(a) See previous section
(b) The UK has not entered into bilateral or multilateral nuclear arms reduction discussions or processes. It has previously stated that UK nuclear weapons will be included in negotiations when the UK is satisfied with progress towards the goal of the global elimination of nuclear weapons.
The UK has not invited external verification of the unilateral reductions in its nuclear arsenal because of the absence of a wider arms control context involving reciprocal obligations from other nuclear states.
(c) The UK made a number of changes to its declaratory policy in 2010 by strengthening its negative security assurance that the UK will not use or threaten to use nuclear weapons against NPT NNWS unless the state is in material breach of its NPT non-proliferation obligations.
The UK declared in a joint P5 statement in 2022 that a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought.
However, UK governments have repeatedly stated that nuclear weapons remain an essential and “ultimate insurance” for national security.
(d) The UK has condemned the DPRK’s continued development of its nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programmes and supported UNSCRs 1718, 1874, 2087 and 2094.
The UK has participated in the E3+3 negotiations on Iran’s nuclear programme; supported six UNSCRs on Iran’s nuclear programme, and negotiated the JCPOA is implementation.
The UK made a major contribution to the G8 Global Partnership (GP) against the Spread of Materials and Weapons of Mass Destruction and, as part of the UK’s G8 Presidency in 2013.
The UK has also expanded its work on nuclear disarmament verification through the QUAD, IPNDV and UN GGEs.
(e) The UK de-targeted its submarine-based strategic nuclear weapons in 1994 and ‘de-alerted’ its nuclear weapons in 1998 Strategic Defence Review to several days' notice to fire.
(f) The UK states that its nuclear weapon command and control system is fully independent, and that the UK has full operational control over its use and only the Prime Minister can authorise the use of UK nuclear weapons.
In 1992 the UK government declared the Holbrook warhead design for its Trident SLBMs as one-point safe meaning the warhead will not produce a nuclear yield if accidentally detonated by an explosion at a single point in its conventional high explosive system.
The UK hosted the ninth P5 Conference on 12-13 February 2020 in London and led a number of expert-level P5 working groups on nuclear doctrines and risk reduction and in 2021 declared it will “champion strategic risk reduction and seek to create dialogue among states possessing nuclear weapons…to increase understanding and reduce the risk of misinterpretation and miscalculation.”
(g) The UK has funded projects on nuclear-armed states’ conceptions of their responsibilities in relation to nuclear weapons.
It provides annual updates to Parliament on the progress of the Dreadnought Class submarine programme.
The UK publishes annual information on holdings of civil separated plutonium, HUE, LEU and natural uranium in the civil nuclear cycle.
The UK asked Parliament to vote in 2016 on the principle of maintaining a continuous at-sea nuclear deterrence (CASD) posture and continuing with the programme to build four new SSBNs to maintain the UK’s nuclear weapons programme and won by a significant majority (472 to 117).
The UK hosted the sixth P5 Conference in London in February 2015 on further steps on transparency.
The UK has reduced transparency in 2021 by no longer providing figures for the operational stockpile, deployed warheads or deployed missile numbers “Given the changing security and technological environment.”