Israel possess some 80 nuclear warheads, a number much lower
than that of countries that are officially in possession of atomic weapons,
according to the 2013 yearbook put out by the Stockholm International Peace
Research Institute (SIPRI), a leading think tank on global security issues.
Of those warheads, 50 are for medium-range ballistic
missiles and 30 are for bombs carried by aircraft, the report said. In
addition, “Israel may also have produced non-strategic nuclear weapons,
including artillery shells and atomic demolition munitions,” the Guardian
reported.
Israel is not a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation
Treaty and has long maintained an official position of ambiguity with regards
to its nuclear capabilities.
India and Pakistan, also countries that have not signed the
NPT but that nonetheless possess nuclear weapons, each have around 90-120
warheads, SIPRI found, while the NPT countries have many hundreds, or, in the
case of the US and Russia, many thousands, more.
Despite pledging not to do so, the countries that have
signed the NPT are still developing new nuclear weapons technology and are
prepared to hold on to their stores, the report said.
“All five legally recognized nuclear weapon states — China,
France, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States — are either deploying
new nuclear weapon delivery systems or have announced programs to do so, and
appear determined to retain their nuclear arsenals indefinitely,” SIPRI said in
a press release, while noting that with the exception of China, which “seems to
be expanding its nuclear arsenal,” overall numbers of nuclear weapons possessed
by NPT countries have been falling.
At the start of 2013 the five NPT states, plus India,
Pakistan and Israel, possessed “approximately 4,400 operational nuclear
weapons. Nearly 2,000 of these are kept in a state of high operational alert.
If all nuclear warheads are counted, these states together possess a total of
approximately 17,265 nuclear weapons… as compared with 19,000 at the beginning
of 2012,” SIPRI stated.
The report attributed the decrease to Russia and the US
having reduced their inventories to fulfill their obligations under New START,
the Treaty on Measures for the Further Reduction and Limitation of Strategic
Offensive Arms, and the culling of obsolete weapons.
SIPRI does not count North Korea and Iran as nuclear powers
yet, as their respective programs are still considered in their nascent stages.
“Once again there was little to inspire hope that the
nuclear weapon-possessing states are genuinely willing to give up their nuclear
arsenals. The long-term modernization programs under way in these states
suggest that nuclear weapons are still a marker of international status and
power,” SIPRI researcher Shannon Kile said.
The report, produced annually since 1968, analyzes issues
relating to security and conflicts, military spending, the arms industry and
non-proliferation, arms control and disarmament issues.
SIPRI found that in 2012, the numbers of peacekeeper forces
deployed worldwide dropped some 10 percent, largely due to the gradual withdrawal
of coalition forces from Afghanistan.
On Syria, “the United Nations appeared paralyzed… the new
principle of an international responsibility to protect populations if the
national government fails to do so — the basis of the 2011 intervention in
Libya — was not invoked, as China and Russia threatened to veto any action
through the UN and other Security Council members opposed outside
‘interference’ in Syria’s domestic affairs,” the report said.
“In the end, national interests and deep-rooted fears that
the responsibility to protect undermines the principle of state sovereignty,
seem to weigh heavier than the plight of populations caught up in conflict,”
senior researcher Dr. Jaïr van der Lijn said.
Efforts to introduce international controls on cluster
munitions were unsuccessful in 2013, the report said. Such devices disperse
explosives that can sometimes detonate a significant amount of time after they
are deployed, posing a threat to civilians.
Major arms-producing countries that have not signed onto the
2008 Convention on Cluster Munitions, including Israel and the US, continue
to produce, distribute and stockpile
such munitions, “even if most seem to have acknowledged their potentially grave
humanitarian impacts,” SIPRI wrote.
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