Bangkok Post

‘Fewer but newer’ nukes, report says

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STOCKHOLM: The overall number of nuclear warheads in the world has declined in the past year but nations are modernisin­g their arsenals, a report published yesterday said.

At the start of 2019, the United States, Russia, Britain, France, China, India, Pakistan, Israel and North Korea had a total of some 13,865 nuclear weapons, according to estimates in a new report by the Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute (Sipri).

That represents a decrease of 600 nuclear weapons compared to the start of 2018.

But at the same time all nuclear weapon-possessing countries are modernisin­g these arms, and China, India and Pakistan are also increasing the size of their arsenals.

“The world is seeing fewer but newer weapons,” Shannon Kile, director of the Sipri Nuclear Arms Control Programme and one of the report’s authors said.

The drop in recent years can mainly be attributed to the US and Russia, whose combined arsenals still make up more than 90% of the world’s nuclear weapons.

This is in part due to the countries fulfilling their obligation­s under the New Start treaty — which puts a cap on the number of deployed warheads and was signed by the US and Russia in 2010 — as well as getting rid of obsolete warheads from the Cold War era.

The Start treaty is, however, due to expire in 2021, which Mr Kile said was worrying since there are currently “no serious discussion­s underway about extending it”.

Next year the treaty on the Non-Proliferat­ion of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) — considered the cornerston­e of the world’s nuclear order — turns 50.

The number of nuclear arms has been drasticall­y reduced since a peak in the mid-1980s when there were some 70,000 nuclear warheads in the world.

While Mr Kile said progress should not be underestim­ated, he also noted a number of worrying trends, such as the build-up of nuclear arms on both sides of the border between rivals India and Pakistan, and the danger of a convention­al conflict escalating to a nuclear one.

There is also a more general trend towards an “increased salience” of nuclear weapons, where changing strategic doctrines, particular­ly in the US, are giving nuclear weapons an expanded role in both military operations and national security dialogue, Mr Kile said.

“I think the trend is moving away from where we were five years ago, where the world’s nuclear weapons were being marginalis­ed,” Mr Kile said.

Former UN chief Ban Ki-moon recently urged nuclear powers to “get serious” about disarmamen­t and warned there was a “very real risk” that decades of work on internatio­nal arms control could collapse following the US pullout of the Iran nuclear deal, which he said sent the wrong signal to North Korea.

Global disarmamen­t efforts also suffered a blow when the United States announced in February it would withdraw from the Intermedia­te-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty, prompting Russia to say it would also suspend its participat­ion.

 ?? AP ?? A photo provided by North Korea shows testing of weapon systems in May.
AP A photo provided by North Korea shows testing of weapon systems in May.

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