India believed to have ‘slightly expanded’ its nuclear arsenal in
2024: Global think-tank SIPRI report
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute reports intensive nuclear modernisation programs by nine nuclear-armed states, including India and Pakistan,
The think tank on Monday (June 16,
2025) launched its annual assessment of the state of armaments, disarmament and
international security in the SIPRI Yearbook 2025.
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The statement on the release of its
yearbook also makes a reference to the recent military conflict between India
and Pakistan.
The four-day military
confrontation between the two nuclear-armed neighbours in May brought the two countries
to the brink of full-scale war.
The SIPRI Yearbook provided a
country-wise assessment of the state of armaments, disarmament and
international security.
“Nearly all of the nine nuclear-armed
states — the United States, Russia, the United Kingdom, France, China, India,
Pakistan, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (North Korea) and Israel —
continued intensive nuclear modernisation programmes in 2024, upgrading
existing weapons and adding newer versions,” the statement said.
Of the total global inventory of an
estimated 12,241 warheads in January 2025, about 9,614 were in “military
stockpiles for potential use”, it claimed.
“India is believed to have once again
slightly expanded its nuclear arsenal in 2024 and continued to develop new
types of nuclear delivery system,” it said.
“India’s new ‘canisterised’ missiles,
which can be transported with mated warheads, may be capable of carrying
nuclear warheads during peacetime, and possibly even multiple warheads on each
missile, once they become operational,” the think-tank claimed.
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In early 2025 tensions between India
and Pakistan briefly spilled over into armed conflict, it said.
The combination of strikes and
third-party disinformation “risked turning a conventional conflict into a
nuclear crisis,” Matt Korda, Associate Senior Researcher with SIPRI’s Weapons
of Mass Destruction Programme and Associate Director for the Nuclear
Information Project at FAS (Federation of American Scientists), was quoted as
saying in the statement.
“This should act as a stark warning
for states seeking to increase their reliance on nuclear weapons,” he said.
The think-tank further said since the
end of the Cold War, the gradual dismantlement of retired warheads by Russia
and the USA has normally outstripped the deployment of new warheads, resulting
in an overall year-on-year decrease in the global inventory of nuclear weapons.
“This trend is likely to be reversed
in the coming years, as the pace of dismantlement is slowing, while the deployment
of new nuclear weapons is accelerating,” it cautioned.
Key findings of SIPRI Yearbook 2025
are that a “dangerous new nuclear arms race” is emerging at a time when arms
control regimes are “severely weakened,” it claimed.
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