China’s rapid nuclear buildup is raising questions about how the country makes decisions related to nuclear weapons. This policy brief analyzes that trend by presenting three overarching analytical lenses, or categories of factors, that shape Beijing’s nuclear decision-making: leadership, weapons systems and military organizations, and official policies and doctrine.
On leadership, Chinese Communist Party General Secretary Xi Jinping likely sees nuclear weapons granting prestige and growing in relevance, but his views on nuclear weapons’ efficacy are less clear. On weapons systems and military organizations, the expansion of China’s nuclear arsenal provides the country’s leaders with new options, which could shift those leaders’ intentions over time. Implementation of those options, though, runs through often-corrupt People’s Liberation Army military organizations. On official policies and doctrine, Beijing possibly sees its professed stance as a country that does not engage in U.S.- and Russian-style arms buildups as a source of diplomatic influence, particularly in the developing world or Global South. Separately, the circumstances where China’s nuclear no-first-use policy would face a true test—for example, during a major Taiwan contingency—are precisely the moments when Beijing would have massive incentives to selectively interpret or simply abandon that policy.
In the near term, China’s official nuclear weapons policies will likely stay the same, so the gap between rhetoric and action will grow. A bigger arsenal and more nuclear rhetoric and signaling will, over time, also shape future Chinese coercion campaigns. In response, U.S. policymakers should commission an intelligence assessment of Xi’s views of specific nuclear crises, pressure China to issue more explanation of its nuclear policies and capabilities, and expand information sharing about missile tests on a reciprocal basis. U.S. policymakers should also make an authoritative policy statement on what would constitute China reaching nuclear parity with the United States and counter China’s nuclear buildup using both conventional and nuclear capabilities.
Introduction
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The nuclear weapons arsenal of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) has grown rapidly in size and sophistication in recent years. The U.S. Department of Defense estimates that the country has 600 warheads in its inventory as of 2024, and those numbers are projected to increase to 1,000 by 2030 and continue growing well into the 2030s.[1](#fn1) In addition, Beijing is improving its triad of nuclear delivery systems comprising various types of missiles, submarines, and bomber aircraft. It has constructed hundreds of new missile silos, has tested new types of delivery systems, and is moving some forces to a launch-on-warning posture.
China’s nuclear buildup has led U.S. policymakers in the executive and legislative branches to question what the trend says about Beijing’s decision-making related to nuclear weapons.[2](#fn2) This policy brief offers a framework to answer those questions in a brisk and accessible way. It presents three overarching lenses, or categories of factors, that shape China’s nuclear decision-making: leadership, weapons systems and military organizations, and official policies and doctrine. The brief concludes with recommendations for U.S. policymakers in the executive and legislative branches.