Global nuclear weapons inventories, 1945–2013
Abstract
The authors calculate that some 125,000
nuclear warheads have been built since 1945, about 97 percent of them by
the United
States and the Soviet Union and Russia. The nine
nations with nuclear weapons now possess more than 10,000 nuclear
warheads
in their military stockpiles, the authors estimate,
with several thousand additional US and Russian retired warheads in
storage,
awaiting dismantlement. The nuclear stockpiles of
China, as well as Pakistan, India, Israel, and North Korea, are
minuscule
in comparison with the US and Russian arsenals, but
more difficult to estimate. Still, the authors believe that China’s
nuclear
weapons stockpile has surpassed Great Britain’s.
Although the total number of nuclear warheads in the world is decreasing
because of US and Russian reductions, all the
nations with nuclear weapons continue to modernize or upgrade their
nuclear
arsenals.
Excessive secrecy prevents the public from
knowing the exact number of nuclear weapons in the world. Although the
United States,
Russia, Britain, and France have taken steps to
increase the transparency of their nuclear stockpiles—both past and
present—China,
Pakistan, India, Israel, and North Korea continue to
refuse to provide basic information about their arsenals. Moreover, an
unfortunate new trend is emerging, in that countries
that previously provided estimates of the other nations’ nuclear forces
have curtailed their release of such information.
Secrecy creates uncertainty, mistrust, and misunderstandings. Increased
transparency would alleviate this potentially
dangerous situation.
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