The world's biggest powers might have
once pledged to
work toward a world without nuclear weapons, but global stockpiles are expected
to rise over the coming decade, according to a new report.
"There are clear indications that the reductions that have characterized global nuclear arsenals since the end of the cold war have ended," the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) said in a report on
Monday.The report comes amid growing Western concerns
over efforts by both China and North Korea to expand their nuclear
capabilities. The US suspects North Korea is preparing to conduct its seventh
nuclear test imminently, while China's Defense Minister Wei Fenghe told the
Shangri-La Dialogue summit at the weekend that his country had made
"impressive progress" in developing new nuclear weapons.
However, while SIPRI reports that China is
"in the middle of a substantial expansion of its nuclear weapon
arsenal," it makes clear that China and North Korea are not the only
culprits.
"All of the nuclear-armed states are
increasing or upgrading their arsenals and most are sharpening nuclear rhetoric
and the role nuclear weapons play in their military strategies -- this is a
very worrying trend," it said.
On SIPRI estimates, the United States and
Russia remain by far the world's largest nuclear powers, with 3,708 and 4,477
nukes respectively, while China has 350, France 290 and Britain 180. But
China's warhead count has increased in recent years, up from 145 warheads in
2006 according to the institute. The Pentagon predicts the Chinese stockpile to
"at least double in size" over the next decade.
While the stockpiles of both the US and Russia
declined in 2021, SIPRI believes an "alarming" longer-term trend will
see both countries increase their stockpiles and develop more powerful weapons.
North Korea's secrecy means it is hard to
gauge its nuclear abilities. Some estimates put its current stockpile at around
20 nuclear warheads, though the US and other countries believe it is working to
increase this number and its ability to deliver them.
Pyongyang has conducted a record number of
ballistic missile launches this year and on Saturday appointed top nuclear
negotiator Choe Son Hui as
its first female foreign minister.
"North Korea continues to prioritize its military nuclear program as a
central element of its national security strategy," SIPRI said, adding
that "the country's inventory of fissile material is believed to have
grown in 2021."
The think tank, which included figures for the
country in its annual report for the first time this year, said it believed
North Korea now had enough fissile material to produce up to 55 warheads.
But its ability to deliver these weapons
remains unknown. In May, North Korea tested what appeared to be an
intercontinental ballistic missile -- though the range of the weapon or its
ability to deliver a nuclear warhead were unclear.
"There is no publicly available evidence
that North Korea has produced an operational nuclear warhead for delivery by an
intercontinental range ballistic missile, but it might have a small number of
warheads for medium-range ballistic missiles," SIPRI said.
SIPRI also said India and Pakistan were making
efforts to expand their nuclear arsenals. It said Israel -- which does not
publicly acknowledge possessing nuclear weapons -- was trying modernize its
arsenal. Stockpile estimates for India and Pakistan stood at 160 and 165, and
for Israel, 90.
As recently as January, the world's five
biggest nuclear powers -- also known as the P5, as permanent members of the
United Nations Security Council -- pledged to work together toward "a
world without nuclear weapons" in a rare statement of unity.
However, Russia's subsequent invasion of
Ukraine has raised concerns that nuclear weapons could be used outside a
testing situation for the first time since the US bombed Hiroshima and Nagasaki
in 1945.
Since the start of the war Russia has
repeatedly reminded the world of its nuclear strength in oblique references
apparently aimed at dissuading Western countries from greater
intervention. CIA director William Burns has also warned Russia may use tactical nuclear weapons
in Ukraine.
Now many nations -- even those without nuclear
arms -- are rethinking their calculations. Japan, the US and South Korea have
recently vowed to strengthen their shared nuclear deterrence strategy.
At the Shangri-La Dialogue, Japanese Defence
Minister Nobuo Kishi made unusually strong comments directed at North Korea and
China.
"The world has become even more
uncertain," Kishi told Asia's premier defense summit. "Japan is
surrounded by actors that possess, or are developing, nuclear weapons, and that
openly ignore rules."
He criticized neighboring North Korea's
missile tests and called China "a nation of concern", citing recent
military operations it had held with Russia in waters close to Japan and Taiwan
-- their first since Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
"Ukraine (today) may be East Asia
tomorrow," he said.
Speaking at the same summit, South Korean
Defense Minister Lee Jong-sup said his country would "dramatically strengthen" its defensive capabilities amid heightened concerns
over Pyongyang's nuclear weapons program.
Various experts have pointed out that Russia's
invasion of Ukraine has demonstrated the power of nuclear deterrence. Ukraine is one of the few countries ever to have
voluntarily given up a nuclear arsenal. It did so after the fall of the Soviet
Union, sending many of its weapons to Russia -- the same country that it is now
being invaded by.
"Countries that feel under threat may
look at Ukraine and figure that getting rid of [their] nuclear weapons is not
the way to go and that might diminish the incentive for them to move towards
nuclear free deal which will become an uphill task," said regional
security expert Ian Chong, also an associate professor of political science at
the National University of Singapore.
Chong said that there had been "a high
level of concern about nuclear weapons" at the Shangri-La. "We are
seeing a ratcheting up of tensions that is very reflective of the concerns in
northeast Asia [at the moment] in the event of any nuclear attack."
SIPRI's report is also likely to refocus
attention on China's nuclear ambitions, following reports last year that
Beijing was building a sprawling network of intercontinental ballistic missile
silos in its western desert.
"Several additional nuclear warheads are
thought to have been assigned to operational forces in 2021 following the
delivery of new mobile launchers and a submarine," SIPRI wrote.
At the Shangri-La Dialogue, Chinese Defense
Minister Wei Fenghe defended his country's nuclear stance.
"China has always pursued an appropriate
path to developing nuclear capabilities for protection of our country," he
said in response to questions about the new nuclear missile silos. Wei said
that nuclear weapons would be used "in self defense" and to prevent a
nuclear war.
"We developed nuclear capabilities to
protect the hard work of the Chinese people and protect our people from the
scourge of nuclear warfare," he said.
Wei's comments came after remarks from US
Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, who told the same conference that China was engaged in
coercive, aggressive and dangerous actions that threatened to "undermine
security, stability and prosperity in the Indo-Pacific."
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