Published on: June 19, 2024

SIPRI REPORT

SIPRI REPORT

NEWS – Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) report on  Investments in Nuclear Arsenals released

HIGHLIGHTS

  • Focus: Continued modernization and increase in operational nuclear warheads
  • Key Finding: Rising global nuclear weapons spending, especially by the US

Nuclear Weapons Modernization

  • Nine Nuclear-Armed Nations:
    • Countries continue to modernize their arsenals.
    • Increasing reliance on nuclear weapons for deterrence.
  • SIPRI Director’s Statement:
    • Despite dismantling Cold War-era weapons, operational nuclear warheads are increasing.
    • Expected acceleration of this trend is concerning.

Recent Developments

  • Russia and Belarus:
    • Launched a second phase of exercises for deploying tactical nuclear weapons.
    • Analysts view this as a move to deter Western support for Ukraine.

Global Nuclear Spending

  • ICAN Report:
    • Total Spending (2023): $91.4 billion on nuclear weapons programs.
    • Increase: $10.7 billion more than in 2022.
    • Major Contributors:
      • United States: $51.5 billion (80% of the increase)
      • China: $11.8 billion
      • Russia: $8.3 billion
    • ICAN: Nobel Peace Prize winner (2017)

Operational Warheads

  • High Operational Alert Warheads:
    • Total: 2,100 deployed warheads on ballistic missiles.
    • Primarily in: Russia and the United States.
    • New Entrant: China believed to have warheads on high operational alert for the first time.
  • Stockpile Stability:
    • Russia and the US hold almost 90% of all nuclear weapons.
    • Russia deployed around 36 more warheads with operational forces in 2023.

Transparency and Treaties

  • Decline in Transparency:
    • Reduced transparency in nuclear forces following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
  • Nuclear-Sharing Debates:
    • Increasing importance in global discussions.
  • Strategic Stability Dialogue:
    • Washington suspended talks with Russia.
    • Moscow suspended participation in the New START nuclear treaty

Global Stockpile Data

  • Total Warheads:
    • Estimated at 12,121 in January 2024.
    • About 9,585 are in military stockpiles for potential use.
  • Deployed Warheads:
    • 3,904 warheads deployed with missiles and aircraft.
    • 2,100 in a state of high operational alert, primarily in the US and Russia, with China joining.

Country-Specific Updates

  • United States and Russia:
    • Possess nearly 90% of all nuclear weapons.
    • Transparency has declined post-Ukraine invasion.
    • Both have over 1,200 retired warheads being dismantled.
  • China:
    • Arsenal increased from 410 to 500 warheads from January 2023 to January 2024.
    • Rapid expansion; expected to rival US and Russia’s ICBMs by decade’s end, but overall stockpile remains smaller.
  • North Korea:
    • Estimated 50 warheads, with potential to reach 90.
    • Conducted new missile tests and developed land-attack cruise missiles.
    • Emphasis on tactical nuclear weapons raises conflict-use concerns.

Diplomatic and Strategic Concerns

  • Nuclear Diplomacy:
    • Wars in Ukraine and Gaza have weakened global nuclear diplomacy.
    • Russia suspended New START Treaty participation, affecting US data sharing.
    • Ongoing nuclear threats and tactical drills by Russia near Ukraine.
  • Middle East Tensions:
    • The Iran-US agreement in June 2023 temporarily eased tensions.
    • The Israel-Hamas war disrupted regional diplomatic efforts, affecting the Middle East nuclear-free zone conference.

India’s Nuclear Developments

  • Nuclear Triad Enhancement:
    • Strengthening the undersea leg of its nuclear triad
    • Developing long-range missiles
  • Submarine Fleet:
    • Third SSBN:
      • Launched in November 2021
      • Fourth SSBN under construction, expected launch in 2024
      • Significantly larger than the first two, approximately 20 meters longer as per satellite imagery
    • Second SSBN (Arighat):
      • Launched in November 2017
      • Underwent advanced sea trials in 2021-22
      • Commissioning delayed, expected in 2024