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Editorial: Luxon's lack of geopolitical experience is showing

Editorial: Luxon's lack of geopolitical experience is showing

NZ Heralda day ago

THE FACTS
Global tensions are high.
Some international relations experts and former diplomats suggest it could be the highest since the Cold War. Global affairs must be the most tenuous since the nervy months that followed September 11, 2001.
With a rapidly arming world, New Zealand's Prime Minister is at

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By Johan Ahlander , Reuters Around 2100 of the deployed warheads were kept in a state of high operational alert on ballistic missiles, nearly all belonging to either the US or Russia. Photo: 123RF The world's nuclear-armed states are beefing up their atomic arsenals and walking out of arms control pacts, creating a new era of threat that has brought an end to decades of reductions in stockpiles since the Cold War, a think tank said on Monday. Of the total global inventory of an estimated 12,241 warheads in January 2025, about 9614 were in military stockpiles for potential use, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) said in its yearbook , an annual inventory of the world's most dangerous weapons. Around 2100 of the deployed warheads were kept in a state of high operational alert on ballistic missiles, nearly all belonging to either the US or Russia. SIPRI said global tensions had seen the nine nuclear states - the United States, Russia, the United Kingdom, France, China, India, Pakistan, North Korea and Israel - plan to increase their stockpiles. "The era of reductions in the number of nuclear weapons in the world, which had lasted since the end of the Cold War, is coming to an end," SIPRI said. "Instead, we see a clear trend of growing nuclear arsenals, sharpened nuclear rhetoric and the abandonment of arms control agreements." SIPRI said Russia and the US, which together possess around 90 percent of all nuclear weapons, had kept the sizes of their respective usable warheads relatively stable in 2024. But both were implementing extensive modernization programmes that could increase the size of their arsenals in the future. The fastest-growing arsenal is China's, with Beijing adding about 100 new warheads per year since 2023. China could potentially have at least as many intercontinental ballistic missiles as either Russia or the US by the turn of the decade. According to the estimates, Russia and the US held around 5459 and 5177 nuclear warheads respectively, while China had around 600. - Reuters

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