Nuclear disarmament
The international community needs to make progress towards the goal of nuclear disarmament—and, eventually, persuade all of the existing nuclear weapon states give up their weapons.

  • There are believed to be at least 23,000 nuclear warheads still in existence, with a combined blast capacity equivalent to 150,000 Hiroshima bombs.
  • The vast majority (over 22,000) are possessed by the the U.S. and Russia—with France, the UK, China, India, Pakistan and Israel around 1,000 between them.
  • Almost half of all warheads are still operationally deployed—with the U.S. and Russia each having over 2,000 weapons ready to be launched within a decision window of just 4-8 minutes for each president in the event of perceived attack.

 

Immediately related elementsHow this works
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Nuclear Politics »Nuclear Politics
Nuclear challenges for the international community? »Nuclear challenges for the international community?
Nuclear disarmament
Potential nuclear disarmament steps? »Potential nuclear disarmament steps?
Is full nuclear disarmament achievable? »Is full nuclear disarmament achievable?
Is full nuclear disarmament desirable? »Is full nuclear disarmament desirable?
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