Section 01

Executive Summary

Nuclear weapons are the only true existential threat to human civilization. Peer-reviewed science is unambiguous: a full US-Russia exchange would kill approximately 5 billion people through nuclear winter-induced agricultural collapse — not from blast, but from famine. The Doomsday Clock stands at 85 seconds to midnight, the closest in 79 years, with arms control collapsed and three nuclear powers modernizing simultaneously.

The Common Good Party's position: nuclear weapons demand democratic accountability, fiscal discipline, and a credible path toward disarmament. One person — the President — retains sole, unchecked, legally unregulated authority to launch the entire arsenal. No statute limits or regulates this authority. Under launch-on-warning posture, the decision window is approximately 10 minutes — based on sensor data that has produced false alarms. 61% of Americans are uncomfortable with this arrangement. This is not national security. It is unchecked executive authority over the most consequential decision in human history.

Against this reality, the United States is spending $946 billion over 2025–2034 — $95 billion per year, more than the entire federal contribution to K-12 education — to replace every leg of the nuclear triad at once, with the Sentinel ICBM suffering an 81% cost overrun that the Pentagon waved through with a "no alternatives" finding. 716 scientists including 10 Nobel laureates have called for Sentinel's cancellation.

This platform rests on six core commitments: (1) adopt No First Use by law; (2) reform presidential launch authority, requiring consensus of President, Vice President, and Secretary of Defense for any first-use order; (3) cancel the Sentinel ICBM and move to a submarine-bomber dyad, saving $120–149 billion over 30 years; (4) reduce to 1,000 deployed warheads through a verified successor to New START; (5) restore arms control and Iran diplomacy; and (6) redirect hundreds of billions toward healthcare, climate, education, and the cleanup of contaminated land the nuclear program left behind.

Section 02

The Problem

The nuclear threat is not a relic of the Cold War. It is growing. The Doomsday Clock is closer to midnight than at any point in its 79-year history. Arms control has collapsed. Three nuclear powers are modernizing simultaneously. One person holds unchecked launch authority. And the United States is spending nearly $1 trillion it cannot account for to replace weapons whose rationale has not been publicly debated in decades.

The Arsenal & the Arms Race
Nine nuclear-armed states possess 12,241 warheads as of January 2025, with approximately 2,100 on hair-trigger alert. The US holds ~5,177 total; Russia holds ~5,459. Combined, they account for 89% of all warheads on earth. For the first time since 1972, no treaty limits either arsenal — New START expired February 5, 2026 with no successor. China has built approximately 350 new ICBM silos and DOD projects 1,000+ operational Chinese warheads by 2030. The conditions for a three-way arms race are now in place.
The Sentinel Boondoggle
The entire nuclear triad is being replaced simultaneously. The Congressional Budget Office prices full triad modernization at $946 billion over 2025–2034 — a 25% increase from the 2023 estimate — with the Arms Control Association projecting $1.5–2 trillion over 30 years. The Sentinel ICBM replacement alone breached the Nunn-McCurdy Act with an 81% cost overrun, from $78 billion to $140.9 billion. The Pentagon issued a "no alternatives" finding to waive the breach rather than cancel the program.
Unchecked Presidential Authority
The President of the United States has sole authority to order a nuclear strike. No consultation with the Vice President, Congress, or the Secretary of Defense is legally required. As the Nuclear Threat Initiative states: "Currently, no statute limits or regulates the president's authority to use nuclear weapons." Under launch-on-warning posture, the decision window is approximately 10 minutes — based on sensor data that has historically produced false alarms narrowly avoided by individual human judgment alone. This is luck, not a system.
The Environmental Debt
The nuclear weapons program left a permanent environmental catastrophe. Hanford (Washington) carries a projected cleanup cost of $364–589 billion through 2100+, with 65 square miles of contaminated groundwater. The Runit Dome in the Marshall Islands — a concrete cap over 120,000 tons of plutonium-contaminated waste — is cracking, has no lined bottom, and rising seas threaten to wash nuclear waste into the Pacific. Over 500 abandoned uranium mines remain on Navajo land. 2,056 total nuclear tests killed an estimated 4 million people prematurely.

