China | Unpacific

China seeks to join the nuclear big league

The Pentagon warns that China is fast building up its nukes, as well as its conventional forces, to confront America

|WASHINGTON, DC

WHEN AMERICA and the Soviet Union raced each other to build ever-larger nuclear arsenals during the cold war, China ambled disdainfully. It did not detonate its first nuclear weapon until 1964, kept only a few hundred warheads compared with the tens of thousands piled up by the superpowers, and to this day maintains it will never be the first to use nukes in a war. Now China is sprinting to catch up.

In its latest annual assessment, the Pentagon says China’s stockpile of nuclear warheads, which last year it reckoned to be in the “low-200s”, could triple to about 700 by 2027 and will probably quintuple to about 1,000 or more by 2030. That is sharply higher than America’s previous forecast that the arsenal would double in size by then. Even so, it would still be smaller than America’s or Russia’s. Those countries each have about 4,000 warheads.

This article appeared in the China section of the print edition under the headline "An unpacific contest"

One year on

From the November 6th 2021 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from China

How Chinese networks clean dirty money on a vast scale

These shadowy “banks” are becoming the financiers of choice for transnational criminal gangs

The dark side of growing old

A coming wave of Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia will test China to its limits


Examining the fluff that frustrates northern China

An effort to improve the environment has had unintended consequences