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This week,
Hans M. Kristensen, director of the Nuclear Information Project, and Dr.
Robert S. Norris, senior fellow for Nuclear Policy, published the new installment of the Nuclear Notebook
in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists regarding India's nuclear forces.
India is
estimated to have produced approximately 520 kilograms of weapons-grade
plutonium, sufficient for 100 to 130 nuclear warheads; however, not all
of the material has been converted into warheads. Based on available
information, Kristensen and Norris estimate that India currently has 80
to 100 nuclear warheads for its emerging Triad of air-, land-, and
sea-based nuclear-capable delivery vehicles.
On April 19,
2012, India successfully launched their Agni V ballistic missile, which
has a range of greater than 5,000 kilometers and is capable of reaching
any location in China. However, there is additional testing needed and
it is a few years away from operational deployment.
Kristensen and
Norris state that India will need more warheads to arm the new missiles
they are currently developing. Other signs that India is growing its
arsenal include the construction of a second plutonium production
reactor on the east coast and the development of an unsafeguarded
prototype fast-breeder reactor at the Indira Gandhi Centre for Atomic
Research, which once operational, will increase India's plutonium
processing capabilities.
To read the Nuclear Notebook click here.
For more information on India and their nuclear arsenal, check out these FAS resources and much more on our website.
FAS Programs and Resources:
Nuclear Information Project- Status of World's Nuclear Forces, 2012
Strategic Security Blog
Nuclear Weapons: India's Nuclear Forces
India Special Weapons Guide
Factsheet: Indian Nuclear Explosions
Congressional Research Service Reports:
U.S. Nuclear Cooperation with India: Issues for Congress
India’s Nuclear Separation Plan: Issues and Views
Nuclear Weapons R&D Organizations in Nine Nations
Nuclear Threat Reduction Measures for India and Pakistan
U.S.-India Nuclear Cooperation: A Side-By-Side Comparison of Current Legislation
India: Domestic Issues, Strategic Dynamics, and U.S. Relations
Other Resources:
Nuclear Weapons in the 21st Century: Prospects and Policy
(Dr. Richard L. Garwin)
Nuclear Weapons in the Twenty-First Century
(Stephen M. Younger, Los Alamos National Laboratory)
Indian Special Weapons Agencies
(Department of Atomic Energy) |
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