Global Nuclear Order

Syllabus: Effect of policies and politics of developed and developing countries on India’s interests, Indian diaspora.

Background of the Global Nuclear Order

  • Nuclear weapons have not been used since Hiroshima and Nagasaki (1945).
  • Global arsenals fell from 65,000 (1970s) to 12,500 today.
  • Despite fears, only nine countries possess nuclear weapons.

Trump’s Announcement

  • Donald Trump has announced U.S. plans to start testing nuclear weapons “on an equal basis”.
  • The message targeted Russia and China, suggesting they were testing clandestinely.
  • Confusion arose since U.S. nuclear labs fall under the Department of Energy, not the Department of War.

Existing Nuclear Developments

  • Russia tested the Burevestnik nuclear-powered missile and Poseidon underwater torpedo.
  • China tested hypersonic glide vehicles capable of orbiting Earth.
  • U.S. developing new warheads like the B61-13 and W76-2.

Status of the CTBT (Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty)

  • CTBT (1996) has 187 signatories but has not entered into force.
  • Required ratifications missing from U.S., China, Israel, Egypt, Iran, and withdrawn by Russia (2023).
  • India, Pakistan, North Korea have not signed.
  • CTBT bans “any nuclear weapon test explosion”, but lacks definition; U.S., Russia, China follow zero-yield testing.
    • Zero-yield testing refers to nuclear experiments that create no detectable nuclear explosion, specifically avoiding a self-sustaining, supercritical chain reaction, to study weapon components or physics without violating test ban treaties like the CTBT.

Potential Global Fallout

  • Resumption of explosive testing may trigger a new nuclear arms race.
  • China, with only 47 past tests, stands to gain from new testing data.
  • India, observing a voluntary moratorium since 1998, may be compelled to resume testing to validate thermonuclear designs.
  • This threatens the global non-proliferation regime and weakens the nuclear taboo.

Need for a New Nuclear Order

  • The current order is shaped by 20th-century geopolitics and now under strain.
  • UN warns nuclear risks are “alarmingly high”, urging restraint.
  • A modern nuclear framework is needed to prevent miscalculation and escalation.

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