I guess my point is that there are diminishing diplomatic/power rewards from increasing the number of nuclear weapons in your stockpile. While having nuclear capability is certainly important to be considered a superpower, the advantage the US gains over China by having a nuclear arsenal way bigger than the the Chinese one is, in my view, relatively small. China still has enough nuclear weapons to make launching missiles at it a really bad idea for a president of the US who wants to keep his job/his party’s political power/his citizens safe (even including the possible incompetency of China’s nuclear force—see this report). Also, having a no first use policy would matter more if China’s leader was bound by his countries laws, which he is unfortunately not.
I guess my point is that there are diminishing diplomatic/power rewards from increasing the number of nuclear weapons in your stockpile. While having nuclear capability is certainly important to be considered a superpower, the advantage the US gains over China by having a nuclear arsenal way bigger than the the Chinese one is, in my view, relatively small. China still has enough nuclear weapons to make launching missiles at it a really bad idea for a president of the US who wants to keep his job/his party’s political power/his citizens safe (even including the possible incompetency of China’s nuclear force—see this report). Also, having a no first use policy would matter more if China’s leader was bound by his countries laws, which he is unfortunately not.