India's Agni-2 ballistic missile on display at New Delhi on Republic Day
by Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 29th Apr 14
The BJP’s
election manifesto has triggered a long-overdue discussion of India’s
decade-old nuclear weapons doctrine. Some analysts interpreted the BJP’s
undertaking that it would “revise and update” the doctrine as an intention to
revisit India’s No-First-Use (NFU) commitment. Narendra Modi, the BJP’s prime
ministerial candidate, quickly denied any such intention.
The debate,
however, has come alive. Last fortnight, this column had urged reconsidering
NFU and also India’s commitment to “massive retaliation”, which binds New Delhi
to respond to nuclear, biological or chemical weapons attack on Indian targets
anywhere with all-out nuclear strikes on the aggressor’s cities that could kill
tens of millions. Since both India’s regional adversaries, Pakistan and China,
possess a robust second-strike capability, or a nuclear arsenal that would
survive an all-out Indian attack, equal retaliation should be expected across
India. Instead of this mayhem, which Indian policymakers would probably shrink
from triggering anyway, I argued that New Delhi should opt for a “flexible
response” that would allow decision-makers more credible options. I pointed out
that American doctrine had graduated from massive retaliation to flexible
response in the 1950s and 1960s after US strategists realised the inherent credibility
shortfall in a threat that consigned both sides to “mutual assured
destruction”, appropriately shortened to MAD.
On April
23, Shyam Saran, the National Security Advisory Board chief, weighed in on
these pages, flatly rejecting doctrinal change. He declared that nuclear bombs
are not weapons of war, but of mass destruction. A tactical nuclear strike on,
say, a tank column (counter-force targeting) that killed a few dozen soldiers
was, he suggested, in the same league as a strategic strike on a city that killed
millions of civilians (counter-value targeting). He quoted a 1950s American
game theory expert who postulated that even the smallest nuclear strike would
inevitably escalate to an all-out nuclear conflagration. While rightly averring
that doctrine must be in line with a country’s nuclear forces and command
structures, Saran questionably concluded that the configuration of our nuclear assets
--- the strategic triad of land, sea and airborne nuclear forces --- made
doctrinal change difficult. It is hard to agree with that; were force
structures to shape doctrine it would be the tail wagging the dog.
In this column,
I shall point out that India’s NFU declaration sits uneasily with the
understanding that China constitutes a growing security threat. India’s nuclear
deterrent --- its last defence against a massive conventional attack by China
--- becomes unusable with a declared NFU policy. The country weaker in
conventional forces has always used a nuclear deterrent to hold off the
stronger. India’s declared NFU devalues our nuclear deterrent against Chinese
attack.
The choice
between massive retaliation and flexible response is more complex and relates
mainly to Pakistan. Massive retaliation is a simple policy, requiring standard
weapons and simple but secure command structures. Since flexible response
requires a broader menu of weapons and structures, which create options for
decision-makers, it also arouses non-proliferation concerns. Advocates of
massive retaliation forget --- in their understandable wish, perhaps, to
portray India as a “responsible nuclear power” --- that India’s basic
deterrence objective against Pakistan must be to ensure that our superior
conventional forces have the time window they need for punishing serious
Pakistani provocation (e.g. another Kargil, a big terror strike, a political
assassination). Pakistan’s deep fear of being overrun by Indian conventional
forces causes it to position low-yield, tactical nuclear weapons (TNWs) with
its military reserve formations; one of these might be used to warn India to halt
an otherwise unstoppable conventional offensive. Instead of immediately escalating
to a mutual holocaust, India’s escalation should be gradual, allowing
conventional operations to continue until conflict termination objectives are
achieved. The nuclear deterrent must be refashioned to ensure dominance at each
rung of the escalation ladder, with massive retaliation always a lingering threat.
Like with
America in the early 1950s, India’s massive retaliation doctrine faces a
credibility deficit. A Pakistani threat to use a TNW on its own soil against
Indian military targets --- killing at the most a few tens of our soldiers --- would
be obviously more plausible than the Indian counter-threat of “massive
retaliation”, which involves destroying multiple Pakistani cities and the
deaths of millions of civilians. With Pakistan’s second-strike capability likely
to cause equal damage in India, Indian obviously rational (and historically
ultra-cautious) decision-makers are unlikely to prevail in a MAD chicken game
with Islamabad.
New Delhi’s
commitment to massive retaliation also has much to do with keeping the military
out of nuclear policymaking. Flexible response, which involves complicating the
calculus of potential opponents, would require our civilian decision-makers to master
a broader range of technicalities, and our military to play a larger role in
shaping and manning the deterrent. Instead, our civilian decision-makers content
themselves with a nuclear doctrine so simple --- even simplistic --- that the
military itself is largely superfluous. By sticking doggedly to massive
retaliation, India’s leadership successfully keeps the military out of nuclear
strategizing.
In the
final balance our nuclear weapons doctrine remains unconvincing because
decision-makers fail to separate ideology from realism. India’s pioneering role
in global disarmament is well known; but war is not a UN General Assembly
debate or a Conference on Disarmament meeting. Phrases like: “Nuclear weapons
are not weapons of war; they are weapons of mass destruction”, are useful
debating gambits in these forums. Yet, it would be self-defeating to be fooled
by our own rhetoric. Away from the seminar rooms, especially during the
feverish decision making in any conflict, both sides get to vote on whether
nukes are usable weapons of war. If Pakistan decides they are --- and the addition
of Tactical Nuclear Weapons (TNWs) into its arsenal suggests exactly that --- then
New Delhi’s fervent insistence that nuclear weapons are unusable is mere
wishful thinking. The new government must initiate a comprehensive review of
our nuclear weapons doctrine and posture.
Pakistan, unlike India has very few population clusters and only two major hubs i.e. Karachi and Punjab, any nuclear strike on these two will not only crumble Pakistan in a war but will also leave it lymping for many many years in future because its entire infra be it health, education, administration or power would have been wiped out and never underestimate enemies intelligence .. i am sure they know thier limitations. Stop sabre rattling col.
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