A turning point for nuclear deterrence
UPSC Study Note: A Turning Point for Nuclear Deterrence
1. At a Glance
- Nuclear deterrence is the strategic doctrine whereby a state's possession of nuclear weapons discourages adversaries from attacking, on the assumption that retaliation would be catastrophically costly. [S1]
- The expiry of New START (February 4, 2026) — the last binding US-Russia arms-control treaty — removed all legally enforceable limits on strategic nuclear arsenals for the first time since 1972. [S2]
- Trump's rupture with NATO over Greenland has shattered extended-deterrence credibility, pushing Europe to reconsider autonomous nuclear arrangements — a systemic shift in global nuclear order. [S3]
- Critical for GS-II (International Relations/Security) and GS-III (Security challenges); also touches GS-I (post-WWII world order).
2. Why in the News
- February 4, 2026: New START treaty expired; UN Secretary-General warned of a "grave moment" as legally binding limits on US-Russian strategic nuclear weapons lapsed amid heightened global tensions. [S2]
- February 5, 2026: The Hindu published an analysis by Priyanjali Malik (nuclear politics and security expert) examining how Europe's loss of trust in US nuclear guarantees could reshape global deterrence doctrine. [S3]
- Trump's Greenland gambit (late 2025–2026): US threats of economic warfare against NATO ally Denmark (Greenland is a Danish autonomous territory) irreparably damaged trust in US as nuclear guarantor of Europe. [S3]
- NPT Review Conference 2026: Convened in New York, April 27 – May 22, 2026; delegations warned threats to humanity are "real, present and growing." [S4]
3. Background & Evolution
- 1945: First (and last) nuclear weapons detonated — Hiroshima (August 6) and Nagasaki (August 9); ~80 years ago as of 2026 with no further wartime use. [S3]
- 1949: NATO founded as a collective defence alliance; US nuclear umbrella designated primary deterrent against Soviet Union; US functioned as primus inter pares (first among equals). [S3]
- 1968: NPT opened for signature; entered into force 1970; institutionalised the world into nuclear haves (P5) and have-nots (all others). [S1][S5]
- 1972 onward: A succession of US-Soviet/Russia bilateral arms control treaties (SALT I, SALT II, START I, New START) imposed quantitative limits on strategic warheads and delivery systems.
- 2010: New START signed; limited both sides to 1,550 deployed strategic warheads and 700 deployed delivery vehicles.
- February 2021: New START extended by five years to February 4, 2026 (agreed under Biden administration).
- 2022: Russia suspended participation in New START inspections; NPT Review Conference failed to adopt consensus final document; UN SG warned humanity is "one misunderstanding, miscalculation away from nuclear annihilation." [S6]
- 2026: New START expires unrenewed; nuclear deterrence architecture enters uncharted territory. [S2]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| NPT full name | Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons |
| NPT opened for signature | 1 July 1968 |
| NPT entry into force | 5 March 1970 |
| NPT depositary states | USA, USSR (Russia), UK |
| NPT signatories | 191 states parties (near-universal; India, Pakistan, Israel never signed; N. Korea withdrew 2003) |
| NPT Review Conferences | Every 5 years; 11th Review Conference: April–May 2026 |
| New START signed | 8 April 2010 (Prague) |
| New START expired | 4 February 2026 |
| New START limits | 1,550 deployed warheads; 700 deployed ICBMs/SLBMs/heavy bombers |
| NATO founding year | 4 April 1949 |
| NATO founding treaty | Washington Treaty (North Atlantic Treaty) |
| Greenland's legal status | Autonomous territory under the Kingdom of Denmark (a NATO member) |
| Nuclear deterrence debate | Certainty-vs-uncertainty: whether deterrence works through guaranteed retaliation or through ambiguity |
| Last nuclear detonation in war | 1945 (Nagasaki); ~80 years of non-use as of 2026 |
| International Day for Nuclear Elimination | 26 September (UN observance) |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Geopolitical / Strategic
- The US-Europe rift over Greenland demonstrates that intra-alliance trust is as essential to deterrence as warhead counts; extended deterrence collapses without credible political commitment. [S3]
- With New START expired, the US and Russia are for the first time since SALT I (1972) unconstrained by treaty limits on strategic nuclear arsenals, raising risks of a new arms race. [S2]
- Europe faces a binary: deepening reliance on Franco-British nuclear deterrents (France: ~290 warheads, UK: ~225), or pursuing strategic autonomy including a possible EU-level nuclear arrangement — both options are fraught. [S3]
- India is directly impacted: any destabilisation of the global nuclear order affects the India-Pakistan-China triangular deterrence dynamic in South Asia.
