Kuwait Times

Nuke arms decline stalls as nations modernize arsenals

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STOCKHOLM: 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 yesterday.

“The reduction of nuclear arsenals that we have gotten used to since the end of the Cold War appears to be leveling out,” Hans Kristensen, associate senior fellow at SIPRI’s Nuclear Disarmamen­t, Arms Control and Non-proliferat­ion Programme, told AFP. The amount of nukes

among the nine nuclear-armed states-the US, Russia, the UK, France, China, India, Pakistan, Israel and North Korea-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. However, this 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 “kept in a state of high operationa­l alert,” meaning for launch in a matter of minutes. “We’re seeing very significan­t nuclear modernizat­ion programs all around the world and in all the nuclear weapons states,” Kristensen said. He added that nuclear states also seem to be

raising “the importance they attribute to the nuclear weapons in their military strategies.”

This change can be observed in both Russia and the United States, which together possess over 90 percent of the world’s nuclear weapons, Kristensen said, stressing it was too early to say if the new US administra­tion under President Joe Biden would deviate from the strategy under his predecesso­r Donald Trump. “I think that the Biden administra­tion is signaling quite clearly that it is going to continue the overwhelmi­ng main thrust of the nuclear modernizat­ion program that was underway during the Trump years,” the researcher said, noting the program was started under Barack Obama.

The US and Russia continued to dismantle retired warheads, but both had about 50 more in “operationa­l deployment” at the start of 2021 than a year earlier. —AFP

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