ItтАЩs a pivotal moment for nuclear weapons.┬а
Tensions between the United States and Russia, the two major nuclear powers,┬аare high. Longstanding nuclear pacts have crumbled. China, which trails well behind the United States and Russia in nuclear arms, is beefing up its arsenal. North Korea is a nuclear threat, and Iran is on the threshold.
Meanwhile, the United States is in the midst of an extensive update of its nuclear weapons. And when Donald Trump takes office as president on January 20, he will, for a second time, be responsible for those weapons. Here are some of the big issues weтАЩll be watching.
What will happen to nuclear arms control?
During the Cold War, in 1986, the worldтАЩs nuclear stockpiles swelled to more than 70,000 nuclear warheads. Now┬аthere are around 12,000. That reduction is largely thanks to a series of treaties between the United States and Russia (or previously the Soviet Union), the two nations that maintain the bulk of the weapons.┬а
But now, the only remaining nuclear arms control treaty between the United States and Russia, the┬аNew Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, or New START, is set to expire in February 2026. тАЬIf that treaty expires without a replacement, it will be the first time in 50 years that we do not have any agreed restrictions on nuclear arsenals with Russia,тАЭ says Steve Fetter, a professor of public policy at the University of Maryland in College Park.
Trump has a track record of pulling out of arms control deals. He withdrew the United States from the Iran nuclear deal in 2018, from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty in 2019, and from the Treaty on Open Skies in 2020. In TrumpтАЩs previous term, New START came close to expiring before President Joe Biden renewed it shortly after assuming office in 2021.
But Trump, who touts himself as a dealmaker, could instead pull off an agreement, Fetter says, pointing to TrumpтАЩs efforts to negotiate with North Korea during his previous term. тАЬI think that suggests that itтАЩs possible.тАЭ
Deal or not, using just a fraction of the worldтАЩs nuclear weapons could cause global devastation. In the 1980s, scientists predicted that smoke from fires caused by the blasts would be lofted into the stratosphere, where it would block sunlight, causing global cooling and thereby inducing widespread famine.┬аObservations of wildfire smoke recently┬аstrengthened the case that such a war could cause a тАЬnuclear winter,тАЭ┬аscientists reported in 2019 in┬аScience.┬а
What will happen to the U.S. nuclear arsenal?
In the meantime, the United States is neck-deep in a sweeping effort to┬аmodernize its nuclear arsenal, replacing or revamping nearly every component, including the nuclear warheads themselves and the missiles, submarines and bombers that carry them.┬а
The decades-long affair is already over budget and behind schedule, and experts say thereтАЩs little prospect of Trump significantly tinkering with that process. тАЬHis ability to change whatтАЩs actually happening on the ground in the U.S. is pretty close to zero,тАЭ says Lisbeth Gronlund, a researcher in nuclear security and policy at MIT.
One avenue where Trump could make an impact is the proposed development of a new type of weapon,┬аa nuclear-armed sea-launched cruise missile. Currently, the United States has 14 submarines that carry nuclear-armed ballistic missiles, so named because they fly in a ballistic trajectory: After launch they fall back to Earth in an arcing path determined by gravity. Cruise missiles, on the other hand, undergo powered flight for the duration of their travel.
The fuzzy calculus of nuclear weapons involves ensuring that nuclear-armed countries are deterred from attacking one another based on fear of retaliation. Arguing that the addition of the new missile would diversify the U.S. nuclear arsenal and thus enhance that deterrent, the first Trump administration proposed the weapon in 2018. But the Biden administration wasnтАЩt keen on the idea and tried to cancel its development. Trump could rekindle the effort, and that could ruffle feathers. тАЬThis is a totally new kind of weapon. ItтАЩs an aggressive move, and both China and Russia will perceive it as such,тАЭ Gronlund says.
Another issue is how many arms the U.S. has deployed. If New START dissolves, Trump will have more freedom to boost those numbers. тАЬThatтАЩs something I will be looking for,тАЭ Gronlund says. тАЬIs he going to be calling for the U.S. deploying more weapons?тАЭ
Each new administration performs a nuclear posture review, which lays out priorities and strategies. The Trump team is likely to do so in 2026. тАЬThat will give a very good blueprint for how the administration is viewing the role of nuclear weapons and how it will approach investing in the kind of force that they would like to see,тАЭ says Sharon Squassoni, a research professor of international affairs at George Washington University in Washington, D.C.
Could the United States return to nuclear weapons testing?
Some experts also speculate that Trump could break the longstanding moratorium on testing nuclear weapons. This would be a seismic shift. The United States hasnтАЩt performed any explosive nuclear tests since 1992. The only country to┬аtest a nuclear weapon┬аthis century is North Korea. But some in the Trump orbit have called for a return to testing, including┬аa former national security advisor to Trump. And officials in the previous Trump administration┬аdiscussed the possibility of resuming tests, according to a report in the┬аWashington Post.
Coupled with TrumpтАЩs willingness to challenge norms, that suggests a resumption of tests is possible, some experts say. тАЬHe just threatened tariffs on Denmark if they donтАЩt give us Greenland. In that world, is a return to nuclear testing credible?тАЭ Squassoni asks. тАЬYeah, sure.тАЭ
In 1996, the United States signed the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty, which prohibits nuclear weapons tests around the globe. Although the treaty was never ratified by Congress, the U.S. has abided by the treatyтАЩs provisions. Prior to the treaty, more than 2,000 nuclear tests caused untold damage to human health and the environment.┬а
Although underground tests reduce the dispersal of radioactive fallout compared to atmospheric tests, they donтАЩt assure the bombsтАЩ impact is contained. Radioactive material can┬аaccidentally be released┬аinto the atmosphere or migrate via groundwater, researchers reported in 2024 in┬аBulletin of the Atomic Scientists.
The United States resuming tests may encourage other countries with nuclear weapons to follow suit, experts say, and could ignite backlash from non-nuclear weapons countries.┬а
In lieu of explosive tests, the United States currently performs nonexplosive тАЬsubcriticalтАЭ nuclear tests. The Nevada National Security Site, northwest of Las Vegas, will soon host an enormous machine called Scorpius, with a particle accelerator the length of a football field designed to generate X-ray images of experiments with plutonium.┬а
Such efforts, combined with extensive computer simulations of nuclear weapons, have made explosive tests obsolete in the eyes of many. тАЬI donтАЩt think itтАЩs necessary,тАЭ Fetter says. тАЬI think itтАЩd be a huge mistake. But itтАЩs something that I and others will be looking at.тАЭ┬а