The War in Iran and Implications for the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Regime

The nuclear non-proliferation regime is a global framework of norms, practices, and diplomatic agreements — underpinned by the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) — designed to limit the spread of nuclear weapons. The regime has had both failures and successes over the decades. Perhap

War on the Rocks
75
2 min read
0 views
The War in Iran and Implications for the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Regime

The nuclear non-proliferation regime is a global framework of norms, practices, and diplomatic agreements — underpinned by the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) — designed to limit the spread of nuclear weapons. The regime has had both failures and successes over the decades. Perhaps the biggest challenge in recent years came from Iran. The country’s nuclear activities raised international concern, prompting diplomatic, economic, and covert efforts to constrain it. Iran is a signatory to the NPT and has argued that it was not pursuing a nuclear weapon but rather engaging in legitimate civilian nuclear activities. However, its activities prompted suspicions that it was seeking to become a threshold state that possesses the ability to quickly develop a nuclear weapon if the government felt it was necessary.In June 2025, despite ongoing talks with Iran, the United States and Israel launched airstrikes against Iran’s nuclear facilities. The current conflict, which began on Feb. 28, goes far beyond those targets, but American and Israeli leaders have listed destroying Iran’s nuclear program among their key reasons for going to war. We asked four experts to consider how the war might affect the nuclear non-proliferation regime.Read more below.Ankit Panda Stanton Senior Fellow in the Nuclear Policy Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Host of War on the Rocks’ Thinking the Unthinkable podcastThis war will not succeed in the complete elimination of Iran’s capacity to seek nuclear weapons. In the short term, the key concern will be whether the political effects of this war within Iran — paired with substantial attrition of the country’s conventional deterrent capabilities — will prompt Tehran to seek the bomb. In the longer term, this war will allow the seeds sown after the 12-Day War — the idea that only nuclear weapons can deter strategic attacks — to germinate in

Members-Only Content

This article is reserved for War on the Rocks members. Join our community to unlock exclusive insights and analysis.

Original Source

War on the Rocks

Share this article

Related Articles

Your Defense Code Is Already AI-Generated. Now What?
📊Analysis & Opinion
War on the Rocks

Your Defense Code Is Already AI-Generated. Now What?

Somewhere in a defense ministry, someone is drafting a policy on whether to permit AI-assisted software development in defense procurement. The sentiment is understandable, but the policy is unfortunately unenforceable because the code is already there.In April 2025, Microsoft Chief Executive Office

hace alrededor de 5 horas15 min
Five Wargames Every Force Design Process Needs
📊Analysis & Opinion
War on the Rocks

Five Wargames Every Force Design Process Needs

In 2019, Gen. David Berger, the 38th commandant of the Marine Corps, issued his Commandant’s Planning Guidance, which announced the service’s force planning initiative to prepare for conflict in the modern era. Berger identified wargaming as critical to the Marine Corps’ efforts an

hace alrededor de 6 horas16 min
Proxy Pressure on Iran: The Promise and Pitfalls of Arming the Kurds
📊Analysis & Opinion
War on the Rocks

Proxy Pressure on Iran: The Promise and Pitfalls of Arming the Kurds

Early in the ongoing war against Iran, the Trump administration and its ally, Israel, believed they could foment a popular uprising to topple the Iranian regime. Part of that plan involved arming Kurdish fighters to infiltrate Iran from their locations in Iraq.The idea had intuitive logic. Kurdish f

hace alrededor de 6 horas10 min
Follow the Money: Finance and the Future of Allied Economic Statecraft
📊Analysis & Opinion
War on the Rocks

Follow the Money: Finance and the Future of Allied Economic Statecraft

What if the real battlefield of great-power competition is the global flow of money?The ability to mobilize and direct large pools of public and private capital across critical industries — defense, infrastructure, manufacturing, and technology — is becoming the defining instrument of co

hace alrededor de 6 horas13 min