India's offensive doctrine jittered
Pakistan into developing tactical nukes
By Ajai Shukla
Business Standard, 14 Jan 17
Army chief, General Bipin Rawat, who this
month became the first senior official to publicly confirm the existence of India’s
so-called Cold Start doctrine, explained on Friday why he acknowledged this
controversial term publicly.
Cold Start is the Indian operational plan
for rapidly mobilising infantry and armour to launch lightning strikes across
the plains and deserts of Pakistan. The aim is to break into Pakistani before
its defensive formations can prepare and occupy defensive positions along the
border.
Indian policymakers and officials have always
downplayed Cold Start, partly because it scared Pakistan’s army into relocated
defensive formations close to the Indian border, and into developing highly
destabilising “tactical nuclear weapons” (TNWs) --- small-yield, nuclear bombs,
delivered by short-range ballistic missiles like the Nasr (Hatf-IX) --- to halt
a Cold Start strike.
Previous Indian chiefs said there was no
Cold Start plan. Instead, they pointed to a “proactive strategy”.
Rawat’s acknowledgment of Cold Start on
January 6, in an interview to India Today, was a radical departure. It was sharply
criticised by strategic analysts like Vipin Narang and Walter C Ladwig III, who
claimed the “[Indian] army simply lacks the material and organisation to
implement the more aggressive versions of Cold Start.” They argued that India
has too few troops and tanks, it faces critical equipment shortages, and the
army and air force do not coordinate air support. “This has put India in the
worst possible strategic position: claiming a capability that it does not have,
but which provides justification for Pakistan’s aggressive expansion of its conventional
and nuclear forces”, Narang and Ladwig wrote in The Hindu.
Today, Rawat, at a press conference in New
Delhi, initially downplayed his acknowledgment of Cold Start, arguing that
offensive plans are a part of India’s overall defensive strategy, aimed at
safeguarding the country’s territorial integrity.
“[W]e know that the future wars will be
short and intense and, when short and intense wars are the future forms of
combat, you have to be prepared to move fast. Now this is something which you
can term in whatever way you want”, said Rawat.
But Rawat also clarified that publicly
acknowledging Cold Start was a signal to the army to be prepared for that
eventuality. “The other reason for coming out with this was, to communicate to
the rank and file and field commanders the kind of preparations they have to
carry out for future combat. That is the messaging that was meant to that
statement that I made,” said Rawat.
Asked by Business Standard about
operational shortcomings that might prevent the success of Cold Start, Rawat
stated: “Weaknesses have to be overcome. And these weaknesses can only be
overcome if you accept the strategy (Cold Start). If you don’t accept the
strategy, then you will let your weaknesses [limit you]. But when you enunciate
a strategy you say: these are the weaknesses which I need to overcome to adopt
success.”
It is ironic that Rawat, an infantry
officer who the government chose because of his expertise in
counter-insurgency, has made his first bold statement in the realm of
warfighting and mechanised operations.
Cold Start was born of the failure of Operation
Parakram in 2001-02, when the military moved into battle stations after
Jaish-e-Mohammed terrorists attacked Parliament on December 13, 2001. However,
by the time the army’s three mechanised strike corps (which are stationed deep
inside India in places like Mathura and Bhopal) were transported to the border
and were ready to launch their tanks and infantry combat vehicles (ICVs),
Pakistan’s defensive formations were deployed and ready to beat them back.
Thus was Cold Start conceived, a plan to
attack Pakistan within 48 hours of any dire provocation traced back to Pakistan
--- like a particularly damaging terrorist attack, or the assassination of a
top Indian leader. Instead of waiting for the mechanised strike corps to make
their long journey to the border, the attack would be launched by 8-10 “integrated
battle groups” (IBGs), cobbled together from the large number of tanks and
reserve infantry in the defensive corps, already located along the border.
Benefiting from surprise, and with
Pakistan’s armoured reserves divided, Cold Start estimates that many of the
IBGs would pierce through Pakistan’s forward defences. That would allow the
strike corps, as it reaches the border, to stream through those breaches and penetrate
towards the large towns and cities in Pakistan’s heartland. This would allow
New Delhi to call off the war quickly, in a victorious position.
Western policymakers have been critical of
Cold Start, since it alarmed Pakistan into developing TNWs, which are seen as
highly insecure and destabilising weapons. Given the Nasr missile’s range of
just 60 kilometres, TNWs would per force be physically located with forward
commanders, and control over them decentralised early in any conflict.
This “de-centralisation” would render TNWs
vulnerable to theft by jihadi groups, or unauthorised use by renegade Pakistani
commanders. It is unclear whether Pakistan has fool-proof security protocols
for TNWs, like permissive access links (PALs). Nor is it known how early, with
a battlefield debacle imminent, would control over nukes be handed over to
local commanders --- probably at the level of corps commanders --- who would be
presumably more prone to use the weapons.
With or without Cold Start, Pakistan would have developed the tactical nuclear weapons, which is the logical step after you have developed the strategic weapons.
