The UK government has disclosed its high-level plans and a strategic rationale for modernising its nuclear arsenal, but has simultaneously increased ambiguity around its operational details in recent years.
The United Kingdom states it must modernise its nuclear arsenal in direct response to a ‘deteriorating security environment’. The 2023 Integrated Review Refresh asserts that the international context is more competitive and dangerous than at any time since the Cold War. It cites an ‘acute threat’ from Russia, an ‘epoch-defining and systemic challenge’ posed by China, and the proliferation of nuclear weapons and disruptive technologies by states like North Korea and Iran.
Public, headline plans for modernising UK nuclear weapon systems and the nuclear weapons complex include:
— Building four new Dreadnought-class nuclear-armed ballistic missile submarines (SSBNs) to replace the current four Vanguard-class SSBNs, with the first-in-class HMS Dreadnought due to enter service in the early 2030s.
— Deploying on the Dreadnought SSBNs the US-designed and built Trident II D5LE submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM), as currently deployed on the Vanguard-class, to be replaced by the D5LE2 from the 2040s.
— Purchasing twelve F-35A aircraft from the US to provide a ‘dual-capable’ (conventional and nuclear) air-launched nuclear capability using B61-11 US gravity bombs in support of NATO.
— Designing a replacement warhead, known as Project Astraea (A21/Mk7), in close coordination with the US W93 warhead programme to replace the current UK design (Holbrook/Mk4A).
— Undertaking a massive, multi-billion-pound infrastructure modernisation initiative to support the design and production of a new warhead. This includes the Project MENSA warhead assembly/disassembly facility at the Atomic Weapons Establishment (AWE) Burghfield site; a High Explosive Fabrication Facility; and the Future Materials Campus (FMC) to manufacture, store, and recover nuclear materials for warhead components at AWE Aldermaston.
— Modernising all parts of the nuclear weapons complex, including BAE Systems’ shipyard in Barrow-in-Furness, the next generation of facilities at Rolls-Royce’s Raynesway site in Derby, and the Royal Naval Armaments Depot (RNAD) Coulport, to build new facilities to support Astraea.
— Exploring options to re-establish a nuclear fuel cycle for reactor fuel for defence purposes.
However, very little detail has been disclosed on the capabilities, timelines, and decision-making on these projects.
The UK has maintained a moratorium on fissile material production for weapons purposes since 1995. New facilities at AWE are not for producing new plutonium or uranium. The modernisation programme involves using the UK’s existing stocks of fissile material.
Official sources
- ^ Cabinet Office. Integrated Review Refresh 2023: Responding to a more contested and volatile world (London, 2023). https://web.archive.org/web/20260325130005/https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/integrated-review-refresh-2023-responding-to-a-more-contested-and-volatile-world
- ^ Statement of Vice Admiral Johnny Wolfe, USN Director, Strategic Systems Programs before The Subcommittee On Strategic Forces of the Senate Armed Services Committee on FY 2025 Budget Request For Nuclear Forces And Atomic Energy Defense Activities (United States Congress, 22 May 2024). web.archive.org/web/20260324152424/https://www.armed-services.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/wolfe_statement.pdf
- ^ Ministry of Defence.The United Kingdom’s Future Nuclear Deterrent: 2021 Update to Parliament (London, 2021). https://web.archive.org/web/20260325130241/https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/the-united-kingdoms-future-nuclear-deterrent-the-2021-update-to-parliament/the-united-kingdoms-future-nuclear-deterrent-the-2021-update-to-parliament
- ^ Ministry of Defence. Defence Nuclear Enterprise: 2025 Annual Update to Parliament (London, 2025). https://web.archive.org/web/20260325130938/https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/682f01c2e9440506ee95398c/20250522-Defence-Nuclear-Enterprise-2025-Annual-Update-to-Parliament-v10.pdf
- ^ ‘Types of UK Royal Navy Submarine’, Submarine and Delivery Agency, updated 27 October 2025. https://web.archive.org/web/20260324152729/https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/uk-royal-navy-submarines/types-of-uk-royal-navy-submarine
Last updated: 22 April 2026 18:43