U.S. Department of Energy - Nuclear Stockpile Facts
Prof. Robert B.
Laughlin
Department of Physics
Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305
Declassification of Certain Characteristics of the United States
Nuclear Weapon Stockpile
U.S. Department of Energy, Office of the Press Secretary,
Washington, DC 20585
June 27, 1994
The Department of Energy and the Department of
Defense have jointly declassified certain characteristics of the
Nation's nuclear weapon stockpile.
Specifically
- The Department of Energy and the Department of Defense have
jointly declassified the total megatonnage of the nuclear
weapon stockpile for the years 1945 to the present.
- The Department of Energy and the Department of Defense have
jointly declassified the total number of nuclear weapons in
the stockpile for the years 1949 to 1961.
- The Department of Energy and the Department of Defense have
jointly declassified the total number of weapon builds by year
for weapon systems fully retired.
- The Department of Energy and the Department of Defense have
jointly declassified the total number of weapon retirements
for the years 1945 to 1989. Disassembly of weapons for
disposal from 1980 to the present is also provided.
- See attached charts for detailed descriptions of the
declassified stockpile characteristics.
Background
- The size of the stockpile has changed dramatically over the
past 50 years. In recent years, a large number of weapons have
been retired in response to treaty obligations and unilateral
commitments.
- After reaching peak megatonnage around 1960, total megatonnage
in the stockpile has decreased to about 10 percent of the
peak.
- The quantities listed here are based on the evaluation of the
records available. The quantities may be updated or revised in
the future after re-evaluation of the methodology used
originally.
- Retirement numbers provided here reflect weapons retired for
conversions, modifications, or disassembles for disposal.
Retirement numbers depend critically on how the term
"retirement" is defined.
- Disassembly for disposal reflect weapons actually dismantled
without including the number of weapons dismantled to change
out a component within the weapon or dismantled and rebuilt
for quality assurance reliability testing.
Benefits
- As part of the Secretary of Energy's Openness Initiative, the
Department of Energy and the Department of Defense are
declassifying information regarding characteristics of the
United States nuclear weapon stockpile. As a result of this
declassification, the American public will have information
that is important to the current debate over the nuclear
arsenal. The information released will help provide a
historical perspective of how the stockpile has changed over
the past 50 years. It should encourage other nations to
declassify similar nuclear weapon stockpile information.
- With the U.S. release of this information, it is hoped that
other nuclear weapon states will be encouraged to release
similar information. The release of retirement rates up to
1989 will show nonnuclear weapon states that the United States
has acted responsibly by retiring and dismantling weapons it
no longer requires.
Who Are the Key Stakeholders?
- The Public. The public will have a better understanding
of the nature of the Nation's nuclear deterrent.
- Freedom of Information Act Requesters. This information
has been long sought by certain public interest groups through
Freedom of Information Act requests.
- Public Interest Organizations. Stakeholders include
environmental, safety and health groups, historians,
archivists, researchers, scientists, and industrial workers,
as well as State and Federal personnel. With this
declassification, those interested in oversight of nuclear
weapons related activities will have additional information
regarding the U.S. nuclear weapon stockpile. Public interest
organizations which have expressed such an interest include
(but are not limited to): Energy Research Foundation,
Environmental Information Network, Friends of the Earth,
Greenpeace, League of Women Voters, Livermore Conversion
Project, Military Production Network, National Security
Archive, Natural Resources Defense Council, Nevada Desert
Experience, Physicians for Social Responsibility, Plutonium
Challenge, and the Sierra Club.
- Arms Control Negotiators. Negotiators for the United
States can use this information to seek similar information
from other nuclear weapon states.
Contact
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Public Affairs
Contact: Sam Grizzle
(202) 586-5806
Attachments
Declassified Stockpile Data 1945 to
1994
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Q. Why wasn't this information declassified
earlier?
A. The United States maintains the nuclear weapon
stockpile as a deterrent. During the Cold War, most information
concerning the stockpile was classified for clear reasons of national
security. Upon review, it was determined that some general information
concerning the stockpile can now be released without harm to national
security.
Q. When will more detailed information on the
nuclear stockpile be declassified?
A. The nuclear stockpile is extremely important to
the defense of the Nation. At this time, release of more detailed
information is not judged to be in the Nation's best interest.
Q. Why are total quantities provided only up to
1961?
A. Past total stockpile numbers which are composed,
even partially, of weapon systems still in the stockpile remain
classified. Further data on total stockpile numbers may be released in
the future as additional weapon systems are retired.
Q. Why are retirement rates and disassembly for
disposal rates different from each other from year to year?
A. Retirement is an accounting change that
authorizes removal of a weapon from the nuclear stockpile and its
transfer to the Department of Energy for conversions, modifications, or
eventual disassembly. Disassembly for disposal is the process of taking
apart a nuclear weapon. Disassembly rates depend on available capacity
at Pantex.
Last Updated: April 24, 2008