ReplyDeleteNothing ironical that it took an Inf officer to at least make bold statements about mechanised warfare. Rommel was an Inf man, so was Sundarjee. And so was Liddel Hart.
ReplyDeleteI'd like a discussion on a matter not directly part of this post, though part of Chief's address, as also comments by the RM on the three complaint videos that are on the air these days. Everyone is jumping on problems stated by one man in each case, all about minor administrative matters. No one as much as even fidgeted when so many ex-servicemen sat on dharna at jantar mantar for months. No one even batted an eyelid when successive Chiefs said ' We are not ready for war'. So what is the moral of the story? Go to social media for immediate, out or proportion, results. But Chief and RM say'Don't go to media'. Denying people an effective weapon?
ReplyDeleteDo as per Narang and Ledwif if Indian general has not acknowledged it. Pakistan would not have prepared TNWs.
ReplyDeleteSimilar argument were given by leftist in 1998 that Pakistan would develop nuclear bomb now without realising Pakistan already had one.
Pakistan is an extension/proxy of China now. Previously it was a weak nation but now the Indian strategy has to be much more detailed and exhaustive.
There should be something to counter the tnw ...I m surprised our air force and army lack cordination
ReplyDeletechicken heart... cold feet... timid... tentative... risk aversion... lackadaisical... can go on...
ReplyDeleteWhere are your sources Ajai? Now police saying that ISI is involved in Kanpur rail accident which makes it a terrorist incident. You still think these people will change? If India loses the long war with Pakistan it will be because of sympathies from people who think that Pakistan has changed. A leopard never changes its spots.
ReplyDeleteFormer RAW chief is on record to state that hate for India permeates Pakistan civil society as well as their military. He should know...
These people think that it is their duty to dismember and convert India and as important as eating Nihaari early in the morning.
Col. सहब ईस बरे मे कुच लिखिये ?
ReplyDeletehttp://www.ndtv.com/india-news/exclusive-indian-army-jawans-to-finally-get-a-modern-helmet-1649923?pfrom=home-lateststories
With or without Cold Start, Pakistan would have developed the tactical nuclear weapons, which is the logical step after you have developed the strategic weapons.
ReplyDeleteOn a recent article, I read about the blast force of these TNWs and how they can affect Armor.
ReplyDeleteBriefly,
1. As per a study, It takes 3 ATMs of overpressure to incapacitate a tank (which are found in Indian IBGs).
2. A 10-15 KT Tactical nuclear weapon can only exert 3 ATMS of overpressure in a radius of 370 -420 Meters. Simply put, only tanks within 420 Meters of point of detonation will be incapacitated.
3. I reckon that just like an Infantry section, Armour units too must be following the basic rule of "spread out" i.e. leaving adequate distance between each advancing tank.
Scaling this up to a Squadron or even a battalion/regimental(armour equivalent of battalion) level, Im sure the distance between two attacking squadrons must itself be more than a few kilometers.
Hence, Using tactical nukes would only make sense if Many tanks are at a concentration point.
4. Else, The article further mentioned that as per its calculations, Pak would need to launch 37 TNWs just to eliminate a single Armoured Division.
5. Launching even a quarter of that number, or for that matter even one TNW, will result in a massive retaliation from India and a certain diplomatic shut down from almost all countries.
India's retaliation need not even be nuclear, but it will be enough to permanently disable Pakistani state. Not to mention the positive Influence India will receive when it showed restraint by not using its use Nuclear weapons, when it easily could have.
6. Those who have doubts, kindly take a look at Eastern Ukraine, Post US Invasion Iraq, Post soviet Afghanistan, Bosnia, Syria, Libya or even Somalia. No Nuclear weapons used there.
I have to strongly disagree with the notion that CS caused Pak to develop TNW. Having said that they haven't even tested a PU device and we are assuming they have a device which can fit on a Nazr sized missle.
ReplyDeleteHere is my theory. The threat of using TNW is because Pak believe Indian nukes are credible! There might be a even fear of first strike on Pak assets. They are trying to get us in a escalation ladder...by using TNW. They want to limit Indian response.
Second aspect is given that they may not have a working PU warhead and their tested & "transportable" U235 devices potentially having 1-5KT yield, it covers them quite well, that their Strategic warhead yields are.. equal to TNW!
They cannot respond to a Indian 200KT warhead!
If Nazr is truly nuke enabled, what are the proofs of nuke training? There will be constant maintenance on a nuke warhead on a Nasr missile. May be a personal view, I dont think it is easy to hide a operationally deployed TNW on a 60KM missile!
Yes they couldn't use but we will use for sure! And for your kind information we will use TNW on Indian troops not on public! Second we will use them only in our territory if Indian force would be able to cross border so for our defense we will use TNWs on your troops :) but my dear fellow Indians you forgot that it's not easy to destroy our defense! Alhamdulillah our forces are enough capable to denfend the border! Second we have hundreds of militias who will crush your troops inside Pakistan. So the TNWs will be the last option and I am sure that this option will never come because in the past when we are very weak in defence, we bravely fought and defend our homeland and now we are in a far better position to do that! So forget your so called cold start :)
ReplyDelete