Stockholm тАУ As nuclear nations commit to renewing and sometimes expanding their arsenals, a decline seen since the early 1990s seems to have stalled, with some signs of a numerical increase, researchers said Monday
The amount of nuclear weapons among the nine nuclear-armed states тАФ the U.S., Russia, the U.K., France, China, India, Pakistan, Israel and North Korea тАФ totaled 13,080 at the start of 2021, a slight decrease from 13,400 a year earlier, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) estimated.
тАЬThe reduction of nuclear arsenals that we have gotten used to since the end of the Cold War appears to be leveling out,тАЭ said Hans Kristensen, associate senior fellow at SIPRIтАЩs Nuclear Disarmament, Arms Control and Non-proliferation program.
The figure includes retired warheads waiting to be dismantled, and without them the combined military stockpile of nuclear arms rose from 9,380 to 9,620.
Meanwhile, the number of nuclear weapons deployed with operational forces increased from 3,720 to 3,825, the report said.
Of these, some 2,000 were kept in a тАЬkept in a state of high operational alert,тАЭ meaning for launch in a matter of minutes.
тАЬWeтАЩre seeing very significant nuclear modernization programs all around the world and in all the nuclear weapons states,тАЭ Kristensen said.
He added that nuclear states also seem to be raising тАЬthe importance they attribute to the nuclear weapons in their military strategies.тАЭ
This change can be observed in both Russia and the United States, which together possess over 90% of the worldтАЩs nuclear weapons, Kristensen said, stressing it was too early to say if the new U.S. administration under President Joe Biden would deviate from the strategy under his predecessor Donald Trump.
тАЬI think that the Biden administration is signalling quite clearly that it is going to continue the overwhelming main thrust of the nuclear modernization program that was under way during the Trump years,тАЭ the researcher said, noting the program was started under Barack Obama.
The U.S. and Russia continued to dismantle retired warheads, but both had about 50 more in тАЬoperational deploymentтАЭ at the start of 2021 than a year earlier.
At the same time, the New START nuclear arms reduction treaty between the U.S. and Russia was extended for another five years in early 2021, albeit at the last minute.
The extension was important to тАЬcreate stabilityтАЭ and тАЬit was doubly importantтАЭ as other treaties тАФ such as the INF treaty, banning intermediate and shorter range land based missiles тАФ have expired.
The report authors said тАЬall the other seven nuclear-armed states are also either developing or deploying new weapon systems or have announced their intention to do so.тАЭ
The International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) this month reported that nuclear nations increased spending on their arsenals by $1.4 billion to $72 billion in 2020, even as the pandemic raged.
In August, the parties to the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) тАФ or most countries in the world тАФ are set to meet in New York for a review held every five years.
Under the treaty nuclear powers commit to тАЬpursue negotiations in good faithтАЭ both on the тАЬcessation of the nuclear arms raceтАЭ and тАЬnuclear disarmament,тАЭ but as many are renewing their arsenals, other parties may question their commitment.
тАЬThe member states of that treaty will rightly be able to ask: тАШAre you truly in тАШcompliance with this treaty?’тАЭ Kristensen said.
тАЬтАШIf youтАЩre not, why should we continue to be members to the treaty’тАЭ
While we might see a reversal of the trend since the end of the Cold War, Kristensen cautioned there were a lot of uncertainties about where future developments might lead.
тАЬIs it just that the reduction phase is over, or are we even going to see an increase because countries might want more weapons,тАЭ he said, adding that ChinaтАЩs growing stockpile may also affect U.S. and Russian readiness to disarm.
The situation during the Cold War was much more тАЬintense,тАЭ added Kristensen.
The number of nuclear weapons peaked at over an estimated 70,000 in 1986.
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