Published: 3 March 2026. The English Chronicle Desk. The English Chronicle Online
France has announced a significant expansion of its nuclear forces and a new “forward deterrence” policy aimed at strengthening security for itself and European partners. President Emmanuel Macron said Paris will increase the size of its nuclear arsenal — the first such expansion in decades — and will involve allied countries more directly in nuclear deterrence planning and deployments.
Speaking at the Île Longue naval base in Brittany, Macron framed the announcement as a response to a changing global security environment marked by ongoing conflicts, including Russia’s war in Ukraine and broader geopolitical instability. He said a stronger, more flexible nuclear posture is necessary to ensure credible deterrence and reassure European states amid concerns about the reliability of security guarantees from other powers.
France currently maintains around 290 nuclear warheads, making it the fourth‑largest nuclear arsenal in the world. Macron did not specify a target number for the expanded stockpile but said the increase would serve to “maintain the assured destructive power” of French deterrence.
A key element of the new doctrine involves closer cooperation with European allies. Talks have begun with countries including Germany, Poland, the Netherlands, Belgium, Greece, Sweden and Denmark over the temporary deployment of French nuclear‑armed aircraft and participation in joint exercises. Paris stressed that decisions on the use of nuclear weapons will remain exclusively under French presidential authority, even as partner nations contribute to exercises and planning.
European leaders have expressed cautious support for the initiative, seeing it as complementary to NATO’s collective defence arrangements rather than a replacement. Denmark’s prime minister described strategic co‑operation with France as a way to “strengthen Europe’s deterrence capability,” while emphasising that it does not substitute for NATO’s nuclear umbrella.
The policy shift is broadly interpreted as part of a broader effort by Paris to enhance European strategic autonomy and address growing doubts among some allies about long‑term U.S. security commitments. France said that the expanded deterrence framework will operate in coordination with NATO and with transparent communication with the United States.




























































