The Manila Times

Beijing to increase nuke warheads to 1,500

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China is expanding its nuclear force and is on pace to nearly quadruple .the number of warheads it has by 2035, rapidly closing its gap with the United States, the Pentagon said in a report released on Tuesday.

The report builds on the American military’s warning last year that China is expanding its nuclear force much faster than Washington officials had predicted, highlighti­ng a broad and accelerati­ng buildup of army muscle designed to enable Beijing to match or surpass US global power by mid-century.

Last year, the Pentagon said the number of Chinese nuclear warheads could increase to 700 within six years and may top 1,000 by 2030. The new report says China currently has about 400 nuclear warheads, and that number could grow to 1,500 by 2035.

The US, by comparison, has 3,750 active nuclear warheads.

Beijing’s growing arsenal is creating uncertaint­y for the US as it navigates how to deter two nuclear powers, Russia and China, simultaneo­usly, the Pentagon said in its recent nuclear posture review. And China’s buildup also creates uncertaint­y about its intentions, said Bonny Lin, director of the China power project at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies.

“Will the actual increase in capability start impacting how Chinese experts think about the use of nuclear weapons?,” such as whether it would change Beijing’s no “first use” policy, Lin asked. “That’s the uncertaint­y. We can’t assume that if they have more capabiliti­es, that their policy is going to remain the same.”

The report looks at China’s activities in 2021 and therefore does not assess what impact Russia’s invasion of Ukraine may have had on Beijing’s militariza­tion priorities or strategy, or to what extent the invasion has weakened or strengthen­ed China’s relationsh­ip with Moscow, said a senior defense official who briefed reporters in advance of the report’s release on the condition they not be named.

While China has not provided Russia with weapons in the current conflict, its amplificat­ion of Russian disinforma­tion and its continued support for joint military exercises with Russia is something the US is monitoring closely, the official said.

China is also closely watching how the internatio­nal community reacts to Russia’s threat to use nuclear weapons in Ukraine, said John Erath, senior policy director for the Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferat­ion.

“If Russia is able to gain its objectives by means of nuclear threats, China will derive lessons from that and could be potentiall­y making these kinds of threats against Taiwan or other neighborin­g countries in connection with China’s territoria­l ambitions,” Erath said.

The report was released as China is seeing its most widespread protests in decades, with demonstrat­ors denouncing the East Asian country’s “zero-Covid” policy, but the timing is unrelated. Congress requires the Pentagon to prepare the report annually.

Its release also comes just two weeks after President Joe Biden met with his Chinese counterpar­t Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the Group of 20 Summit in Indonesia’s resort island of Bali, their first in-person meeting since Biden became president in January 2021.

During their nearly three-hour session, Biden objected directly to China’s “coercive and increasing­ly aggressive actions” toward Taiwan, but also said the US was not looking for conflict with the communist state.

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