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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.

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