Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Report to Congress: China will double warheads by 2030

Pentagon says its nuclear stockpile will still lag far behind U.S., Russia

- ROBERT BURNS

WASHINGTON — China likely plans to double its stockpile of nuclear warheads in this decade, including those designed to be carried atop ballistic missiles that can reach the United States, the Pentagon said in a report released Tuesday.

Even with such increases, China’s nuclear force would be far smaller than that of the United States, which has an estimated 3,800 warheads in active status and others in reserve. Unlike the U.S., China has no nuclear air force, but the report said that gap may be filled by developing a nuclear air-launched ballistic missile.

The Trump administra­tion has been urging China to join the U.S. and Russia in negotiatin­g a three-way deal to limit strategic nuclear arms, but China has declined. Chinese Foreign Ministry officials have said China’s arsenal is too small to be included in negotiated limits and that by pressing China to join in such talks, the Trump administra­tion has created a pretext for walking away from the existing U.S.-Russia arms treaty known as New START.

That deal is due to expire in February but could be renewed for up to five years if Moscow and Washington agree.

In its annual “China Military Power” report to Congress, the Pentagon said the modernizat­ion and expansion of China’s nuclear forces is part of a broader effort by Beijing to develop a more assertive position on the world stage and to match or surpass America by 2049 as the dominant power in the Asia-Pacific region.

“China’s nuclear forces will significan­tly evolve over the next decade as it modernizes, diversifie­s, and increases the number of its land-, sea-, and air-based nuclear delivery platforms,” the report said. “Over the next decade, China’s nuclear warhead stockpile — currently estimated to be in the low 200s — is projected to at least double in size as China expands and modernizes its nuclear forces.”

Within that force, the number of nuclear warheads on land-based interconti­nental ballistic missiles capable of threatenin­g the United States — currently about 100, according to the report — “is expected to grow to roughly 200 in the next five years,” it said.

Hans Kristensen, a nuclear weapons expert at the Federation of American Scientists and a specialist in China’s force, said the “low 200s” Pentagon estimate is slightly lower than his own estimate of about 300.

“The low number of course somewhat weakens the Trump administra­tion’s warnings about Chinese capabiliti­es” and its concerns that Beijing may be aiming to achieve nuclear parity with the United States, he said.

Defense Secretary Mark Esper himself made this connection three days before the Pentagon’s China report was released.

“As Communist China moves to at least double the size of its nuclear stockpile, modernizin­g our nuclear force and maintainin­g readiness is essential to a free and open Indo-Pacific,” he wrote on Twitter.

The Pentagon report also raised the possibilit­y that China may adopt a higher level of nuclear combat readiness. Currently, it keeps its nuclear warheads stored separately from its missiles and launchers and thus would need advance warning to get them ready for war.

The report said unspecifie­d evidence emerged in 2019 indicating that China wants to keep at least a portion of its force on a higher state of alert known as “launch on warning,” meaning for example that its silo-based ICBMs would be armed in peacetime and ready for launch on short notice, which is the way the U.S. ICBM force operates.

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