without intent from the MC4139 and continuously applied power the MC4137 does not know how to arm the safelink.Template:Sfn

File:B61-6,8 IUQS for MC2969.png
IUQS for MC2969 Intent Stronglink Switch

Template:Main

The weapon was to feature a number of weapon stronglinks. Stronglinks are part of the weapon's safety systems and are designed to be robust enough that they can survive abnormal environments long enough for the weapon's weaklinks to fail. This requires weak and stronglinks to be colocated so they are exposed to the same environmental conditions in an accident.Template:Sfn

The first stronglink was the MC2969 Intent Stronglink Switch which was also used on the B61-3, −4 and −7, W78, W80 and B83 weapons. The MC2969 consisted of a 14-pin ceramic-insulated bank of switches that would close upon the receipt of the proper intent unique signal (IUQS) to its electromechanical decoder. Receipt of the wrong signal would lock the MC2969 in the open position until a specific unlock signal was received.Template:Sfn

The second stronglink was the MC2935 Trajectory Stronglink Switch of which there were two, one for each channel of the weapon's firing set. Like the MC2969, it mechanically locked if it received the wrong input signals, but unlike the MC2969 it could only be manually unlocked, which could only take place at the factory.Template:Sfn Signals for the MC2935 come from either of the two MC4175s or the MC4137 Trajectory Sensing Signal Generators.Template:Sfn

A third stronglink existed inside the first exclusion region of the weapon and was involved in weapon arming. Details of the system are still classified.Template:Sfn

B61 Mod 12

File:F-35 B61-12 trial.jpg
B61 Mod 12 test

As of 2013, the Pentagon saw the B83 nuclear bomb as a "relic of the Cold War," believing that deploying a megaton-yield gravity bomb, the highest level nuclear weapon left in the U.S. inventory, to Europe was "inconceivable" at this point. It can also only be carried by the B-2 bomber, and integrating it onto additional aircraft would be costly. The Mod 12 upgrade is being pursued as a forward-deployed tactical/strategic nuclear weapon to protect NATO and Asian allies since it can be used from dual-capable fighter aircraft, as well as planned to arm the F-35 and B-21 Raider, and its lower yield options make it more flexible with less collateral effects. Recapitalizing the B61 is hoped to lead to the retirement of the B83, resulting in the elimination of the last megaton-yield U.S. bomb and leave the B61-series as the only U.S. gravity nuclear bomb.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In 2013, the Pentagon and NNSA stated that if B61 refurbishment did not begin by 2019, components in the existing weapons could begin to fail.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>Template:Update inline In 2013 Tom Collina of the Arms Control Association said that the new development could complicate arms control efforts with Russia.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

In 2014, Congress slashed funding for the project and called for alternates to be studied.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In January 2014, former Air Force Chief of Staff Norton A. Schwartz stated that the Mod 12 nuclear bomb upgrade would have enhanced accuracy and a lower yield with less fallout compared to previous versions of the weapon. Accuracy has not been a guarantee for air-dropped nuclear weapons, so consequently large warheads were needed to effectively impact a target; the Mod 11 nuclear earth-penetrator is accurate to 110–170 meters from the desired detonation location, so it requires a 400-kiloton warhead. The Mod 12 is accurate to 30 meters from a target and only requires a 50-kiloton warhead. Schwartz believes that greater accuracy would both improve the weapon and create a different target set it can be useful against. An example is the higher-yield Mod 11's role of attacking underground bunkers that need a ground burst to create a crater and destroy it through the shockwave. A 50-kiloton yield detonating on the ground produces a crater with a radius of 30–68 meters, depending on the density of the surface, effectively putting the bunker within the circular error probability.<ref name="fas25nov14">Template:Citation</ref>

In 2014, critics said that a more accurate and less destructive nuclear weapon would make leaders less cautious about deploying it, while Schwartz said it would deter adversaries more because the U.S. would be more willing to use it in situations where necessary. The improved accuracy would make it more effective than the previous Mod 3/4 currently deployed to the continent. F-16 and Panavia Tornado aircraft cannot interface with the new bomb due to electronic differences, but NATO countries buying the F-35 would be able to utilize it.<ref name="fas25nov14"/> The first flight test for an inert Mod 12 was conducted in 2015, with a second successful test in August 2017.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="flightglobal10july15">Template:Citation</ref>

Despite claims the Mod 12 has an earth penetrating capability,<ref>Video Shows Earth-Penetrating Capability of Mod 12 Nuclear Bomb Template:Webarchive – Fas.org, 14 January 2016</ref> the weapon does not have the reinforced structure like that of the Mod 11, which is required to function as an earth penetrating weapon. The Mod 11 will be retained in service for the ground penetrating mission.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