The Iran lesson: The JCPOA extended Iran's nuclear breakout time to 12 months with the most comprehensive verification regime ever applied to any nation. The 2018 US withdrawal triggered systematic Iranian escalation. Current breakout time for enough material for 5–6 weapons: under 2 weeks. The lesson of arms control abandonment is not theoretical — it is playing out in real time, and the consequence is a nuclear-armed Iran being assessed at 40–50% probability following the post-war period.

Section 03

How We Got Here

The current nuclear posture is not the result of deliberate democratic design. It evolved from Cold War emergency decisions that were never revisited, arms control frameworks that were built over decades and dismantled in under ten years, and a political culture that treats the most consequential weapons in human history as exempt from the scrutiny applied to every other federal program.

1945–1960s

Sole Presidential Authority — A Historical Accident, Not a Design

The current sole authority structure was not designed by democratic deliberation — it evolved from early Cold War urgency, when speed of response to a Soviet first strike seemed paramount. The architecture built around that assumption — 10-minute decision windows, launch-on-warning posture, no statutory check on presidential authority — has never been revisited despite 79 years of nuclear history demonstrating how close it has come to catastrophic failure. No democratic body has ever voted to give one person this power.

1983 & 1995

Near-Misses That Human Civilization Survived by Luck

In 1983, Soviet Lt. Col. Stanislav Petrov received a warning of five incoming US nuclear missiles and personally decided it was a false alarm — correctly. In 1995, Boris Yeltsin activated the nuclear football after a Norwegian scientific rocket was mistaken for a US submarine-launched missile. Human civilization survived both incidents because one person made the right call under 10-minute pressure. That is not a system. That is luck — and the architecture that made those moments possible is still intact today.

2002–2019

The Arms Control Architecture Dismantled

The US-Russia arms control framework took decades to build and less than a decade to destroy. The ABM Treaty, signed in 1972 and cornerstone of strategic stability, was unilaterally withdrawn from in 2002. The INF Treaty, which eliminated an entire class of nuclear missiles from Europe, was abandoned in 2019 over Russian violations — without a multilateral framework to replace it. Open Skies, providing mutual aerial surveillance transparency, was withdrawn from by both sides. Each dismantlement removed a verification layer and lowered the cost of arms race escalation.

2018

JCPOA Withdrawal — The Proof of Concept for Diplomatic Failure

The 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action extended Iran's nuclear breakout time to 12 months with the most comprehensive verification regime ever applied. The 2018 US withdrawal was followed by systematic Iranian escalation. Breakout time has since compressed from 12 months to under 2 weeks — the direct and measurable consequence of abandoning verified diplomacy. This is the clearest available evidence of what arms control abandonment costs.

February 5, 2026

New START Expires — No Treaty Now Limits Either Arsenal

New START — the last remaining US-Russia treaty limiting strategic nuclear warheads — expired February 5, 2026 with no successor in place. Russia suspended participation in 2023 and allowed it to expire. Both sides are now legally free to increase their arsenals without limit for the first time since the 1972 SALT I agreement. The conditions for unconstrained three-way US-Russia-China arms race competition are now in place.

2024–2026

Calculated Ambiguity — The Unchallenged Status Quo

The United States has never adopted a No First Use policy. Current declaratory policy reserves the right to use nuclear weapons first "in extreme circumstances." President Biden campaigned on NFU adoption but his 2022 Nuclear Posture Review rejected both NFU and "sole purpose" as creating "unacceptable risk" — described by the Federation of American Scientists as "a disappointment." China has maintained a declared NFU policy since 1964 without sacrificing deterrence credibility. The argument that NFU is incompatible with deterrence is contradicted by its longest-serving practitioner.

Section 04

What Other Countries Do

The international community has developed multiple frameworks for nuclear restraint, disarmament, and nonproliferation — some of which the United States has signed but not ratified, others that demonstrate credible alternatives to the current posture, and one that proves voluntary disarmament is possible.

