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US-China relations
Opinion

Will the US’ new nuclear policies spark an arms race with China?

Will Saetren says China has thus far maintained a restrained approach to nuclear weapons – seeing them as ‘paper tigers’, more for show than use. The new US nuclear posture review, however, specifically threatens Beijing and may cause it to strengthen deterrence in return

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US President Donald Trump, left, speaks while his Secretary of Defence Jim Mattis listens during a cabinet meeting at the White House in Washington in January. The US’ aggressive nuclear posture review comes alongside an increased military budget, requested by Mattis, designed for “great power competition” against China and Russia. Photo: Bloomberg
Will Saetren
Last month, the Trump administration unveiled its nuclear policy review. As expected, the document significantly departed from Donald Trump’s predecessors. Every American president since Richard Nixon has cut the role and number of nuclear weapons in US strategy, but Trump called for new low-yield nuclear weapons and expanded the circumstances in which they can be used.
This is a dangerous development. In regions where superpower tensions already run high, the United States has significantly raised the stakes of miscalculation or misunderstanding.
Nuclear deterrence is an all or nothing game boiling down to ability to inflict unacceptable losses on an adversary. It does not take many nuclear weapons to accomplish this, nor is there any credible reason to believe that low-yield nuclear weapons will make the unthinkable less likely. A retired senior army officer who examined the review said the authors have provided Trump with “a kind of gateway drug for nuclear war”.
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China has shown clear understanding since it entered the nuclear weapons club in 1964. Mao Zedong understood that nuclear weapons could never be used. He is often quoted as referring to nuclear weapons as “paper tigers”, terrifying illusions with no power. To this day, China’s nuclear weapons policy largely reflects Mao’s philosophy.
In the 54 years since China tested its first nuclear bomb, it has accumulated roughly 270 nuclear warheads. The US arsenal, by contrast, ballooned to more than 32,000 in the late 1960s, with the US developing a nuclear bazooka, air-to-air missiles, surface-to-air missiles and a cannon to fire shells with the force of the bomb that destroyed Hiroshima. Many of these weapons have been tossed in the dustbin, but the US retains an inventory of more than 6,000 warheads.

With an irrational Trump in office, the nuclear power of US president must be tamed

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