A turning point for nuclear deterrence


UPSC Study Note: A Turning Point for Nuclear Deterrence


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


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

Legal / Constitutional

Scientific / Technological

Historical

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. New START expired on 4 February 2026 — the last remaining US-Russia arms-control treaty limiting strategic nuclear warheads. [S2]
  2. New START allowed a maximum of 1,550 deployed strategic warheads and 700 deployed delivery vehicles per side.
  3. NPT entered into force on 5 March 1970; was opened for signature on 1 July 1968. [S1]
  4. The three depositary states of the NPT are the USA, the USSR (Russia), and the UK.
  5. 191 states are parties to the NPT; India, Pakistan, Israel have never signed; North Korea withdrew in 2003.
  6. NPT Review Conferences are held every five years; the 11th Review Conference was scheduled April–May 2026 in New York. [S4]
  7. 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]
  8. Greenland is a Danish autonomous territory — Denmark is a NATO member; US threats over Greenland in 2026 broke intra-NATO trust. [S3]
  9. Nuclear weapons were last used in war in 1945 (Hiroshima and Nagasaki); 2026 marks ~80 years of nuclear non-use. [S3]
  10. Article VI of the NPT obliges all parties — especially nuclear-weapon states — to pursue disarmament negotiations in good faith. [S5]
  11. The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW) entered into force in 2021; none of the P5 or NATO states are parties.
  12. The International Day for the Total Elimination of Nuclear Weapons is observed on 26 September (UN). [S2 related]
  13. The 2022 NPT Review Conference failed to adopt a consensus final document — a significant breakdown in global non-proliferation governance. [S6]
  14. 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:

  1. "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)
  2. "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)
  3. "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

  1. NPT vs. CTBT confusion: NPT (1968/1970) governs proliferation and ownership; CTBT (1996) bans nuclear test explosions — India signed neither. Do not conflate.
  2. 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.
  3. NATO founding year: 1949, not 1945 or 1947; do not confuse with the UN (1945) or the Marshall Plan (1948).
  4. 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.
  5. 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.
  6. 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