Framework / Country What They Did Lesson for the U.S.
NPT191 states parties Created a legal framework separating nuclear "haves" from "have-nots" with a legally binding Article VI disarmament obligation on nuclear states. Simultaneous full-triad modernization violates the spirit of Article VI. Two consecutive NPT Review Conferences (2015, 2022) failed to reach consensus because nuclear states modernize while demanding others remain non-nuclear. The compliance gap is the treaty's greatest threat.
TPNW74 states parties First legally binding international ban on nuclear weapons. Entered into force January 2021. ICAN won the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize for driving its adoption. The US should attend TPNW meetings as observer, formally acknowledge the humanitarian case for prohibition, and commit to a phased approach toward treaty goals consistent with strategic realities.
South Africa6 weapons, dismantled 1989 The only nation to independently develop and then verifiably dismantle its entire nuclear weapons program under IAEA inspection — without external pressure. Voluntary disarmament is possible. Security does not require a permanent arsenal. The South African precedent is the most powerful existing proof of concept for the disarmament pathway.
Ukraine, Belarus, KazakhstanBudapest Memorandum, 1994 Surrendered inherited Soviet weapons in exchange for security assurances from the US, UK, and Russia. Russia's 2022 invasion was a direct violation of those assurances. Russia's Budapest Memorandum violation is the single greatest blow to nonproliferation credibility in 30 years. It must be named explicitly and addressed through strengthened extended deterrence commitments to US allies facing similar pressures.
ChinaNFU since 1964 Maintained a declared No First Use policy for 60+ years while building and modernizing its arsenal. Has never abandoned NFU despite growing arsenal size. NFU is fully compatible with credible deterrence. The US argument that NFU creates "unacceptable risk" is directly contradicted by 60 years of Chinese NFU practice. China is the world's longest-serving NFU practitioner.
Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zones5 zones, Southern Hemisphere majority Tlatelolco, Rarotonga, Bangkok, Pelindaba, and Semipalatinsk ban nuclear weapons across Latin America, the South Pacific, Southeast Asia, Africa, and Central Asia. The US has signed but not ratified protocols for Bangkok, Rarotonga, Pelindaba, and Semipalatinsk. Ratify all four. This costs nothing strategically and demonstrates US commitment to the NWFZ framework.

The JCPOA lesson, stated plainly: The most comprehensive verification regime ever applied to any nation extended Iran's breakout timeline to 12 months. Its abandonment compressed that timeline to under 2 weeks. Diplomacy with verification worked. Its abandonment created precisely the crisis it was designed to prevent. Every arms control skeptic must account for this empirical record before arguing that diplomacy is naive.

Section 05

Our Policy

Six commitments that are simultaneously a security policy, a fiscal policy, an environmental justice policy, and a democratic accountability policy. These are not in tension. They are the same argument: that the most dangerous and expensive weapons in human history deserve the same democratic scrutiny, cost discipline, and strategic rigor as every other federal program.

Commitment 01 No First Use by Law — The Foundational Commitment

Adopt NFU through legislation, not executive declaration. The United States will never be the first to use nuclear weapons. An executive declaration of NFU is revocable at presidential discretion — Congressional legislation enacting NFU makes it a structural commitment requiring legislative action to reverse, subjecting any change to public accountability.

This is not weakness. China has maintained this position since 1964 without sacrificing deterrence credibility. India adopted NFU in 2003. NFU reduces crisis instability — it reduces adversary pressure to launch on warning, lowers the temperature in escalation scenarios, and strengthens the normative framework that NFU is compatible with credible deterrence. The "calculated ambiguity" status quo creates uncertainty that adversaries must plan against, and that planning increases the risk of miscalculation in a crisis.

Enforcement: Enacted by statute — not executive order. Reversible only by Congress. Any nuclear first use without Congressional declaration of war triggers mandatory post-use accountability proceedings.
Commitment 02 Presidential Launch Authority Reform

No single person should hold unchecked authority to initiate nuclear war. Require consensus of President + Vice President + Secretary of Defense for any nuclear first use order. Support the Markey-Lieu Restricting First Use of Nuclear Weapons Act, which would prohibit nuclear first strike without a Congressional declaration of war while preserving presidential authority to respond to a confirmed incoming attack.

