[1] “Putin was ready to put nuclear weapons on alert in Crimea crisis,” Financial Times (Online), March 16, 2015, https://www.ft.com/content/41873ed2-cb60-11e4-8ad9-00144feab7de, accessed on May 18, 2024.
[2] “Strategic deterrence forces exercise,” The Kremlin, February 19, 2022, http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/67814, accessed on May 18, 2024.
[3] “Putin signals escalation as he puts Russia's nuclear force on high alert,” The Guardian, February 28, 2022, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/feb/27/vladimir-putin-puts-russia-nuclear-deterrence-forces-on-high-alert-ukraine, accessed on May 18, 2024.
[4] “Non-strategic nuclear weapons” as defined for the purpose of this article refer to nuclear weapons used in attacking counterforce targets.
In today's world, the distinction between strategic nuclear and non-strategic nuclear weapons is very vague. In the past, the distinction between strategic and non-strategic nuclear weapons was based, not on their destructive power, but on their range capability. Under the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty between the United States and the Soviet Union, “intermediate-range nuclear missiles” were defined as those with the range of about 300-3,000 miles (500-5,500km) and therefore those with the range below 300 miles were classified as tactical nuclear weapons and those with the range above 3,000 miles as strategic nuclear weapons. Having a 3,000-mile range means having a capability of attacking the mainland of the Soviet Union directly from NATO countries.
However, this classification is strictly for the purpose of the agreement between the United States and the Soviet Union (Russia), and it is not necessarily appropriate to apply this definition to other countries. For instance, between two neighboring countries, such as India and Pakistan, even a 500km-range nuclear missile can be a strategic nuclear weapon. Also, the same 100 kiloton nuclear missile is completely different in significance depending on whether it is used for mass destruction of urban areas (countervalue attacks) or targeted solely at an opponent's military forces deployed in the field or on the seas (counterforce attacks). In other words, whether a certain nuclear missile is strategic or non-strategic is ultimately up to how it is perceived by those who use it and those who are targeted by it.
[5] To put it more accurately, it should be referred to as “escalation for de-escalation,” which is to escalate the situation in order to bring down the level of escalation. However, for the purpose of this chapter, this strategy is referred to as “de-escalation” strategy. Nikolai Sokov, “Why Russia Calls a Limited Nuclear Strike 'de-escalation,'” Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists website, March 13, 2014.
[6] Herman Kahn, On Escalation -Metaphors and Scenarios, Penguin Books, 1968, p.290.
[7] During the Cold War, the United States under the President John F. Kennedy implemented the flexible response strategy to offset its inferiority to the Soviet Union in conventional capability in the European theater. It is perceived that a similar strategy is being deployed by Russia, which is currently inferior in the conventional capability. Yu Koizumi, “Roshia no Gunji Senryaku ni okeru Chu-To'o: NATO Toho Kakudai to Ukuraina Kiki no Inpakuto [Central and Eastern Europe in Russia's Military Strategy: NATO's Expansion to the East and the Impact of the Ukrainian Crisis],” p.62. Tom Nichols, Douglas Stuart and Jeffery McCausland eds, Tactical Nuclear Weapons and NATO, U.S. Army War College Strategic Studies Institute, April 2012, p.158.
[8] U.S. Department of Defense, Military and Security Developments Involving the People's Republic of China 2023 -Annual Report to Congress, 2023, pp.103-114.
[9] Ibid, p.105.
[10] According to Ken Jimbo, since the late 20 th century, China has been shifting from “minimum deterrence” (basically synonym to the minimum retaliation strategy), which seeks to secure a second-strike capability, to “assured retaliation,” which seeks to achieve deterrence by having a reliable retaliatory capability, having carried out modernization such as equipping nuclear-armed ICBMs with multiple independently targetable reentry vehicle (MIRV) capability. Ken Jinbo, “Chugoku: Saishogen Yokushi kara Kakusho Yokushi eno Henkan [China: A Shift from Minimum Deterrence to Assured Retaliation],” Chapter 3 in Nobumasa Akiyama and Sugio Takahashi ed., Kaku no Bokyaku no Owari: Kakuheiki Fukken no Jidai [The End of Nuclear Forgetting: Revival of Nuclear Weapons], Keiso Shobo, 2019, p.75-85.
[11] U.S. Department of Defense, Military and Security Developments Involving the People's Republic of China 2023, p.111.
[12] LOW is also referred to as “early warning counterstrike.” Ibid, p.112.
[13] Matt Korda and Hans Kristensen, “China Is Building A Second Nuclear Missile Silo Field,” Federation of American Scientists website, July 26, 2021, https://fas.org/blogs/security/2021/07/china-is-building-a-second-nuclear-missile-silo-field/, accessed on May 15, 2024.
[14] U.S. Department of Defense, Military and Security Developments Involving the People's Republic of China 2023, p.104.
[15] Ibid, pp.111-112. The DF-26 is considered a dual-capable missile system that can operate both conventional and nuclear warheads.
[16] Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, SIPRI Yearbook 2023 -Armaments, Disarmament and International Security, Oxford University Press, 2023, pp.291-292.
[17] It is estimated that Russia was in possession of 1,816 non-strategic nuclear warheads in 2023. Ibid, pp.262-263.
[18] Ibid.
[19] For details of the analytical process, see Keitaro Ushirogata, “Oshu to Ajia niokeru Kaku no Shikiichi: Hisenryakukaku o meguru Shiko Jikken [Nuclear Thresholds in Europe and Asia: Thought Experiment on Non-Strategic Nuclear Weapons],” Chapter 8 in Yoko Iwama ed. Kaku Kyoyu no Genjitsu: NATO no Keiken to Nippon [Reality of Nuclear Sharing: NATO's Experience and Japan], Shinzansha, 2023.
[20] U.S. Department of Defense, 2022 Nuclear Posture Review, October 27, 2022, pp.20-21.