China’s Evolving Nuclear Forces: Changes, Rationales and Implications

Authors

  • Adam MacDonald Dalhousie University

Abstract

China is embarking on a comprehensive modernization program to quantitatively and qualitatively improve their nuclear force. These efforts, however, do not reflect or indicate a distinct shift in Chinese views towards or policy governing the purpose and use of nuclear weapons, but to achieve and maintain a secured second strike capability in a changing strategic landscape. Specifically, military developments by the United States including Ballistic Missile Defence and Precision Global Strike are seen as threatening the credibility of their nuclear deterrent, motivating the construction and deployment of a more modern, diverse and capable force. These force reconfigurations, however, create the potential of causing confusing and misunderstandings with the United States, and other nuclear powers, of the rationales informing their improvement. Ensuring the nuclear force balance between Beijing and Washington remains a minor and largely benign matter separated from and not influencing other more divisive matters is critical in the maintenance of their relatively stable, but increasingly complicated and tense, great power relationship and the international system in general. In order to achieve this, both states must clearly signal an understanding of their nuclear relationship as one defined by mutual vulnerability and the necessity of providing guarantees and evidence that their respective military technological developments and force structure changes are not designed to alter this reality.

Author Biography

Adam MacDonald, Dalhousie University

Adam P. MacDonald, a former naval officer in the Canadian Armed Forces, is an independent academic based in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Receiving his BA in Political Science from the Royal Military College of Canada and his MA in Political Science from the University of Victoria, he is a regular contributor to the East Asia Forum, the Conference of Defence Associations Institute and Frontline Defence. Nuclear weapons theory and weapons developments; the rise of China and its impact on global order, specifically within the Status-Quo/Revisionist Power paradigm; and geopolitical and military developments in the Arctic are his current academic foci. He began pursuing his PhD in Political Science at Dalhousie University this fall. His PhD work focuses on the application of various IR theoretical perspectives towards understanding and predicting the trajectory of China's growing interest and involvement in the Arctic. 

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Published

2017-09-11

Issue

Section

JMSS Awards of Excellence