Legal / Constitutional
- Article VI of the NPT obliges nuclear-weapon states to pursue good-faith disarmament negotiations; New START's expiry without a successor undermines this legal commitment. [S1][S5]
- Article X of the NPT allows withdrawal with 90 days' notice (North Korea's precedent, 2003) — a legal loophole that structural deterrence collapse could incentivise others to exploit.
- The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), adopted 2017, entered into force 2021; none of the P5 or NATO states are parties, illustrating limits of norm-setting without major power buy-in.
Scientific / Technological
- Modernisation of delivery systems: all P5 states are upgrading ICBMs, SLBMs, and hypersonic glide vehicles, complicating arms-control verification (traditional counting rules no longer adequate). [S2]
- Tactical/battlefield nuclear weapons have no binding treaty limits; their potential use in European theatre is a live doctrinal debate post-Ukraine.
- The certainty-vs-uncertainty debate in deterrence theory: classical deterrence (Brodie, Schelling) assumed rational actors; new technologies (AI-enabled launch systems, cyber-vulnerability of nuclear command chains) introduce non-rational failure modes. [S3]
Historical
- The "long peace" (1945–2026) — 80+ years without nuclear weapon use in war — has been attributed partly to deterrence, partly to luck; the Malmö/Cuban Missile Crisis precedent shows how close inadvertent escalation has come. [S3]
- At the dawn of the nuclear age, strategists debated whether deterrence required declared, certain retaliation (Brodie) or deliberate ambiguity (the "threat that leaves something to chance" — Schelling). This debate is being reprised in 2026. [S3]
- The NPT regime (1970–present) successfully prevented proliferation beyond nine states, but its two-tier architecture (nuclear haves vs. have-nots) is increasingly contested by non-nuclear states as inequitable. [S5][S6]
Ethical / Governance
- Extended deterrence (US nuclear umbrella over NATO, Japan, South Korea) is premised on the willingness to risk nuclear war on an ally's behalf; when that willingness is publicly questioned, deterrence credibility erodes. [S3]
- The NPT's implicit bargain — non-nuclear states forgo weapons in exchange for eventual P5 disarmament — is visibly strained as disarmament stalls and arsenals modernise. [S6]
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- February 4, 2026: New START treaty expired without renewal; the last legally binding US-Russia nuclear arms control agreement lapsed. UN Secretary-General called it a "grave moment." [S2]
- February 5, 2026: The Hindu analysis by Priyanjali Malik flagged Europe's nuclear conversation as a potential turning point in deterrence doctrine. [S3]
- Late 2025 – early 2026: Trump administration's demands over Greenland triggered the most serious intra-NATO political rupture since the alliance's founding; European capitals began discussing autonomous security architectures. [S3]
- April 27 – May 22, 2026: 11th NPT Review Conference convened in New York; high-tension sessions amid New START expiry and ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict with nuclear overtones. [S4]
- 2022 NPT Review Conference (preceding cycle): Failed to adopt a consensus final document — first such failure since 1995 — signalling deep divisions between nuclear and non-nuclear states. [S6]
7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)
- New START expired on 4 February 2026 — the last remaining US-Russia arms-control treaty limiting strategic nuclear warheads. [S2]
- New START allowed a maximum of 1,550 deployed strategic warheads and 700 deployed delivery vehicles per side.
- NPT entered into force on 5 March 1970; was opened for signature on 1 July 1968. [S1]
- The three depositary states of the NPT are the USA, the USSR (Russia), and the UK.
- 191 states are parties to the NPT; India, Pakistan, Israel have never signed; North Korea withdrew in 2003.
- NPT Review Conferences are held every five years; the 11th Review Conference was scheduled April–May 2026 in New York. [S4]
- NATO was founded on 4 April 1949 under the Washington (North Atlantic) Treaty; the US served as primus inter pares in its nuclear dimension. [S3]
- Greenland is a Danish autonomous territory — Denmark is a NATO member; US threats over Greenland in 2026 broke intra-NATO trust. [S3]
- Nuclear weapons were last used in war in 1945 (Hiroshima and Nagasaki); 2026 marks ~80 years of nuclear non-use. [S3]
- Article VI of the NPT obliges all parties — especially nuclear-weapon states — to pursue disarmament negotiations in good faith. [S5]
- The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) entered into force in 2021; none of the P5 or NATO states are parties.
