Japan and RoK can likely do so pretty quickly. They both have large nuclear power programs and reprocess fuel. Plus a large number of very robust mathematical and physics schools able to crunch the numbers to design an implosion lens.Why Japan Australia and S. Korea should immediately develop independent nuclear arsenals.
And then there's the problem of the implosion lens.
Funny, I've always heard that the other way around: that the technically-challenging part of designing a nuclear weapon is the implosion lens.That is something they could do easily as HE lens tech is a mature field, the major bottle-neck for any country in becoming a nuclear power is access to fissile and futile material.
Access to fissionables is the expensive and very-obvious-what-you're-up-to part, but getting a working implosion lens is quite difficult.
And if you're using plutonium you must use implosion designs.It all depends on the amount and type of nuclear material you have. If you have a ton of U235, you can get away with a gun-type design. As you move to designs with less and less nuclear material the complexity of the HE goes up. So it all depends on where the expertise lies, nuclear material production/refinement, or HE design. It is also a lot easier to hide the HE design and testing than the nuclear production/refinement.
While true, it's apparently not easy to do.If the country in question has the time, money and the needed people it's just a matter of time to develop, test and manufacture an HE lens design.
I could maybe see France willing to discuss Dual-Key nukes with NATO. More likely to discuss that with Poland than Germany, however.Germany's looking for a replacement to existing 'joint key' nuclear weapons provision.
France isn't offering that.
I'm not sue Paris is even willing to discuss that.
London currently only has Trident nukes under their control. No other nuclear weapons unless they decide to rebuild WE.177s and offer those to NATO as the replacement for US Dual-Key.London might and it has no 'ambitions' in the way Paris does.
My understanding is they talked, but when Germany's people rocked up to Paris to talk about the decision system, they got told Paris will decide.I could maybe see France willing to discuss Dual-Key nukes with NATO. More likely to discuss that with Poland than Germany, however.
Which is where the UK comes in.Still too much bad blood from the 20th Century.
Which is effectively what I'm saying, though I'm not sure we could say it's going to be German uranium.London currently only has Trident nukes under their control. No other nuclear weapons unless they decide to rebuild WE.177s and offer those to NATO as the replacement for US Dual-Key.
France and Germany have been cooperating in NATO and the European Union over the decades. French and German governments have carefully avoided stepping on each others' toes. So much, in fact, that it raised concern among some observers in the USA and the UK. In the current international climate, I expect the two to cooperate even more.I could maybe see France willing to discuss Dual-Key nukes with NATO. More likely to discuss that with Poland than Germany, however.
Every time you make a new computer model, you need to do a test shot to validate it.
What you're saying is that the computer models we have are 30+ years old and therefore SUCK.
Yes they could reprocess the Pu, but they would first have to build the facilities to do so. All their civilian reactors are LWR which produce significant (~50%) amounts of Pu-240 while you need to get down to <7% Pu-240 for weapons-grade Pu. They may have a lot of Pu lying around, but its not usable as is.
Additionally, the US hasn't produced new plutonium in decades, and the isotropic and chemical composition of plutonium changes as a it ages.
It is rather buried in the engineering discussion on this page, but the point is made several times that the need for weapons grade Pu is somewhat exaggerated, and with boosting and other techniques it's possible to get a quite effective weapon with reactor grade Pu.
Seems that the simplest solution would be for EU to just buy missiles and warheads from France. Of course, the EU would be forced to operate them.![]()
A French-UK nuclear umbrella for Europe? Not likely, say analysts
Paris (AFP) Feb 27, 2025 - France and Britain are unlikely to include European allies in their nuclear deterrence, analysts said after future German leader Friedrich Merz called for European defence independence and a possible nuclear sharing.www.spacewar.com
Good article hereAbsolutely their own fault, I should point out. It's a BAD idea to break relations with both of your powerful neighbors, especially when you aren't in good relations with their potential opponents also (French were rather pissed off by Warsaw opportunistic behavior in 1938, Britain also considered Poland more a "convenient nuisance" than real ally)
theconversation.com
Well when you do a warhead count you think, no, but then which 240 cities could Russia afford to lose?![]()
French nuclear deterrence for Europe: how effective could it be against Russia?
