Shangea and weapons of mass destruction

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Shangea
Xiaodong map (cropped).png
Nuclear programme
start date
1975
First nuclear
weapon test
17 June 1975
First fusion
weapon test
4 March 1992
Most recent test12 April 2010
Largest-yield test2 mT
Number of tests
to date
38
Peak stockpile300-500
Current stockpile300-500
Maximum missile
range
14,000 km
Treaty of Shanbally PartyNo

The Auspicious Republic of Shangea has over its history possessed several weapons of mass destruction. From 1908 to 1935 it maintained a chemical and biological weapons programme that was used in Senria during the Senrian front of the Great War before being dismantled after the end of the Great War. Since 1975 it has been one of the seven states in the world to have successfully developed and maintain nuclear weapons.

With nuclear development approved by Premier Li Zhaozheng in 1960 Xiaodong has steadily built a nuclear arsenal since 1965 when it refused to sign the Treaty of Shanbally after Senria developed nuclear weapons. Xiaodong launched its first nuclear test in 1975 during the Coastal Crisis - Housheng-1 whose max yield was 10 kilotons of TNT. Following the testing of Housheng-1 Xiaodong adhered to the so-called Harborough Protocols which effectively froze further Xiaodongese nuclear development and limited their ability to perform a second strike.

In 198X following [some crisis that Xiaodong blames Senria for] premier Sun Yuting restarted Shangea's nuclear programme effectively discarding the Harborough Protocols. Shangea performed several nuclear tests in the 1980's after the foundation of the Rongzhuo Strategic Protocol Organisation which resulted in Shangea to undergo an arms embargo and partial economic sanctions. The beginning of the Nuclear Arms Limitation and Non-proliferation Talks in 1986 saw Shangea agreeing to limit development of inter-continental ballistic missiles but refusing Senrian demands to take steps to de-nuclearise alongside the terms of the Treaty of Shanbally and the Harborough Protocols. Nuclear weapons development and testing continued throughout the 1990's until Shangea agreed to limit testing and missile development in 1999 and 2004. Development has continued since 2010 when Shangea conducted its last nuclear test.

Shangea maintains that it retains the right to launch a first-strike through a nuclear triad. Since 2012 it has outlined its own Baiqiao Principles where it has stated that it will streamline its nuclear force to maintain a "credible minimum defence" and that it is open to the idea of de-nuclearisation if it is done multilaterally, rejecting unilateral de-nuclearisation. Shangea has been in negotiation with the Atomic Energy Commission to allow them partial access to nuclear facilities in order to engage in nuclear commerce but these efforts have been limited.

Shangea is a member of [treaties that ban bio and chemical weapons].