- The International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons is observed on 26 September (UN). [S2 related]
- The 2022 NPT Review Conference failed to adopt a consensus final document — a significant breakdown in global non-proliferation governance. [S6]
- The classic deterrence debate contrasts certainty (guaranteed retaliation deters attack) vs. deliberate ambiguity (strategic uncertainty as a tool of deterrence). [S3]
8. Mains Relevance
| GS Paper | GS-II (International Relations, Security); GS-III (Internal Security, Challenges to security) |
| Syllabus headings | Bilateral, regional, global groupings; Effect of policies of developed and developing countries on India's interests; Challenges to internal security; Role of external state and non-state actors in creating challenges |
Plausible Mains Questions:
- "The expiry of New START in 2026 without a successor agreement represents a qualitative shift in the global nuclear order. Critically examine its implications for international security and India's strategic interests." (GS-II, 250 words)
- "European trust in the US nuclear umbrella has been fundamentally shaken. Analyse how this rupture could reshape nuclear deterrence architecture in the 21st century." (GS-II, 150 words)
- "The NPT's two-tier structure of nuclear haves and have-nots is increasingly untenable. Discuss the challenges to the global non-proliferation regime and India's position therein." (GS-II, 250 words)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) | Core legal framework; India's deliberate non-signatory status is examinable. |
| India's Nuclear Doctrine | No-First-Use (NFU) policy, credible minimum deterrence — directly linked to deterrence theory. |
| CTBT (Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty) | India has not ratified; linked to arms control landscape. |
| New START & US-Russia arms control history | Direct predecessor context; SALT I/II, START I, INF Treaty. |
| NATO's Article 5 & collective defence | Basis of extended deterrence; tested by Trump-Greenland episode. |
| TPNW (Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons) | Counter-narrative to deterrence; humanitarian disarmament movement. |
| India-Pakistan nuclear dynamics | South Asian deterrence; Kargil War as first nuclear standoff between declared states. |
| Hypersonic missiles & emerging technologies | Complicating deterrence stability; no arms-control frameworks cover these. |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- NPT vs. CTBT confusion: NPT (1968/1970) governs proliferation and ownership; CTBT (1996) bans nuclear test explosions — India signed neither. Do not conflate.
- New START expiry date: It expired February 4, 2026, not 2025. It was extended in 2021 (by Biden) from its original 2021 expiry to 2026.
- NATO founding year: 1949, not 1945 or 1947; do not confuse with the UN (1945) or the Marshall Plan (1948).
- Greenland's status: Greenland is Danish (autonomous territory of Denmark), not an independent state and not part of the EU (it left the EEC in 1985); Trump's demand was over a NATO member's territory.
- India and NPT: India is not a signatory — it is outside the NPT, not a "non-nuclear state under NPT." Do not write "India is a non-NPT nuclear state" as meaning it violated NPT; it simply never joined.
- Deterrence certainty vs. ambiguity: Examiners may conflate assured destruction (a US doctrine) with no-first-use (India's doctrine) — these are distinct concepts within deterrence theory.
11. Sources
- [S1] Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons — Main Page — https://legal.un.org/avl/ha/tnpt/tnpt.html — (Tier 2: un.org)
- [S2] UN chief warns of 'grave moment' as final US-Russia nuclear arms treaty expires — https://news.un.org/en/story/2026/02/1166892 — (Tier 2: un.org)
- [S3] "A turning point for nuclear deterrence" — Priyanjali Malik, The Hindu, February 5, 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-05/th_international/articleG1JFHQ75T-13378603.ece — (Tier 4: thehindu.com / article excerpt provided)
- [S4] NPT Conference 2026 — Review conference of the parties to the treaty on the NPT — https://www.un.org/en/conferences/treaty-on-the-non-proliferation-of-nuclear-weapons-npt-2026 — (Tier 2: un.org)
- [S5] Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) — UNODA — http://www.un.org/disarmament/WMD/Nuclear/NPTtext.shtml — (Tier 2: un.org)
- [S6] "Humanity 'One Misunderstanding, Miscalculation Away from Nuclear Annihilation'" — UN Press, 2022 NPT Review — https://press.un.org/en/2022/dc3845.doc.htm — (Tier 2: un.org)