Europe faces a seismic shift in security as Russia’s war in Ukraine, now three years old as of April 2025, fuels nuclear deterrence debates.
Poland seeks its own arsenal, Finland considers allowing nuclear transit, and Germany explores funding options, driven by fears of waning U.S. support. French and British nuclear stockpiles—290 and 225 warheads respectively—stand as Europe’s only current deterrents.
Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk pushes for advanced capabilities, including nuclear weapons, amid Russia’s deployment of tactical nukes in Belarus since 2023.
Developing an arsenal risks violating the 1969 Non-Proliferation Treaty, a move less unthinkable since Poland exited the 1997 Ottawa landmine ban in 2024.
Experts estimate a decade-long, multibillion-euro effort, given Poland’s nascent nuclear infrastructure, with its first power plant due in the 2030s. Meanwhile, Germany opts for a financial role, leveraging its NATO nuclear-sharing status, which includes hosting 20 U.S. B61 bombs.
Security expert Karl-Heinz Kamp suggests that Berlin could fund France and Britain’s costly programs. This includes £31 billion for the UK’s Trident and €6 billion yearly for France’s Force de Frappe.
Europe’s Nuclear Shift
A 2017 parliamentary report confirms this aligns with the NPT, especially under the 2024 German-British Trinity House Agreement hinting at nuclear cooperation. Finland, newly NATO-aligned since April 2023, marks a stark turn from neutrality.
President Alexander Stubb, elected in 2024, supports nuclear transit across Finland’s 1,340-kilometer Russian border, citing deterrence needs. This follows Russia’s aggression, reviving memories of the 1939 Winter War.
The backdrop reveals Europe’s unease. Russia’s 1,000–2,000 non-strategic warheads dwarf NATO’s 230, while U.S. reliability falters under recent political shifts.
France’s Emmanuel Macron offers a nuclear umbrella, but Poland and Germany weigh independent paths. Costs, legal hurdles, and proliferation risks loom large, yet the continent braces for a redefined defense landscape.