January
20, 2003
Closer
to Nuclear MADness
As
nuclear taboos of various kinds get weakened and violated the world
over, India and Pakistan are drawing each other into the vortex
of a potentially ruinous nuclear and missile arms race. They are
transiting from a posture of demonstrating an assured capability
to cause mass destruction, to one of deterring each other with nuclear
weapons that are deployed and ready to go at short notice.
This is India's and Pakistan's own
version of MAD, the doctrine of seeking security through mutually
assured destruction, which both the United States and the former
USSR adopted for long years during the Cold War. South Asia's MAD
may be even more fallible and prone to grave risks and breakdowns
than the US-USSR deterrent equation. It is likely to bring a nuclear
catastrophe more squarely with the realm of possibility.
Recent developments have lowered
South Asia's nuclear threshold even further.
As in the past, with all matters
nuclear, it is India that is taking the lead today. Early this month,
it officially declared that it has established a two-tiered Nuclear
Command Authority and also released a summary highlighting the main
features of its nuclear strategic doctrine. It has since set up
a Strategic Forces Command headed by an Air Marshal, to manage India's
nuclear weapons and nuclear-capable missiles.
The NCA will be comprised of a Political
Council, headed by the Prime Minister, and an Executive Council,
headed by the National Security Adviser, a recently created post.
The Political Council alone will have the authority to order the
use of nuclear weapons. The Executive Council will provide it intelligence
and expert advice, and implement its decisions.
Pakistan
had set up its own nuclear command-and-control structure way back
in February 2001. Last week, it made it clear that this would be
headed not by a civilian Prime Minister, as earlier indicated, but
by the President and army chief General Pervez Musharraf. Pakistan
is believed to be somewhat more advanced than India in matching
nuclear warheads with missiles and aircraft.
Both India and Pakistan are testing
and readying a variety of ballistic missiles for induction into
their armed forces. Pakistan announced on January 9 that the medium-range
Hatf-V-Ghauri missile has been handed over to the army for
induction. The very next day, India tested the new Pakistan-specific
Agni-I, with a range of about 800 kilometres.
India is expected to deploy Agni-I
within about a year. It has already deployed the nuclear-capable
short-range (150 to 250 km) Prithvi missile. India has also
announced it will test a 3,500 km-range missile Agni-III.
Even more important than the nuclear
and missile preparations are changes in strategic thinking. Private
briefings by India's military personnel provided to select journalists
suggest that the government has drawn a number of inferences and
conclusions from the recently ended 10 months-long border confrontation
with Pakistan. This ended in a draw, or more accurately, a failure
on New Delhi's part to achieve any of the stated objectives of this
massive mobilisation – of a total of one million troops.
These
conclusions are quite simply that New Delhi has lost its conventional
superiority or edge over Islamabad. Even a repeat of a "limited
conventional war" – of the kind India and Pakistan fought at
Kargil in Kashmir a year after the May 1998 nuclear tests – is also
ruled out because Pakistan will brandish the nuclear sword at a
relatively early stage of a military conflict with India (Musharraf
held out this very threat in his December 30 speech, discussed in
the last column
here).
Yet, Indian strategists think that
there is an urgent "need" to punish Pakistan for its continued
support to "terrorism" and militant infiltration into
India, especially Kashmir, and also to "call its nuclear bluff"
and prevent it from practising "nuclear blackmail".
Such a strategy would require a
high level of preparation and readiness to use nuclear weapons – i.e.
to make India's threat of "massive retaliation" to nuclear
strike more and more demonstrable and realisable.
A Defence Ministry official has been quoted as saying: "While
we still do not envisage a nuclear exchange … we do not want to
be found wanting in such an event."
This clearly implies a high level
not just of deployment, but of readiness to use nuclear weapons – and
hence a high level of alert.
One "lesson" that Indian
generals seem to have drawn from the recent mobilisation, codenamed
"Operation Parakram", is that though India has larger
armed forces than Pakistan, they are not large enough to overwhelm
the adversary. In conventional terms, the ratio of Indian and Pakistani
deployable army divisions is of the order of 1.2 to 1, not the 3
to 1 normally considered necessary.
This changes the armed forces' earlier
assessment that Pakistan will resort to a nuclear first strike primarily
to counter India's superiority in conventional military forces,
especially in the event of a crushing military defeat, or the virtual
overrunning of Pakistan by Indian forces.
This new "realisation"
is the Indian government's belated, but distorted, and partial,
recognition of the elementary truth which the peace movement has
all along underscored: nuclear weapons impose major additional constraints
upon a country's military options; they don't usually enlarge or
extend them, nor furnish greater space for diplomatic and military
manoeuvre. In South Asia, nuclear weapons can only have a profoundly
destabilising impact.