  • Adopt ride-out posture. Submarine survivability makes launch-on-warning unnecessary. If attacked, the US retaliates after confirming the attack is real, using submarines that no first strike can destroy. Eliminate the 10-minute decision window as a structural feature of US nuclear posture.
  • De-alert all ICBMs immediately. Taking ICBMs off hair-trigger alert as a first-phase action reduces the risk of accidental launch from false alarms while maintaining the deterrent value of the weapons.
  • Congressional notification. Any presidential consideration of nuclear use requires immediate notification of the Gang of Eight. No nuclear decision should be made without legislative awareness.
Enforcement: Markey-Lieu Act codified as permanent statute. Violation of consensus requirement for first use triggers automatic Congressional review. De-alerting verified through Pentagon audit mechanism (Issue 9).
Commitment 03 Cancel Sentinel; Move to a Submarine-Bomber Dyad

Cancel Sentinel. The Sentinel ICBM — $140.9 billion, 81% overrun, Nunn-McCurdy breach — has been endorsed for cancellation by former Secretaries of Defense Perry and Mattis, former STRATCOM commander General Cartwright, and 716 scientists including 10 Nobel laureates. Retire land-based ICBMs at the end of Minuteman III's service life. Save $120–149 billion over 30 years.

  • Maintain the Columbia-class backbone. The Columbia-class submarine program ($132 billion for 12 boats) is the actual backbone of deterrence. Submarines at sea are essentially undetectable with current technology. A single Ohio-class submarine can destroy any nation. Columbia continues; Sentinel does not.
  • The "nuclear sponge" argument fails. The argument that ICBMs protect the coasts by drawing Russian warheads to empty silos in Montana and Wyoming requires detonating hundreds of nuclear weapons on American agricultural heartland. That is not a defense strategy. It is a theory that trades a populated coast for an agricultural interior.
  • Do not fund Savannah River pit production. Plutonium pit production required to arm Sentinel has been court-halted and remains 10+ years from operational at a projected cost of $25+ billion. Canceling Sentinel eliminates the rationale for this expenditure entirely.
  • Maintain the B-21 Raider program. The stealth bomber provides the second leg of the dyad. The B-21 program, on schedule and within its original cost parameters, continues as planned.
Enforcement: Sentinel cancellation enacted by statute. Nunn-McCurdy framework strengthened — cost overruns exceeding 25% trigger mandatory program review with Congressional reauthorization required, closing the "no alternatives" finding loophole.
Commitment 04 Reduce to 1,000 Warheads; Ratify the CTBT

Pursue a verified successor to New START targeting 1,000 deployed strategic warheads. SIPRI research identifies 1,000 warheads as more than sufficient for deterrence. Establish this target in law. Engage China in separate bilateral arms control discussions appropriate to its current arsenal size — not in a trilateral parity framework China has firmly and correctly refused as "unreasonable and unrealistic" given its arsenal is one-eighth America's total stockpile.

  • Long-term target: minimum deterrence (~300 warheads). SIPRI research identifies approximately 300 warheads as a minimum deterrence threshold. This is a long-term goal, not a near-term demand. The path is verified mutual reductions with Russia, not unilateral disarmament.
  • Address tactical nuclear weapons. Russia holds an estimated 1,558 tactical nuclear warheads against approximately 150 US tactical warheads — a 10:1 advantage that has never been subject to any arms control treaty. Any comprehensive successor to New START must include tactical weapons.
  • Ratify the CTBT. The Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty has been in force as a monitoring regime since 1996. The International Monitoring System has detected all six North Korean nuclear tests. The US has observed a testing moratorium since 1992 but the Senate rejected ratification 51-48 in 1999. Ratify now. US ratification would provide the decisive diplomatic push to universalize the treaty and cement the global testing norm.
Enforcement: 1,000-warhead target enacted in statute. CTBT ratification submitted to Senate in Year 1. New START successor negotiations begin immediately upon New START expiration, with verified reduction milestones.
Commitment 05 Restore Iran Diplomacy; Pursue North Korea Interim Framework

Return to JCPOA+. The 2015 JCPOA extended Iran's nuclear breakout time to 12 months with the most comprehensive verification regime ever applied. Israeli strikes in June 2025 set the program back 1–2 years, but the post-war probability of Iran pursuing weapons is assessed at 40–50%. A JCPOA+ framework with longer sunset provisions, broader missile coverage, and updated verification is essential. The alternative is a nuclear-armed Iran within this decade.

