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SIPRI Year bookBack
[Published: Monday June 29 2020]

 Nuclear weapon modernization continues but outlook for arms control is bleak: SIPRI Yearbook 

 
STOCKHOLM, 29 June. - (ANA) - This month, SIPRI launched the findings of SIPRI Yearbook 2020, which assesses the current state of armaments, disarmament and international security. 
 
A key finding is that despite an overall decrease in the number of nuclear warheads in 2019, all nuclear weapon-possessing states continue to modernize their nuclear arsenals.
 
 
This 51st edition of the SIPRI Yearbook pro­vides evidence of an ongoing deterioration in the conditions for international stability. This trend is reflected in the continued rise in military spending and the estimated value of global arms transfers, an unfolding crisis of arms control that has now become chronic, and increasingly toxic global geopolitics and regional rivalries. There also remains a persistently high number of armed conflicts worldwide, with few signs of negotiated settlements on the horizon. 
 
 
Flashpoints
 
 
Events in 2019 included dangerous clashes between major powers in the Middle East and in South Asia. Missile strikes, proxy attacks and challenges to freedom of navi­gation in the Persian Gulf in mid­2019 raised the possibility of Iran going to war with Saudi Arabia and other regional powers, and potentially with the United States. Armed clashes also escalated between two nuclear­armed states, India and Pakistan, over Kashmir. In both cases the situation eventually calmed, but not as a result of traditional crisis management. 
 
 
Arms control
 
 
In 2019 there were no gains and some further setbacks in nuclear arms control. The USA withdrew from the 1987 Treaty on the Elimination of Intermediate­Range and Shorter­Range Missiles (INF Treaty) and Russia formally suspended its obli­gations under it. Uncertainty continued about whether the Russian–US bilateral 2010 Treaty on Measures for the Further Reduction and Limitation of Strategic Offensive Arms (New START) would be extended beyond its current expiry date of February 2021. 
 
In addition, discussions on denuclearization between the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (North Korea) and the USA lost traction during 2019 and by the end of the year the Iran nuclear deal (2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action) was largely non­functional. 
 
 
The climate crisis
 
 
There were some welcome signs in 2019 that opinion was moving towards support for serious action to address the climate crisis. However, there will be a considerable time lag between action and impact, and it will also be necessary to adapt to the effects of climate change and build resilience. In add­ition, it is now clear that the impact of climate change often needs to be addressed amid peacebuilding in war­torn settings. There is still time to prepare for future climate­related security challenges; the key to success will be increased 
international cooperation.
 
 
International cooperation
 
 
The need for cooperation on climate change is matched by a similar need for cooperation on other major challenges of our age. The degree to which international politics are characterized by tensions and disagree­ments, especially among the three great powers—China, Russia and the USA—is a serious cause for concern. Nonetheless, even governments that express loathing of diplomacy find it next to impossible to do without cooperative approaches to shared problems. The spread of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID­19) underlines the message that other global challenges today also require cooperation for human security and international stability.
 
 
conflict-related fatality estimates
 
 
The five armed conflicts with the highest fatality estimates in 2019 were in Afghani­stan, Yemen, Syria, Mexico and Nigeria. With a combined total of nearly 98 000 fatal­ities, these conflicts accounted for about 78 per cent of the total conflict­ related deaths in 2019.  - (ANA) -
 
For the full report, visit: https://www.sipri.org/sites/default/files/2020-06/yb20_summary_en_v2.pdf?utm_source=phpList&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=SIPRI+Update+June+2020%3A+New+SIPRI+data+on+world+nuclear+forces%2C+SIPRI+Yearbook+2020+launch%2C+and+more&utm_content=HTML
 
AB/ANA/29 June 2020 - - -
 
 
 

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