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Global tensions are reaching a boiling point as Vladimir Putin places nuclear weapons back at the center of world politics. In a stark address, Putin declared strengthening Russia’s nuclear triad an “absolute priority,” signaling a long-term buildup as arms control agreements collapse. The expiration of the New START Treaty leaves Moscow and Washington without binding nuclear limits for the first time in decades.

The warning comes amid escalating friction between United States and Iran, rising nuclear expansion by China, and bold weapons advances from North Korea. As the war in Ukraine reshapes military doctrine, experts warn that miscalculation risks are growing in a world with fewer safeguards and fading transparency.

Is the world entering a new nuclear arms race?


#PutinNuclearWarning #USvsIran #NuclearArmsRace #RussiaNuclearTriad #NewSTARTExpired #GlobalTensions #PutinSpeech #NuclearCrisis #USRussiaTensions #IranNuclearCrisis #ChinaNuclearExpansion #NorthKoreaNuclear #WorldSecurity #ArmsControlCollapse #NuclearModernization #BreakingNews #Geopolitics

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Transcript
00:19Putin just put nuclear weapons back at the center of global politics.
00:25In a video address marking Defender of the Fatherland Day,
00:29Russian President Vladimir Putin delivered a message that wasn't just ceremonial.
00:35It was strategic, and it was pointed.
00:52Putin declared that strengthening Russia's nuclear forces,
00:55specifically its nuclear triad, is now an absolute priority.
01:00That triad includes land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles,
01:05submarine-launched ballistic missiles, and strategic bombers.
01:09In other words, the full spectrum of nuclear delivery.
01:13He said this build-up is essential to guarantee Russia's security,
01:17to maintain strategic deterrence,
01:19and to preserve what he calls the global balance of power.
01:23But this speech comes at a moment when that balance is already under strain.
01:28Putin also promised to modernize Russia's army and navy,
01:32drawing lessons from what he still calls the special military operation in Ukraine.
01:36He framed the war as a testing ground,
01:39a laboratory for high-tech domestic weapons production.
01:43And he praised Russian troops as patriots defending national sovereignty.
01:47But here's the bigger story.
01:49For the first time since 1972,
01:52there are no binding nuclear arms control treaties between the United States and Russia.
01:57The New START Treaty, signed in 2010 and extended in 2021, expired on February 5, 2026.
02:05It had capped deployed strategic warheads at 1550 each and limited launchers to 700.
02:12Just as important, it allowed for inspections, data exchanges, transparency.
02:17Those inspections stopped during COVID.
02:20Russia suspended participation in 2023.
02:23And now, there are no legal limits.
02:25As of early 2025 estimates, Russia has over 4,300 nuclear warheads.
02:31About 1550 were deployed under previous limits.
02:34The United States has around 3,700.
02:37And without a treaty, both sides can upload more warheads onto existing missiles quickly.
02:42No new missiles required.
02:44This is how arms races quietly begin.
02:47Not with explosions, but with worst-case planning.
02:51If one side assumes the other might expand, it expands first.
02:54And it's not just Washington and Moscow.
02:57China is in the middle of its fastest nuclear expansion ever.
03:01Its arsenal has grown from around 200 warheads in 2019 to more than 600 by late 2025,
03:07with projections of 1,000 by 2030.
03:09New silos, new submarines, low-yield weapons.
03:13Beijing maintains a no-first-use policy, but it has refused to join arms control talks,
03:18arguing its arsenal is still smaller than those of the U.S. and Russia.
03:21Then there's North Korea.
03:23On February 22, 2026, Kim Jong-An was re-elected as reader of the Workers' Party.
03:29State media celebrated his nuclear buildup as central to national strength.
03:32Pyongyang has unveiled dozens of tactical nuclear-capable systems.
03:36It is developing submarine technology, and it is deepening ties with Russia.
03:41Estimates suggest around 50 warheads, with material for dozens more.
03:44And in the Middle East, the U.S. and Iran remain locked in high-stakes tensions over Tehran's nuclear program.
03:51Iran has enriched uranium to near weapons-grade levels.
03:53The U.S. has increased military presence.
03:56Threats and diplomacy are moving in parallel, which is often when things become most unstable.
04:00So what does all of this mean?
04:02It means we are entering a multipolar nuclear era.
04:05More nuclear states.
04:07Fewer rules.
04:08Less transparency.
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