  • North Korea freeze framework. Complete, verifiable, irreversible denuclearization (CVID) is not achievable in the near term. North Korea has 50 assembled warheads with fissile material for up to 90, adding approximately 6 per year. Pursue an interim framework: freeze on testing and fissile material production, verified caps on delivery systems, confidence-building measures, and humanitarian engagement.
  • Maintain extended deterrence to South Korea and Japan. South Korea's 76.2% public support for an independent nuclear weapon (2025 Asan Institute poll) is the clearest available signal of nonproliferation failure risk in East Asia. The alternative to credible US extended deterrence is independent South Korean and Japanese nuclear programs — the cascade scenario that must be prevented.
  • Increase IAEA safeguards funding. The IAEA's safeguards budget is chronically underfunded relative to the verification demands placed on it. The US, as the largest IAEA contributor, must increase its share and push for structural budget reform.
Enforcement: Iran diplomatic framework submitted to Congress as executive agreement with oversight provisions. IAEA funding increase mandatory through State Department appropriation. Extended deterrence commitments to South Korea and Japan reaffirmed by treaty.
Commitment 06 Nuclear Testing Justice as a Permanent Obligation

Permanently reauthorize RECA with no sunset clause. The Radiation Exposure Compensation Act was expanded in July 2025: $100,000 per claimant, expanded geography, $7.7 billion in funding — but it expires in 2028. Permanently reauthorize RECA. No more forcing Indigenous, Pacific Islander, and downwinder communities to re-litigate their right to compensation every few years. 2,056 nuclear tests by 8 nations killed an estimated 4 million people prematurely. Those who bore that burden deserve permanent, not recurring, acknowledgment.

  • Clean up the 500+ abandoned uranium mines on Navajo land. The uranium mining that fueled the nuclear program left radioactive contamination on Indigenous land. The communities that did not benefit from the weapons bear the cleanup costs. This is an environmental justice obligation, not a discretionary line item.
  • Hanford is a permanent obligation. Hanford (Washington) carries a projected cleanup cost of $364–589 billion through 2100+, with 65 square miles of contaminated groundwater. Fund cleanup on an accelerated schedule. Do not treat it as a budget variable.
  • Runit Dome remediation before sea-level rise causes a Pacific catastrophe. The Runit Dome in the Marshall Islands — a concrete cap over 120,000 tons of plutonium-contaminated waste — is cracking, has no lined bottom, and rising seas threaten to wash nuclear waste into the Pacific Ocean. Address this before it becomes an international environmental emergency.
Enforcement: RECA permanently reauthorized with automatic inflation adjustment. Hanford cleanup on DOE mandatory spending line. Runit Dome remediation treaty with Marshall Islands obligating US contribution to full remediation costs.
Section 06

How We Pay For It

This is primarily a policy of savings, not expenditure. The United States is spending $946 billion over 2025–2034 on nuclear modernization — $95 billion per year, more than the entire federal contribution to K-12 education. Our policy reduces that spending dramatically while maintaining credible deterrence. Every dollar saved is redirected to domestic priorities.

