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1[[quoteright:294:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/Tu-95h_1.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:294:Do not feed the [[ReportingNames "Bear"]]. No, seriously.[[note]]Pictured: The Tupolev Tu-95, probably one of, if not the fastest and noisiest propeller aircraft ever. Yep, it is just around 80mp/h slower than the US counterpart B-52 and can be heard from submarines. [[OldSoldier This virtual antique (older examples first came into service in 1952, at a time when most countries were looking towards jet-powered bombers) is still enough of a threat]] that allied nations send out their advanced jet fighters to escort them away when they stray too close.[[/note]]]]
3->''(Russian accent) "Russia has The Bomb, we have many bombs. We don't know where they all are. Maybe you want a dirty bomb."''
4-->-- '''Creator/RobinWilliams'''
5
6What the UsefulNotes/RedsWithRockets and UsefulNotes/RussiansWithRustingRockets have - [[MacrossMissileMassacre lots and]]
7 [[ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill lots of nukes]]. Where evil Soviets or Russians go in fiction, their nuclear weapons platforms are likely to be close behind. They also look cool and sound cool, making them great vehicles for baddies.
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9In RealLife, the Russian Federation is still the world's largest nuclear power with 5,830 active nuclear warheads, although this is considerably down from the 1986 peak of over 40,000 and over 3,000 of these are in storage as per the 2002 SORT Treaty. The USSR exceeded the US in raw numbers of warheads in 1978, a major factor in the Reagan defence expenditure increases.
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11They were developed in response to the United States' policy of UsefulNotes/PeaceThroughSuperiorFirepower. The Soviets' (well, to be honest, mutual) institutional paranoia and fear that they were going to get sneak attacked[[note]]Especially in the early 1980s with Pershing II and GLCM missiles in Western Europe. As Russians will point out to you, their experience of being sneak-attacked from the West in 1941 was ''extremely'' traumatic and their foreign policy since has concerned preventing this from happening again. They will also point out that the Soviet Union had a "no first use" policy for nuclear weapons, but the United States ''did not and still doesn't''—Eisenhower unofficially had one, and successive presidents have maintained it, but it was never signed into law and is subject to presidential whim. (Post-Soviet Russia abandoned this policy in 1993, and reserves the right to use nuclear weapons in response to invasion.)[[/note]], Khruschev's love for stuff high-tech and a view that having the things in service supplanted other considerations, meaning that platforms arrived before they were fully military effective (early Soviet missile subs had short-range missiles and were sitting ducks for Western subs), or ''safe''.
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13We'll look at the different types of delivery systems (because warheads are just boring). We'll cite Soviet/Russian and NATO designations for both (we'll ignore those silly bilateral RS ones, which the USSR just made up, as well as largely ignore the hard-to-remember GRAU codes used in the Russian military).
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15These weapons have appeared a lot in fiction, in both a nuclear and conventional role.
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17Before we begin a few notes on the Soviet/Russian nukes:
18* During the UsefulNotes/ColdWar, many submarines didn't have names, but rather alpha-numeric designations. The numbers painted on the side of a sub were ''never'' connected to her actual designation; they were deliberately obfuscatory and changed at random. They often had nicknames though. All Russian submarines now have names.
19* High-falutin' ship names went out of fashion in the 1930s. Sorry, Tom Clancy and James Bond...
20* Unlike a lot of other navies, ship classes weren't named after the first one built. Instead, ship classes were given two-to-four digit "Project" numbers, assigned randomly for counter-intelligence purposes.
21* The ReportingNames system for the Navy varied over time. Sometimes a name is one of the names of the first ship in the class. Where this is the case, the reporting name will be in italics.
22* You read that right- names. Many a warship will change its name when it is passed on second-hand to another navy. In the case of the Russian Navy, however, this was often for a different reason. When the USSR collapsed, a lot of ship names became politically incorrect (as in names of places no longer under Moscow's control) and were changed. Sometimes twice. This can lead to confusion, like any discussion of a ship called ''Moskva'' (the helicopter carrier or the cruiser formerly called ''Slava''?).
23* There were two designators for missiles- the "secret" ones (which we're using) and the "public" GRAU codes (which we're generally not). Both, however, were state secrets during the Soviet time, thus the ReportingNames.
24* Quoted statistics are unclassified estimates and may be subject to error.
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26See AtomicHate for what we are including.
27
28Welcome to a world of big missiles, embarrassing (sometimes fatal) incidents, political intrigue and Dire "Badgers".
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30Here we go. Due to the number of platforms, this is split into sub-entries.
31[[index]]
32* UsefulNotes/MnogoNukesMissileSubmarines
33* UsefulNotes/MnogoNukesOtherNavalNukes
34* UsefulNotes/MnogoNukesBombers
35* UsefulNotes/MnogoNukesTacticalDeliverySystems
36* UsefulNotes/MnogoNukesIntercontinentalMissiles
37* UsefulNotes/MnogoNukesOtherBallisticAndCruiseMissiles
38* UsefulNotes/MnogoNukesSurfaceToAirMissiles
39* UsefulNotes/MnogoNukesOther
40[[/index]]
41
42Rather prone to ANuclearError, and, if the Russian Orthodox Church is to be believed, are watched over by [[OddJobGods St. Barbara]].
43
44''NB: This trope used to be known as "Mnogo Nukes", a title still seen on other pages of the wiki (and above!). "Mnogo" is a Russian word meaning "a lot of" or "too many".''
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