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[SAAN] Averting a Hundred Hiroshimas - J. Sri Raman

Harsh Kapoor
Sat, 07 Aug 2004 08:49:39 -0700

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truthout | Perspective
Friday 06 August 2004
URL: www.truthout.org/docs_04/080604I.shtml

AVERTING A HUNDRED HIROSHIMAS
By J. Sri Raman

     Chennai, India - A hair-raising thought for the Hiroshima Day.
     On this day, 59 years ago, the world's first nuclear bomb 
flattened Hiroshima, killing about 130,000 of its people in an 
instant. Can a more horrendous tragedy hit any other part of the 
globe? Yes, and it can take a toll at least twenty times higher - in 
South Asia.
     And, at the most, nearly a hundred times.
     We will revert to those figures in a moment. First, however, a 
question that everyone in this part of the world must be asking 
today, but few are. And a stunningly negative answer.
     Has the prospect of a holocaust prompted the rulers of the region 
to take any preventive measures? No, none. India and Pakistan, into 
their seventh year as nuclear-weapon states, in fact, seem determined 
to hurtle downhill together on this path of self-destruction.
     The prospect appeared imminent in frightening flashes just over 
two years ago. About a million Indian and Pakistani soldiers faced 
each other in an eyeball-to-eyeball confrontation all along the 
India-Pakistan border for months in the sub-continental summer of 
2002. Behind the soldiers on either side were nuclear weapons in 
ready deployment, missiles on hair-trigger alert.
     India and Pakistan, which had fought wars before, were playing a 
far more dangerous game this time. They were both nuclear-weapon 
states now. They were threatening to start the first nuclear war of 
history.
     It was then that experts elsewhere worked out those figures. 
Their meticulous calculations yielded two sets of findings. If five 
major cities each in India and Pakistan were to be hit first, they 
expected about 1.7 million people in India and about 1.2 million in 
Pakistan to die or evaporate instantly. If fifteen cities in each 
were to fall victims to nuclear militarism, the instantaneous toll 
would total no less than twelve million.
     The consequences of the war, of course, would not be confined to 
instant deaths. The experts presented a picture - replete with slower 
and subsequent deaths, deaths by prolonged radiation, and deaths from 
the expected spread of disease and starvation, besides other details 
of destruction and generations-long suffering - that should have sent 
the soldiers back to barracks.
     The nuke-rattling rulers of India and Pakistan, however, could 
not have cared less. They went on hurling dire threats at each other 
- Pakistan of a 'first strike' without fear of consequences and India 
of a crippling use of the final weapon.
     Shivers may have gone down spines elsewhere, every time they 
traded such threats. In India and Pakistan, however, opinion-makers 
and opinion-managers did their best to damn peace activists as 
panic-mongers. With a smirk and a snigger, these politicians and 
propagandists repeated shibboleths, almost as old as Hiroshima, about 
the nuclear weapons as something meant only for deterrence and not 
delivery. Simultaneously, in each country, they hailed every Bomb 
threat as a proclamation of patriotic resolve. They pretended, of 
course, not to see any contradiction in their own stances.
     Both the nuclear-weapon states, officially, coexisted as allies 
in the USA-headed 'coalition against global terror' formed after 
9/11. The fact, however, had only made them more implacable foes, 
with each trying to turn the alliance to its own decisive advantage 
against the other. The USA and the UK, while feigning profound 
concern over the war threat, did precious little to avert it - and 
their military-industrial complexes, indeed, saw it as a great 
opportunity to sell their wares to both sides.
     On the nuclear front, the official US hypocrisy was no less 
pronounced. Washington had clamed a series of sanctions against India 
and Pakistan in 1998 in the wake of their nuclear-weapon tests. It 
did not wait long after 9/11 and the formation of the 'coalition' to 
waive the sanctions. In India's case, it hastened to certify that a 
"credible minimum nuclear deterrent" was all that the country was 
trying to acquire. New Delhi was quick to respond with official 
recognition that the motive of the Missile Defense Program was to 
effect "deep cuts" in the US nuclear arsenal.
     The politics and ideology behind India's nuclear-weapon tests are 
known and notorious. It took a far-Right regime, headed by the 
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), to carry out the tests that India's 
traditional policies had not allowed this far. A fascism, which 
treated Indian Muslims and Islamic Pakistan as India's chief foes, 
facilitated the hitherto unthinkable declaration of India as a 
nuclear-weapon state.
     This, however, does not mean that the danger has passed with the 
BJP's defeat in India's general election three months ago. The 
replacement of a BJP-led regime in New Delhi by a coalition with the 
Congress Party at its head has not spelt a step towards India's 
return to its pre-1998 past.
     The Common Minimum Program (CMP), which the Congress-headed 
United Progressive Alliance (UPA) and the Left adopted, makes this 
clear. On the nuclear policy, the CMP says: "The UPA Government is 
committed to maintaining a credible nuclear weapons program while at 
the same time it will evolve demonstrable and verifiable 
confidence-building measures with its nuclear neighbors."
     This is a sharp departure from the line the Congress took as the 
main opposition in the post-tests period. Reports quoted Congress 
president Sonia Gandhi as telling visiting US President Bill Clinton 
in 2000 that the Congress was for "a minimum credible nuclear 
deterrent" - and all hell broke loose within the party then. Congress 
leader Mani Shankar Aiyar, now Petroleum Minister, was reportedly 
upset in particular, and the party clarified that this was not indeed 
its policy.
     The present government under Manmohan Singh can, of course cite 
the talks it has held with Pakistan on nuclear confidence-building 
measures (CBMs). But the talks have produced only agreement to 
install a telephonic hot line, with both sides diplomatically 
avoiding any discussion about de-deployment of nuclear weapons.
     Neither the Congress nor the government mentions the Rajiv Gandhi 
Action Plan of 1988 for nuclear disarmament. The plan, which former 
Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi (a Congress icon) presented at a UN 
Special Session on Disarmament, would have committed India to its own 
nuclear disarmament by 2010.
     The message of this Hiroshima Day for the peace activists of 
India and Pakistan is no different from what it has been on every one 
of these occasions for the past six years. It is a message of 
continuing struggle against nuclear militarism, which poses the most 
real and the gravest threat to the two nations.

---------------------------------
     A freelance journalist and a peace activist of India, J. Sri 
Raman is the author of Flashpoint (Common Courage Press, USA). He is 
a regular contributor to t r u t h o u t.


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  • [SAAN] Averting a Hundred Hiroshimas - J. Sri Raman Harsh Kapoor