Cancel Sentinel ICBM $120–149B Saved Over 30 Years
Canceling Sentinel and retiring land-based ICBMs at end of Minuteman III service life. The Columbia-class submarine program provides equivalent or superior deterrence at lower cost and higher survivability. No deterrence capability is lost.
Warhead Reduction Savings Hundreds of Billions Over 30 Years
Moving from full triad modernization to a verified 1,000-warhead submarine-bomber dyad reduces the 30-year nuclear budget by hundreds of billions. CBO's $946 billion estimate assumes full triad replacement — a dyad structure operates at a fraction of that cost.
Eliminate Savannah River Pit Production $25B+ Avoided
Plutonium pit production for Sentinel has been court-halted and remains 10+ years from operational. Canceling Sentinel eliminates the rationale for this expenditure entirely — saving $25+ billion in projected Savannah River costs.
Redirect to Domestic Priorities $50B+/Year at Full Implementation
Sentinel cancellation and warhead reduction savings redirected to: healthcare expansion, climate infrastructure, education funding, Hanford cleanup acceleration, Runit Dome remediation, and RECA permanent reauthorization. The nuclear weapons budget currently exceeds the entire federal K-12 education contribution.
Pentagon Audit Compliance Full Nunn-McCurdy Enforcement
Every nuclear weapons program subject to the Pentagon audit requirement (Cross-reference Issue 9). Cost overruns exceeding 25% trigger automatic program review with Congressional reauthorization required. The "no alternatives" finding loophole that allowed Sentinel to continue at 81% overrun is closed permanently.

The fiscal case for nuclear restraint is straightforward: A submarine-bomber dyad provides deterrence that is more survivable, less vulnerable to use-it-or-lose-it crisis pressure, and far cheaper than the full triad. The Arms Control Association concludes: "There are no time-sensitive targets that require prompt ICBM launch." We are spending $140.9 billion on a weapons system that former Secretaries of Defense say is unnecessary, that 716 scientists including 10 Nobel laureates say should be canceled, and that breached the Nunn-McCurdy Act. This is not defense spending. It is waste.

Section 07

Implementation Timeline

Phase 1 — Immediate
Year 1
  • Adopt No First Use by executive order, followed immediately by legislation
  • De-alert all ICBMs — remove from launch-on-warning posture
  • Reform launch authority: require President + VP + SecDef consensus for first use
  • Support Markey-Lieu Act in Congress
  • Announce Sentinel program review for cancellation
  • Ratify CTBT — submit to Senate
  • Attend TPNW meetings as observer
  • Permanently reauthorize RECA with no sunset clause
  • Increase IAEA safeguards budget contribution
  • Ratify NWFZ protocols for Bangkok, Rarotonga, Pelindaba, and Semipalatinsk
Phase 2 — Foundation
Years 2–3
  • Cancel Sentinel; begin planned Minuteman III retirement
  • Pursue New START successor with Russia targeting 1,000 deployed warheads
  • Open bilateral arms control discussions with China at arsenal-appropriate scale
  • Return to Iran JCPOA+ diplomacy with updated verification and longer sunset
  • Establish 1,000-warhead reduction target in statute
  • Fund Hanford cleanup acceleration and Runit Dome remediation plan
  • Pentagon audit of all nuclear programs with full Nunn-McCurdy enforcement
Phase 3 — Build
Years 3–5
  • Complete transition to submarine-bomber dyad
  • Achieve verified mutual reductions toward 1,000 deployed warheads
  • Iran agreement in force with updated verification regime
  • North Korea freeze framework operational
  • NPT Review Conference with credible Article VI progress — demonstrated US arsenal reductions
  • Nuclear testing justice programs fully funded and processing claims
  • Redirect $50B+/year in Sentinel/ICBM savings to domestic priorities
Phase 4 — Sustain
Years 5–10
  • Further verified reductions toward minimum deterrence (~300 warheads)
  • Multilateral arms control framework engaging all nuclear states
  • CTBT universally in force with US ratification having provided the decisive push
  • Nuclear cleanup sites on accelerated completion schedule
  • Comprehensive nonproliferation framework preventing South Asian, Middle Eastern, and East Asian cascade scenarios
  • Doomsday Clock movement used as policy benchmark — measurable movement away from midnight
Section 08

Addressing Counterarguments

"Eliminating ICBMs weakens deterrence."

