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US-China relations
ChinaMilitary

Will Trump’s call to resume nuclear testing fuel a US-China arms race?

US president’s order could spur Beijing to speed up development of nuclear weapon systems, observers say

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US President Donald Trump gestures as he arrives in Tokyo, Japan on Monday as part of an Asia tour that also included a summit with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping. Photo: AFP/Getty Images/TNS
Seong Hyeon Choi
US President Donald Trump’s call to “immediately” resume testing of nuclear weapons, citing Beijing and Moscow’s rapid nuclear build-up, could drive China to “accelerate” its own efforts to develop its strategic forces, according to analysts.
On Thursday, Trump posted on social media that he had instructed the Pentagon to start testing US nuclear weapons “on an equal basis” with Russia and China because of “other countries’ testing programmes”.
“That process will begin immediately,” Trump said in a post published just a few minutes before his meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Busan, South Korea, on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) summit.
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Trump said that while the US had more nuclear weapons than any other country – followed by Russia in second place and China as a “distant” third – Moscow and Beijing’s nuclear forces would catch up with Washington within five years.

In response to Trump’s order, the United Nations issued a rare direct rebuke.

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“We shouldn’t forget the disastrous legacy of over 2,000 nuclear-weapons tests that have been carried out over the last 80 years,” UN spokesman Farhan Haq told reporters on Thursday. He said the UN and Secretary General Antonio Guterres believed “nuclear testing can never be permitted under any circumstances”.

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