Advertisement
United States
WorldUnited States & Canada

Small enough to use? ‘Low yield’ US nukes begin rolling off the production line

  • Trump administration has argued smaller nuclear bombs will be a greater deterrent, but has also expanded scope in which nukes could be used

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
Picture taken on August 6, 1945 of the mushroom cloud generated by the US nuclear attack on the city of Hiroshima. Photo: AFP
The Guardian

The US has begun making new, low-yield nuclear warheads for its Trident missiles that arms control advocates warn could lower the threshold for a nuclear conflict.

The National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) announced in an email it had started manufacturing the weapon at its Pantex nuclear weapons plant in Texas, as ordered by Donald Trump’s nuclear posture review (NPR) last year.

The last US B53 10,000-pound nuclear bomb before being dismantled in October 25, 2011 at Pantex Plant outside Amarillo, Texas. Photo: AP
The last US B53 10,000-pound nuclear bomb before being dismantled in October 25, 2011 at Pantex Plant outside Amarillo, Texas. Photo: AP
Advertisement

The NNSA said the first of the new warheads had come off the production line and it was on schedule to deliver the first batch before the end of September.

The new weapon, the W76-2, is a modification of the existing Trident warhead.

Advertisement

Stephen Young, a senior Washington representative of the Union of Concerned Scientists, said its yield had most likely been cut by taking away one stage from the original two-stage, W76 thermonuclear device.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x