Former Secretary of Defense William Perry, former STRATCOM commander General James Cartwright, and former Secretary of Defense James Mattis have all endorsed a submarine-bomber dyad without ICBMs as consistent with credible deterrence. A single Ohio-class submarine carries enough warheads to destroy any nation. ICBMs, in fixed known locations, create use-it-or-lose-it pressure in a crisis and are the least survivable leg of the triad. The Arms Control Association concludes: "There are no time-sensitive targets that require prompt ICBM launch." Deterrence depends on survivability, not on land-based vulnerability. The "nuclear sponge" argument — that ICBMs protect the coasts by drawing warheads to Montana and Wyoming — requires detonating hundreds of nuclear weapons on American agricultural land. That is not a defense of America. It is a theory that sacrifices the interior to protect the coast.

"No First Use emboldens adversaries and undermines extended deterrence."

China has maintained NFU since 1964 without any evidence of emboldening. India adopted NFU in 2003. The United States has NATO allies, AUKUS partners, and bilateral security commitments backed by the world's most capable conventional military, the most survivable submarine fleet, and a nuclear arsenal sufficient to destroy any aggressor in a second strike. The argument that adversaries will be emboldened by the removal of first-strike ambiguity is not supported by 60 years of Chinese NFU practice, by the logic of deterrence (which requires survivable retaliation, not first-strike capability), or by the security records of the countries that have adopted NFU. The US conventional military advantage makes nuclear first use unnecessary against any non-nuclear threat.

"Arms control with Russia is naive given Ukraine and Russian behavior."

Russia's invasion of Ukraine is precisely the reason the arms control architecture must be rebuilt, not abandoned. The alternative to negotiated limits is unconstrained competition: both sides legally free to increase their arsenals without limit for the first time since 1972, while simultaneously modernizing and adding new destabilizing weapons. The INF Treaty's collapse has allowed Russia to deploy intermediate-range missiles in Europe and the US to consider the same — exactly the instability arms control was designed to prevent. Arms control does not require trust — it requires verification, which the New START inspection regime provided successfully for over a decade. The answer to Russian bad behavior is stronger verification, not zero verification.

"We cannot reduce while China is rapidly expanding its arsenal."

China currently has approximately 500 warheads — one-tenth of America's total stockpile. Even if China reaches 1,000 warheads by 2030 as DOD projects, the US at 1,000 deployed warheads would have equivalent deployed capability and superior survivability through its submarine fleet. The trilateral arms race argument assumes that matching China warhead-for-warhead is the only path to deterrence. It is not. Deterrence requires survivable retaliation, not numerical superiority. Demanding parity before any reduction creates a permanent excuse for unlimited spending while foreclosing the bilateral engagement with China that could eventually lead to multilateral limits. The US has ten times China's warheads. If 1,000 is sufficient for deterrence — and SIPRI research says it is — then the US can reduce to 1,000 without waiting for China to reach parity.

Section 09

Key Statistics

12,241 Nuclear warheads worldwide as of January 2025 — approximately 2,100 on hair-trigger alert, ready to launch within minutes SIPRI Yearbook 2025
89% Of all global warheads held by the US (~5,177) and Russia (~5,459) combined — the two nations that must lead disarmament SIPRI / FAS Nuclear Weapons 2024
85 seconds To midnight on the Doomsday Clock (early 2026) — the closest in 79 years of nuclear history, with arms control collapsed Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists
$946B US nuclear modernization cost over 2025–2034 (CBO estimate) — $95B/year, more than the entire federal contribution to K-12 education Congressional Budget Office
$140.9B Sentinel ICBM cost after 81% overrun from original $78 billion — a Nunn-McCurdy breach cleared by a "no alternatives" finding Arms Control Association
$100B+ Global nuclear weapons spending in 2024 — first time it has exceeded $100 billion in history. US alone: $56.8 billion. ICAN Hidden Costs 2024
2,056 Total nuclear tests by 8 nations — 528 atmospheric; 2025 study estimates 4 million premature deaths from testing alone Arms Control Association
12 months → 2 weeks Iran's nuclear breakout timeline: 12 months under JCPOA (2015) to under 2 weeks today — the direct cost of diplomatic abandonment Arms Control Association
$120–149B Savings over 30 years from canceling ICBMs and moving to a submarine-bomber dyad — without reducing deterrence capability Arms Control Association
$364–589B Projected Hanford cleanup cost through 2100+, with 65 square miles of contaminated groundwater — a permanent US obligation Arms Control Association
74 states Parties to the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons as of late 2025 — the US has not joined, but should attend as observer ICAN TPNW Status
76.2% Of South Koreans supporting an independent nuclear weapon (2025 Asan Institute poll) — the clearest signal of nonproliferation failure in East Asia Asan Institute 2025
Section 10

