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Khaleej Times - May 15, 2005

Scoring nuclear self-goals

By Praful Bidwai

On the seventh anniversary of India's Pokharan-II 
nuclear tests, how do South Asia's strategic and 
political balance-sheets look? The honest answer 
is, distinctly ungainly. The Manmohan Singh 
government did not celebrate the anniversary 
although it observed May 11 as "Science Day." At 
the party level too, there was no enthusiasm for 
celebrating the Shakti tests. Only the Bharatiya 
Janata Party held a commemoration-a small 
symposium, where the tone was peevishly 
self-justificatory.

Party president L.K. Advani used the occasion to 
pillory the Left and demand it be firmly kept out 
of all areas that affect vital national 
interests. He cited Communist Party (Marxist) 
general secretary Prakash Karat's description of 
the nuclear tests as "adventurist and very 
unfortunate" events which weakened India.

Advani was barking up the wrong tree. It is not 
just Karat, but much of the Opposition in 1998, 
which questioned the wisdom behind the nuclear 
blasts, including Manmohan Singh, H.D Deve Gowda, 
Mulayam Singh and many others. During the 1998 
Monsoon Session of Parliament, the government 
came under intense fire over breaking the 
consensus to have a nuclear capability, but not 
to cross the threshold and make weapons. Singh 
went as far as to warn that a defence strategy 
based on nuclear weapons would lead to an arms 
race which would turn out to be so expensive that 
there would be "nothing left to defend."

Today, the BJP's claim that it did both the right 
thing, and the popular thing, by conducting the 
Pokharan blasts, sounds laughable. Opinion polls 
show that 63 to 72 percent of Indians are against 
making or using nuclear weapons. This is in 
keeping with the figures in most major countries 
of those who want nuclear disarmament. These 
range from 67 percent (Russia) and 78 percent 
(Japan) to 87 percent (US, Germany and UK) and 93 
percent (Canada). In most Non-Aligned Movement 
countries, there is an even stronger sentiment 
against nuclear weapons.

Poll ratings apart, South Asia has become more 
insecure since 1998 despite the recent 
improvement in India-Pakistan relations, itself 
uneven, wobbly and reversible. As far as a 
flashpoint for a nuclear confrontation goes, 
South Asia still remains the world's "most 
dangerous place". More than one billion ordinary 
civilians living in that region have become 
vulnerable to a devastating nuclear attack, 
whether intended, accidental or unauthorised, 
against which there is no defence, military, 
civil or medical.

Seven years ago, the Indian Bomb lobby made at 
least five claims about the virtues of 
nuclearisation. It said India and Pakistan would 
become more secure and self-confident because 
neither could now blackmail the other on the 
strength of conventional strategic superiority or 
even covert support to militant groups. This new 
strategic equation would form the bedrock of 
stability. Second, Pakistani and Indian leaders 
would behave "responsibly" and "maturely": the 
Bomb's destructive power would ensure that, 
irrespective of the leaders' qualities.
Third, after the Pokharan-Chagai tests, an 
India-Pakistan conventional war would become 
inconceivable. Doesn't deterrence theory tell you 
that nuclear weapons-states do not go to war with 
one another? The low-intensity skirmishes between 
the USSR and China in the 1960s and 1970s across 
the Ussuri river were only an aberration. That 
doesn't affect the rule.

Fourth, nuclearisation would greatly expand 
India's and Pakistan's capacity for 
political-diplomatic manoeuvre in world affairs. 
And fifth, nuclearisation's adverse 
social-political impact would be minimal, and its 
economic costs affordable.

All five predictions have proved disastrously 
false. India and Pakistan have become edgy, 
nervously unsure about each other's doctrines, 
more prone to panic reactions-and strategically 
unstable. Nuclear weapons have not induced 
"maturity" and "sobriety" into India-Pakistan 
relations. Indeed, they have promoted rank 
adventurism based on the premise that nuclear 
weapons furnish a shield or cover for needling 
and harassing the adversary in numerous 
conventional ways. The casual, cavalier, manner 
in which Indian and Pakistani officials exchanged 
nuclear threats in 1999 and 2002 was 
spine-chilling. The two came close to the brink 
of a nuclear attack at least three times.

Thanks to pure adventurism, Pakistan and India 
went to war at Kargil a year after the 
Pokharan-Chagai nuclear tests. Kargil was a 
serious middle-sized conflict by international 
standards, involving 40,000 Indian troops, 
top-of-the-line weaponry, and billions of 
dollars. The casualties exceeded 1,000.

Take global stature and the supposed ability to 
expand room for international manoeuvre. After 
Chagai, Pakistan became a virtual pariah 
state-until 9/11, which gave it a chance to get 
into an alliance with the US. True, India's 
global profile has risen. But that is more 
because of information technology successes and 
economic growth-and despite nuclear weapons. 
India's bargaining power and room for manoeuvre 
vis-à-vis Washington has shrunk thanks to 
nuclearisation. That's one reason why India had 
to get into an unequal "strategic partnership" 
with the US and take ambivalent positions on many 
US policies and actions.

Nuclearisation's still-unfolding economic costs 
have proved extremely burdensome. India's 
military budget has more than doubled in absolute 
terms since Pokharan-II. Pakistan's spending has 
followed the same trend. This is just for 
starters. As their nuclear programmes proceed 
towards deployment, military spending will 
skyrocket. With an arms race-in the Indian case, 
two races, the other being with China-, it could 
spiral out of control, ruinously, for all 
concerned. The low-end estimate for a small 
arsenal, one which is only one-fifth the size of 
China's, is Rs 60,000 to 100,000 crores. This 
would entail doubling the military budget, which 
is now 3.2 percent of GDP.

All this means paying through our nose to court 
yet more insecurity. The nuclear danger cannot be 
contained or managed while retaining nuclear 
weapons. Systematic elimination of nuclear 
weapons, beginning with the South Asian region, 
is the only solution. India can work for it if it 
revives and upgrades the thoughtful Rajiv Gandhi 
Plan of 1988, which involves a three-stage 
process of global nuclear elimination.

But this means making an extraordinarily bold 
gesture of nuclear restraint in the South Asian 
region. Is India ready for this? The alternative 
is an unsafe world over which the nuclear sword 
will hang forever.-end-


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SOUTH ASIANS AGAINST NUKES (SAAN):
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