This article is about the warhead B61-12; the whole program is estimated to cost about $11 billion.
This is scary, as the higher-precision guidance and adjustable lower yields make it more likely to be used; and sad, that President Obama and the various contractors and New Mexico politicians are pushing this.
"This is scary, as the higher-precision guidance and adjustable lower yields make it more likely to be used"
Nuclear weapons with much, much smaller yields have been in the US arsenal for a long time (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W54 for an example of one with a yield of 10 tons of TNT, as compared to the 300 ton minimum claimed in the article for the B61-12) and we haven't used them in war, so I don't see how this one is any different in that respect.
Furthermore, the "high-precision" argument is also not convincing. You can make an argument -- dubious, but it can be made -- that existing precision conventional weapons are more likely to be used because it's possible to destroy an enemy target even if it's located right next door to noncombatants. But even at its lowest setting, the B61-12 would completely destroy dozens of square blocks and cause additional damage dozens farther out; there's no way that wouldn't lead to massive civilian casualties if it was used in a city.
Nuclear weapons have a definite "shelf life" because of the exotic materials used. But if you think about things like the screws & bolts used on them - every time a technician applies a tool to them, there's a little bit of wear and tear. Over time, these and other parts need replacing because of ongoing handling & routine maintenance.
The socio-political aspects are a much broader topic. Personally I don't like them, but I realize that once Pandora's Box Of Technology has been opened, there's no going back.
Some decades ago, during discussion about test bans, the people who had experience from blowing up 1,000+ nuclear bombs were asked if it was possible to design a nuclear bomb that could be used by future generations that would be sure to work without additional testing, and bearing in mind changes in technology. Their answer was "yes".
(I think my knowledge comes from one of Freeman Dyson's accounts.)
I have not heard a clear explanation of why those earlier weapons designers were wrong, only concerns about how they might have been wrong. That more nebulous caution sounds identical to the sorts of statements someone might make as a justification for designing new weapons - for some people designing nuclear weapons and watching them go BOOM is a lot of fun.
In my very limited understanding of the topic, the largest unknown is the changes to the plutonium-gallium alloy of the core. Some worry that it has degraded. Others say "most plutonium pits have a credible lifetime of at least 100 years". Even if it's a problem, one solution is to re-smelt the cores, though currently we do not have the facilities for that. However, we could make those facilities without testing new weapons.
This is scary, as the higher-precision guidance and adjustable lower yields make it more likely to be used; and sad, that President Obama and the various contractors and New Mexico politicians are pushing this.