Cross-References

#6 Israel & Gaza
Conditional aid framework applies to nuclear-armed allies. Unconditional relationships that insulate partners from accountability are rejected across the platform. Nuclear-armed actors require special engagement frameworks.
#7 Ukraine & NATO
Russia's invasion violated the Budapest Memorandum security assurances Ukraine received when it surrendered its nuclear weapons — the single greatest blow to nonproliferation credibility in 30 years. Strengthened extended deterrence commitments to NATO allies are the direct response.
#8 China Policy
China's rapid nuclear expansion toward 1,000+ warheads by 2030 makes bilateral arms control engagement essential. Confrontation alone fuels the three-way arms race it is supposed to prevent. Engagement at arsenal-appropriate scale is required.
#9 Defense Spending
Pentagon must pass audit before any budget increases. The 15–20% defense budget reduction targets include nuclear programs. Sentinel's 81% overrun is exactly the unchecked spending the Pentagon audit requirement is designed to expose and prevent.
#11 Climate & Energy
Nuclear winter science establishes that even a "limited" regional exchange of 100 warheads threatens global agricultural collapse and multi-billion famine. Nuclear policy and climate policy are both existential-threat frameworks requiring the same urgency.
#22 Racial Justice
Nuclear test site selection and production site placement constitute environmental racism. The burdens fell overwhelmingly on Indigenous, Pacific Islander, Kazakh, and rural American communities — communities that did not benefit from the weapons that contaminated their land.
#23 Indigenous Rights
Marshall Islands, Navajo uranium mines, Western Shoshone land at the Nevada Test Site, Aboriginal land at Maralinga — Indigenous peoples bore the primary health burden of the nuclear age without consent, without compensation, and without remediation.
#25 Infrastructure
Hanford cleanup ($364–589B projected through 2100+) and other production site remediation are permanent infrastructure obligations that belong in the infrastructure investment framework — not treated as discretionary budget variables.

Sources & References

  1. SIPRI Yearbook 2025: Nuclear Risks Grow as New Arms Race Looms
  2. Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists — Doomsday Clock: Doomsday Clock Statement 2026
  3. Congressional Budget Office — Nuclear Weapons Cost: Projected Costs of US Nuclear Forces, 2025–2034
  4. ICAN — Global Nuclear Weapons Spending 2024: Hidden Costs 2024: Global Nuclear Spending
  5. Union of Concerned Scientists — Scientists Call to Cancel Sentinel: 716 Scientists Call to Cancel New Nuclear Missiles
  6. FAS — Nuclear Weapons 2024: Nuclear Weapons: Who Has What at a Glance
  7. Nuclear Threat Initiative — Sole Authority: Rethinking Sole Authority
  8. Arms Control Association — INF Treaty: The Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty
  9. Arms Control Association — Iran Nuclear Program: Iran Nuclear Program Factsheet
  10. Arms Control Association — ICBM Savings: The Future ICBM Force: Replace or Retire?
  11. Arms Control Association — Sentinel Costs: Sentinel ICBM Costs Unacceptable, Say Critics
  12. Arms Control Association — Nuclear Testing Tally: Nuclear Testing Tally
  13. Ploughshares Fund — New START Expiration: New START Expires
  14. FAS — 2022 Nuclear Posture Review Analysis: 2022 Nuclear Posture Review
  15. ICAN — TPNW Signature and Ratification Status: TPNW Status
  16. Markey-Lieu Restricting First Use Act: Markey-Lieu First Use Legislation
Paid for by The Common Good Party (thecommongoodparty.com) and not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.