The Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT)
iasparliament
July 16, 2026
Mains: GS II – International relations
Why in News?
Recently there is a pressure surmounting over Iran to dismantle all the enriched uranium in the country.
What is the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT)?
NPT – It is a landmark 1970 international agreement designed to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons, promote peaceful nuclear energy, and achieve global disarmament.
Supervision – It operates as a "grand bargain" overseen by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to monitor compliance.
3 pillars – The NPT balances three main principles:
Non-Proliferation – States without nuclear weapons pledge not to acquire or develop them.
Disarmament – States with nuclear weapons pledge to actively pursue negotiations toward total disarmament.
Peaceful Use – All countries have the right to develop nuclear energy for peaceful purposes, provided they adhere to IAEA safeguards.
Categorization of States – The treaty divides its 191 member states into two categories:
Nuclear-Weapon States (NWS) – Defined as those that manufactured and detonated a nuclear explosive device before January 1, 1967.
These five states are the United States, Russia, China, France, and the United Kingdom.
Non-Nuclear-Weapon States (NNWS): All other signatory parties.
Global Participation and Holdouts – The NPT boasts near-universal membership, but a few key nations operate outside of it:
Never signed – India, Pakistan, and Israel.
Withdrew – North Korea signed in 1985 but withdrew in 2003 to pursue nuclear capabilities.
What is the significance of NPT?
Preventing Nuclear Proliferation – The NPT limits the number of nuclear-armed states, preventing catastrophic scenarios where dozens of countries develop nuclear arsenals.
Access to Peaceful Nuclear Tech – Non-nuclear states gain legal access to peaceful nuclear technology for power generation, agriculture, and medicine under strict oversight.
International Safeguards – The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) uses the NPT to conduct inspections, giving the global community confidence that civil nuclear programs are not being diverted to build weapons.
Framework for Disarmament – The treaty legally commits nuclear-weapon states to pursue negotiations in good faith toward eventual disarmament, historically enabling massive reductions in global stockpiles.
Global Stability – It establishes a predictable international norm against nuclear proliferation, reducing the risk of accidental or intentional nuclear conflict.
What are the issues with NPT?
Unequal rules – The NPT institutionalised a hierarchy rather than dismantling it.
The NPT is built on a "grand bargain" where non-nuclear states forego weapons, and nuclear states commit to eventually disarm.
However, major powers continue to modernize their arsenals, and bilateral arms control has deteriorated, raising concerns about a renewed arms race.
Noncompliance and Verification – Certain states (such as North Korea, which withdrew from the NPT, and Iran) have pursued clandestine nuclear programs, challenging the enforcement capabilities of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
States Outside the Framework – The NPT's credibility is weakened by the presence of nuclear-armed states that never signed the treaty—India, Pakistan, and Israel—as well as North Korea's withdrawal.
This creates regional instability and undermines global non-proliferation norms.
Peaceful Nuclear Energy vs. Proliferation Risk – The NPT guarantees states the right to pursue peaceful nuclear technology.
However, technologies like uranium enrichment and plutonium reprocessing, while legal for civilian energy, can be diverted to weaponization, making oversight difficult.
Perceived Double Standards – Many non-nuclear weapon states argue there is inherent hypocrisy in the system.
They are expected to limit their nuclear ambitions while recognized nuclear powers face no comparable or binding ultimatum to eliminate their own arsenals.
How to strengthen the NPT?
Adopt the Additional Protocol – Make the IAEA Additional Protocol the universal standard for NPT safeguards, enabling short-notice inspections and greater environmental monitoring to detect illicit nuclear programs.
Implement Stricter Withdrawal Consequences – Establish clear diplomatic and economic penalties, such as the immediate return of nuclear materials and technology, for states that withdraw from the NPT after violating its terms.
Fulfill Disarmament Obligations – Nuclear-weapon states must take concrete, verifiable steps to reduce their arsenals, cease qualitative weapon modernization, and recommit to arms control treaties.
Promote Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zones (NWFZs) – Encourage the establishment of universally binding NWFZs, particularly in highly volatile regions like the Middle East, to reduce local proliferation incentives.
Enforce Binding Treaties – Accelerate the entry into force of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) and negotiate a Fissile Material Cut-off Treaty (FMCT) to cap the materials available for nuclear weapons.
The Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT)
It is a multilateral agreement that prohibits all nuclear weapon test explosions and any other nuclear explosions, for both military and civilian purposes, in all environments.
Adopted by – The UN General Assembly in 1996.
Enforced by – The Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organization (CTBTO) via a global monitoring system.
Signatory nations – While the treaty has been signed by 187 nations, it has not yet officially entered into force.
This is because the treaty requires ratification by 44 specific "nuclear-capable" states, nine of which—including the United States, China, India, and Pakistan—have yet to do so.
Current Status and Challenges – The treaty's path to formal implementation has faced political roadblocks.
It requires ratification from 44 specific states listed in "Annex 2" of the treaty (countries with nuclear reactors or research facilities at the time of negotiation).
As of 2026, nine of these Annex 2 states have not completed ratification:
States that have not signed or ratified – India, North Korea, and Pakistan.
States that have signed but not ratified – China, Egypt, Iran, Israel, and the United States.
States that revoked ratification – Russia (which ratified in 2000 but withdrew its ratification in 2023)