The Mod 12 Life Extension Program continued in 2018 and on 29 June 2018 two successful non-nuclear system qualification flight tests at Tonopah Test Range were reported.<ref>NNSA, Air Force complete successful end-to-end Mod 12 Life Extension Program flight tests at Tonopah Test Range Template:Webarchive GlobalSecurity.org</ref> In October 2018, the Mod 12 guided tail-kit assembly received Milestone C approval to enter the production phase; the TKA went through the traditional test program in under 11 months, achieving a 100% success rate for all 31 bomb drops.<ref>US Air Force's Mod 12 nuclear bomb new guided tail-kit assembly enters production phase Template:Webarchive. Air Recognition. 10 December 2018.</ref> The B61-12 nuclear bomb completed its successful flight tests with the US Air Force's F-15E in June 2020. It was dropped from above 25,000ft and was in the air for approximately 55 seconds before hitting the target.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The first B61-12 bomb was produced in November 2021. The weapon replaces the B61 mod 3, mod 4 and mod 7 bombs while the B61-11 will be retained in the stockpile. It is expected that the LEP will extend the B61's life by at least 20 years.<ref name=FPU/> In October 2022, it was announced that the US military planned to accelerate the deployment of the Mod 12 in Europe.<ref name="SCMP Russia says US lowering nuclear threshold">Template:Cite news</ref> This drew criticism from the Russian Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Alexander Grushko, who accused the US government of "reducing the nuclear threshold" with the weapon's increased accuracy.<ref name="SCMP Russia says US lowering nuclear threshold"/>

The F/A-18E/F Super Hornet is not listed as a future platform.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

B61 Mod 13

File:B61-13-first-production-unit.webp
First production B61-13 in May 2025

Initially, the NNSA Stockpile Stewardship and Management Plan anticipated Phase 1 development for the B61 Mod 13 Life Extension Program (LEP) beginning in 2037 with first production of the weapon in 2050,<ref name=SandiaHistory/> but in 2023 plans were announced to produce a new gravity bomb similar to that of the B61-12, but having a high yield similar to that of the B61-7, named the B61 Mod 13.<ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead linkTemplate:Cbignore</ref> This discards plans for the Mod 13 to be a future Mod 12 LEP.<ref name=FAS_mod13>Template:Cite web</ref> It is planned that for each B61-13 produced, one fewer B61-12 is to be produced, therefore not increasing the planned number of new B61 bombs;<ref>Template:Cite report</ref> defense officials indicated only "a few dozen" B61-13s may be produced. The new bomb will be carried by the B-21 Raider, but it is not planned to be deployed on the F-35.<ref>US to build new nuclear gravity bomb. Defense News. 27 October 2023.</ref>

The Federation of American Scientists have accused the weapon of being a "political bomb", introduced to finally retire the B83-1 nuclear bomb, whose retirement has been blocked by hardliners.<ref name=FAS_mod13/>

The first B61-13 was completed in May 2025.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

W61 Earth Penetrator Warhead

File:W61 Earth Penetrator Warhead.jpg
W61 Nuclear Earth Penetrator Warhead

A W61 Earth Penetrator Warhead (EPW) with a yield of Template:Convert was developed for the AGM-129 Advanced Cruise Missile and the MGM-134 Midgetman small ICBM. The weapon entered Phase 1 initial development in January 1985 and phase 4 production engineering in September 1992 before being cancelled in December of that year.<ref name=Kristensen2015/><ref name=SandiaHistory/><ref name=Sure1988>Template:Cite report</ref>

In the Advanced Cruise Missile role, the weapon was to replace aging B53 bombs, but after the W61 cancellation the role was filled by the B61-11 bomb.<ref name=Sure1988/>

Pits

A declassified technical report on the automation of pit handling at Pantex indicates that the B61-2 and B61-5 share a common pit design, as do the B61-3, B61-10 and W85. The B61-0 and B61-4 do not share a pit with any other weapon. As the B61-7 was a retrofit of the B61-1 and the B61-11 was a retrofit of the B61-7, they presumably share a common pit.<ref>Template:Cite report</ref>

Cost

In May 2010, the National Nuclear Security Administration asked Congress for $40 million to redesign the bomb to enable the Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II to carry the weapon internally by 2017.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> This version is designated Mod 12.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> The four hundred Mod 12 bombs will be used by both tactical aircraft (such as the F-35) and strategic aircraft (such as the B-2) and the Tail Subassembly (TSA) will give them Joint Direct Attack Munition levels of accuracy, allowing the fifty kiloton warhead to have strategic effects from all carrying aircraft.<ref>Kristensen, Hans. "B61 LEP: Increasing NATO Nuclear Capability and Precision Low-Yield Strikes." Template:Webarchive FAS, 15 June 2011.</ref> However, refitting the 400 weapons is now expected to cost over $10 billion.<ref>Kristensen, Hans. "B61-12: NNSA’s Gold-Plated Nuclear Bomb Project." 26 July 2012Template:Webarchive FAS, 26 July 2012.</ref> The Mod 12 tail assembly contract was awarded to Boeing on November 27, 2012 for $178 million.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> Boeing will use their experience with the Joint Direct Attack Munition to yield JDAM-equivalent accuracy in a nuclear bomb.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> This contract is only the first part of the billion-dollar expense of producing and applying the tail kits, over and above the $10 billion cost to refurbish the warheads.<ref>Kristensen, Hans. "$1 Billion for a Nuclear Bomb Tail." Template:Webarchive FAS, 12 April 2013.</ref> The Mod 12 uses an internal guidance system and can glide to its target. On 1 July 2015, the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) conducted the first of three flight tests of the Mod 12 tail kit assembly.<ref name="flightglobal10july15"/>

According to the Federation of American Scientists in 2012, the roughly 400 B61-12s will cost $28 million each.<ref name=FAS12/>

See also

File:B-61 bomb rack.jpg
B61s on a bomb rack

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Notes

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References

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