The post-"Parakram" thinking
is generating enormous pressure in favour of further lowering
the threshold for a nuclear conflict in South Asia. It means
India will move away from the "minimum" part of its stated
doctrine of creating a "credible minimum nuclear deterrent".
The term "minimum" was always vague and ill-defined. But
conceptually, it suggested doing with less, rather than more.
MAD assumes a high level of preparedness
and a broad range of mass-destruction capability to inflict "massive"
and "unacceptable" damage upon the adversary. India is
already committed to building a "triadic" nuclear arsenal
(with land, air and sea-based components).
It is planning to build a nuclear-powered
submarine of its own, and in the meanwhile, to lease one from Russia.
Many Indian nuclear strategists believe that a submarine alone can
provide an assured second strike capability – crucial given India's
No-First-Use (NFU) doctrine.
This doctrine is coming under pressure
and has already been diluted. When India crossed the nuclear threshold
in 1998, it pledged it would never use nuclear weapons against a
non-nuclear-weapons state, and won't be the first to use them against
even nuclear powers.
Then, in August 1999, the Draft
Nuclear Doctrine prepared by the National Security Advisory Board
modified the first commitment to say it would not apply to states
which are allied to nuclear powers. Thus Draft was officially neither
adopted nor rejected. The United States frowned on its original
formulations which were considered highly ambitious and open-ended.
There is yet more, and major, dilution
in the latest version released by the Cabinet Committee on Security
on January 4: India will now retaliate with nuclear weapons "in
the event of a major attack against India or Indian forces anywhere" – an
attack made not just with nuclear weapons, but with "biological
or chemical weapons" too.
In this, India emulates the US's
December 2002 "National Strategy to Combat Weapons of Mass
Destruction": massive nuclear retaliation killing hundreds
of thousands of non-combatant civilians, in response to chemical
or biological weapons which usually kill on a smaller scale, e.g.
hundreds of soldiers. This disproportion makes NFU's dilution especially
obnoxious.
Even worse, there is pressure on
the government from the 15-member NSAB (now in its third avatar)
to rescind No-First-Use altogether. In a classified report – quoted
by the weekly "India Abroad", published from the US – submitted
to National Security Adviser Brajesh Mishra on December 20, the
NSAB recommends: "India may consider withdrawing from this
commitment as the other nuclear weapons states have not accepted
this policy."
The
Board also asks India to lift its voluntary moratorium on nuclear
testing should the US ever do so. It is widely believed that India's
claimed "hydrogen bomb" test of 1998 was a dud. Some Indian
nuclear scientists, including former Atomic Energy Commission chairman
and the chief physicist responsible for the 1974 nuclear test, P.K.
Iyengar, have called for further tests.
Defence Minister George Fernandes
has for the moment reaffirmed the NFU commitment. But many military
personnel prefer its revision. Some believe it won't practically
mean much given that there is no strategic distance worth the name
between the two South Asian rivals.
Recent experience has vindicated
the peace movement's position that no stable nuclear deterrent equation
exists, and can exist, between India and Pakistan. The two frequently
indulge in reckless nuclear threat-making. During the Kargil conflict,
they exchanged nuclear threats with each other 13 times. During
the recent "Operation Parakram" too, they resorted to
loose nuclear talk.
It is widely believed that twice
last year, in January and at the end of May/early June, India called
off advanced preparations for a conventional strike on Pakistan – largely
as a result of US pressure. However, Indian leaders, in particular,
its just-retired army chief Gen S. Padmanabhan, deny that India
was deterred by Pakistan's nuclear threat or capability. Padmanabhan
said that India had a full assessment of Pakistan's nuclear capability
and was "not deterred". "We were ready to cope with
[that capability]". This "coping" could only have
been a retaliatory nuclear strike.
One is left aghast wondering whether
Indian policy-makers think that nuclear weapons only deter one adversary,
not both, in a two-way confrontation: that India's weapons
will successfully deter Pakistan, but Pakistani weapons will not
stop India from doing what it wants to do!
This is a dangerously mistaken,
profoundly irrational, insane proposition, which self-confessedly
makes utter nonsense of relying on nuclear weapons for security!
Deterrence assumes and requires high levels of rationality and symmetrical
perceptions of what constitutes "unacceptable damage".
This simply does not obtain in the
India-Pakistan case, with its history of strategic miscalculation
as well as misassessment of each other's capabilities. Some Indian
policy-makers believe that India can lose a few cities and still
survive in some normal or "acceptable" way. For Pakistani
generals, the threshold may be even higher. Indeed, some have been
quoted as saying Pakistan can lose all its major cities and still
survive as a nation.
All this bodes ill future of this
troubled, unhappy and strife-torn region.
Praful Bidwai
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