US Leads Record Rise in Spending on Nuclear Arsenals, Campaign Group Says

GENEVA, ⁠June ⁠8 (Reuters) – Spending ⁠on nuclear weapons by the ​world’s nine nuclear-armed states rose by almost ‌a fifth in ‌2025 to $119 billion, a report ⁠by ⁠the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons ​said on Tuesday.

The 19% increase from 2024 produced the highest expenditure on nuclear ​weapons since the campaign group began ⁠tracking the ⁠annual nuclear arms ⁠expenditure ​of the U.S., Russia, China, France, Britain, ​India, Pakistan, ⁠North Korea and Israel in 2020.

• The U.S. spent $69.2 billion, more than all other nuclear states ⁠combined, and saw largest increase, at 22%.

• U.S. ⁠is increasing military spending in general as well as rebuilding nuclear arsenal, ICAN says.

• China came second, increasing by 7% to $13.5 billion.

• Britain overtook Russia to become third-biggest spender, up 17% to $12.6 billion. ⁠Russia spent $9.5 billion, increase of 6%.

• 2017 Nobel Peace laureate ICAN seeks total elimination of nuclear weapons.

(Reporting ​by Olivia Le Poidevin; Editing ​by Kevin Liffey)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

Photos You Should See – June 2026

TOPSHOT - Hindu devotees of the Tengger community are seen through low-lying clouds at sunrise as they ascend the active Mount Bromo volcano to present offerings of rice, fruit, livestock and other items as part of the Yadnya Kasada festival near Probolinggo, East Java province on June 1, 2026. The Yadnya Kasada ceremony is a ritual of the Tenggerese people, a sub-ethnic group of Javanese in eastern Java, in which offerings are thrown into the crater of Mount Bromo as a form of gratitude, prayer for safety, and fulfillment of a legendary vow to the mountain's deity. (Photo by JUNI KRISWANTO / AFP via Getty Images)

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