Whether or not to decide that no country has the right to own nuclear weapons. Nuclear weapons greatly hurt the environment. Damage may continue. Damage to the environment may argue that they can be justified by the fact that they can quickly end the war and reduce the number of deaths, but that they will soon end the war When they are used to, they still kill indiscriminately. Many civilians radiation can kill many innocent people. However, they are not innocent because they are the enemy's people most likely to be exposed to radiation.
Most countries in the world - non - nuclear - weapon states (NNWS) - promised to maintain non - nuclear weapons, including countries that once owned nuclear weapons. South Africa announced in July 1993 that it developed a small weapon before being destroyed in 1991 to join the nuclear nonproliferation treaty as a non - nuclear - weapon state. After a number of nuclear warheads left from the former Soviet Union in the mid 1990s and related transportation systems from Belarus, Kazakhstan and Ukraine returned to Russia, joined the NPT and became NNWS.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Ukraine inherited nuclear weapons. Belarus has 81 warheads and various non-strategic nuclear weapons. There are 1,410 nuclear warhead missiles in Kazakhstan. Ukraine has 1,900 strategic nuclear warheads and 2,650 to 4,200 nonstrategic nuclear weapons, and it is the third largest nuclear weapon in the world. All three countries signed the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT), returned the weapons to Russia, and dismantled in the mid-1990s.
Nine countries have nuclear weapons. Five of them (the United States, Russia, Britain, France, China) are members of the official owner club and have made weapons early in the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) signed in 1968 and legalized it. The main part dominates international law on nuclear weapons. NPT is very successful. In the 1960s, it seems like the influence on the world stage and the rapid tracking of the position seems to be prompt, so it was widely expected that dozens of countries will set up bombs. However, so far only four fraudulent nuclear weapons states have ignored the "non-proliferation treaty" and created their own bombs. The order of acquisition is Israel, India, Pakistan, North Korea
We currently have nuclear weapons in nine countries, and there are various delivery systems. The chart below shows an overview of some countries possessing or possessing nuclear weapons and some countries that can produce nuclear weapons. They also show how these weapons can rebuild the constraints the country faces in geopolitical calculations. The map emphasizes three aspects of the world's nuclear weapons. The first is to distinguish between deployed weapons and spare weapons. Deployed nuclear weapons are already connected to the delivery system and can be used at any time. Prepared warheads still require a final connection step before delivery