Under what conditions could France – the only nuclear power in the EU since Brexit – provide deterrence on a European scale now that US protection against Russia is not guaranteed?theconversation.com
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How The Military Wants AI To Help Control America's Nuclear Arsenal
Science fiction has warned us about melding AI and nuclear command and control, but Pentagon leadership sees it as a critical tool for future deterrence.www.twz.com
Britain’s ability to rely on the US to maintain the UK’s nuclear arsenal is now in doubt, experts have warned, but working with European states to replace it will be costly and take time.
However, calls for Britain to make alternative plans have been joined by the former UK foreign secretary Sir Malcolm Rifkind, who initiated talks in the 90s between the UK and France on nuclear weapons cooperation.
“It really is necessary for Britain and France to work more closely together because if American reliability ever came into question, then Europe could be defenceless in the face of Russian aggression,” he said.
“The contribution by America must now be to some degree in doubt, not today or tomorrow, but over the next few years and certainly as long as Trump and people like him are in control in Washington.”
Defence analysts are emphasising the need to plan for a scenario where a transatlantic relationship fractures to the extent that the US declines to give the UK missiles.
Dr Marion Messmer, a senior research fellow at Chatham House and an expert on nuclear weapons policy, said: “It would be a big risk if it wasn’t being planned for, but it’s something the UK government can’t be too public about, as it wouldn’t want to give the Trump administration or Russia any ideas.”
“You wouldn’t necessarily be able to take the warheads which the UK uses for submarine launches and fit them for air launch. You would very likely need to develop a whole second warhead. That would require everything from new assembly facilities and workforce planning, but it could be a worthwhile investment for Britain,” she said.
“You could hope that France – the most obvious contender for Britain to work with – has a delivery vehicle similar to Trident that could easily be adapted, but it would require the French government and the French nuclear enterprise being willing to share those designs with the UK.”
American President Donald Trump’s policies have made Europe wary, they are no longer sure if they can depend on the U.S. for military deterrence if ‘push comes to shove’. Confronted with the possibility that the United States could abandon them during Donald Trump's presidency, European Union leaders initiated emergency discussions on Thursday to strengthen their own security measures and guarantee continued protection for Ukraine.
The 27-member alliance is also warming up to reports that French President Emmanuel Macron would consult with EU leaders on the potential deployment of France’s nuclear arsenal as a shield against Russian aggression on the continent.Currently, Europe’s deterrence rests mainly on one country and specifically one platform - it is the French Triomphant class ballistic missile submarine armed with M51 missiles.
It's crucial to note here that unlike Britain’s American-made Trident II SLBM, the French system has been independently developed.
In this video, Defense Updates analyzes why M51 SLBM-equipped French Triomphant ballistic missile submarines are Europe’s best deterrence against Russia?
#defenseupdates #TriomphantSubmraine #m51SLBM
Germany’s chancellor-to-be, Friedrich Merz, has said he will reach out to France and Britain to discuss the sharing of nuclear weapons, but cautioned that such a move could not be a replacement for the US’s existing protective shield over Europe.
“The sharing of nuclear weapons is an issue we need to talk about,” Merz said in a wide-ranging interview on Sunday with the broadcaster Deutschlandfunk (DLF). “We have to be stronger together in nuclear deterrence.”
"not a replacement for the US's existing protective shield" my ass.![]()
Germany to reach out to France and UK over sharing of nuclear weapons
But Friedrich Merz cautions such a move could not replace the US’s existing protective shield over Europewww.theguardian.com
The goal is too still have the door open where the Nato sharing system is used. That said an secondary system outside of nato could be build for user who wants it. That said sutch solution in an fast timeline would mean buying Rafales and using ASMP's. Any new weapon solution would take mutch longer und SSBNs are problematic...."not a replacement for the US's existing protective shield" my ass.
SSBNs are expensive, and there's a small number of usable bases to station them.The goal is too still have the door open where the Nato sharing system is used. That said an secondary system outside of nato could be build for user who wants it. That said sutch solution in an fast timeline would mean buying Rafales and using ASMP's. Any new weapon solution would take mutch longer und SSBNs are problematic....
Jip. Also the amount one could get with out having problems for national security for existing user (meaning only old subs) would give ous 8 SSBNs. 4 of them would need to me modefied for M51 as i think Trident isn't available so those likely wont even be really usable as subs but more "tactical" silos. Same could be said about the other 4 french ones. Or atleast budget and person wise this would be the cheapest solution.SSBNs are expensive, and there's a small number of usable bases to station them.
Which is where we end with buying Rafales as its doubtful for france to integreate ASMP in EF.Air-launched or surface launched would be more viable for most of Europe.