[Pakistan, already a major nuclear weapons power with well over 100
warheads and the missiles to carry them, is racing to expand its
arsenal of short-range tactical weapons meant as a deterrent against
India, its larger, more powerful neighbor and blood enemy. India is
thought to have around 100 nuclear warheads of its own. (North Korea
is estimated to possess enough fissile material to make several
warheads.)
But it’s not the numbers of weapons between India and Pakistan that
most worry analysts and diplomats. It’s the instability of their
nuclear stand-off and the possibility that an accident, a
miscalculation or a terrorist attack could ignite a catastrophic
nuclear war.]

http://www.huffingtonpost.in/entry/pakistan-india-nuclear-crisis_us_5909042de4b02655f841de0e

Forget North Korea. The Next Nuclear Crisis Festers On The India-Pakistan Border
Terrorism is fueling fears of unintended war between the two bitter enemies.

 04/05/2017 12:57 AM IST | Updated 22 hours ago

[Video: 0.20-min. clip]

WASHINGTON ― While President Donald Trump is focused on North Korea’s
nuclear madman, a more alarming threat is rising in South Asia: an
explosive mix of nuclear weapons, terrorism and hair-trigger war
plans.

Pakistan, already a major nuclear weapons power with well over 100
warheads and the missiles to carry them, is racing to expand its
arsenal of short-range tactical weapons meant as a deterrent against
India, its larger, more powerful neighbor and blood enemy. India is
thought to have around 100 nuclear warheads of its own. (North Korea
is estimated to possess enough fissile material to make several
warheads.)

But it’s not the numbers of weapons between India and Pakistan that
most worry analysts and diplomats. It’s the instability of their
nuclear stand-off and the possibility that an accident, a
miscalculation or a terrorist attack could ignite a catastrophic
nuclear war.

Bitter and distrustful, the two countries have fought four wars since
1947 and skirmished in numerous border clashes that continue to this
day. Analysts now warn of a growing risk that another border clash
could swiftly escalate into a nuclear crisis.

Just as likely, they say, a terrorist group such as the Pakistan-based
Lashkar-e-Taiba could launch an assault inside India, as it did in the
Mumbai attacks of 2008. That might prompt the powerful Indian army to
respond by driving deep into Pakistan, an assault that the latter
nation could halt only by using its nuclear weapons. India considered
such an attack after 174 people were killed in Mumbai eight years ago.
In that instance, U.S. officials reportedly were able to talk the
Indian military out of such reprisals.

FAISAL MAHMOOD/REUTERS

Pakistan displays its nuclear-capable NASR missile battery during a
military parade in Islamabad on March 23, 2017.

In other all-too-possible scenarios, Pakistani extremists could
attempt to obtain a nuclear weapon for themselves. Radicalized members
of the Pakistani armed forces might provide the terrorists with
insider help.

Past terrorist attacks on Pakistani military bases have already been
staged with insider help. In 2011, extremists fought their way into
the heavily guarded Mehran naval air base, blowing up aircraft and
holding off commandos for 16 hours. In 2014, they tried to hijack a
Pakistani warship.

Strategists also suggest that Pakistani jihadists might stage a
terrorist attack in India with the intention of provoking a crisis
between the two countries. When Pakistan began removing its weapons
from secure storage to stage them for a possible launch, the
terrorists would pounce and steal one or more warheads.

“The whole South Asian subcontinent is becoming more and more of a
nuclear powder keg,” said Matthew Bunn, a nuclear weapons analyst at
Harvard University’s Belfer Center for Science and International
Affairs. “You can easily imagine an inadvertent process of escalation
to an all-out nuclear war that neither wanted, provoked by terrorism.”

Scott Sagan, senior political scientist at Stanford University’s
Center for International Security and Cooperation, puts the risk of an
India-Pakistan nuclear clash at a higher threat level than the current
U.S. confrontation with North Korea. Dealing with North Korean leader
Kim Jong Un is dicey and uncertain, but with Pakistan, he said, “the
U.S. influence is far more limited.”

An all-out nuclear war that set Indian and Pakistani cities burning
would produce enough smoke and particulate debris in the upper
atmosphere to cause global temperatures and precipitation to plummet.
Corn and soybean yields in the U.S. Midwest and elsewhere would be cut
by 20 percent and there would be massive global food shortages for
years, according to some climate models.

X

The pressure in the region to escalate to the use of nuclear weapons
has been intensified by India’s adoption of “Cold Start,” a military
strategy that calls for lightning strikes with tank columns and
artillery deep into Pakistani territory at the start of a conflict.
The shift in strategy came after Indian forces based in the country’s
interior were unable to quickly punish Pakistan after Lashkar-e-Taiba
terrorists overran the Indian parliament in late 2001. Subsequently,
India moved quick-strike battle groups close to the border with
Pakistan, where they remain on alert.

In response, Pakistan has deployed short-range Nasr missiles, which
can carry nuclear warheads and hit targets about 35 miles away, into
its own border region. There are some reports that the country is
developing nuclear artillery shells and land mines as well. If war
were to break out, Pakistan would have to use these weapons quickly,
before their locations were overrun by Indian troops.

If any optimism is to be found in this war scenario, it is that by
aiming its nuclear weapons at Indian troops, rather than civilian
population centers, Pakistan would give India “little justification
for a disproportionate nuclear strike on Pakistan’s strategic
centers,” according to Indian analyst Sajid Farid Shapoo.

Experts are especially worried that terrorists will play on the
historic enmity between India and Pakistan to trigger an unintended
nuclear exchange.

“The combination of tactical nuclear weapons and Cold Start doctrine
provides an opportunity for terrorist elements to initiate a nuclear
war,” writes Shahzeb Ali Rathore, an analyst at the International
Center for Political Violence and Terrorism Research in Singapore.

Parts of the Pakistani military and intelligence services are closely
tied to various militant groups and have sympathizers within them.
Matthew Bunn, a nuclear weapons analyst at Harvard

The tricky balance for Pakistan is to secure its nuclear weapons
against theft or misuse, but still have them ready for launching in a
crisis. Although the security arrangements are highly secret, Pakistan
is believed to store its nuclear warheads disassembled and at a
distance from the airfields and missile sites where they would be
prepared for use.

Bunn recently spoke with officers of Pakistan’s Strategic Plans
Division, which is responsible for securing the nation’s nuclear
arsenal. He said the risk that terrorists could hijack a warhead is
serious.

“We know that various parts of the Pakistani military and intelligence
services are closely tied to various militant groups and have
sympathizers within them,” Bunn told HuffPost. Members of the military
and security forces can be radicalized “in a matter of months,” he
said. “Pakistanis say that won’t happen to them. But it strikes me as
something to worry about, given the repeated incidents of insider
threats at other Pakistani military organizations.”

Last year in Washington, Pakistan officials sought to reassure an
international gathering of nuclear security officials that they have
strengthened security measures ― including, according to a statement,
“deploying radiation detection equipment at several entry and exit
points to deter, detect and prevent illicit trafficking of nuclear and
radioactive materials.” The Pakistan Embassy in Washington did not
respond to requests for comment for this story.

The United States may have secretly provided Pakistan some technical
advice on securing nuclear weapons in the past, but that offers only
limited comfort. “Whatever assistance we’ve given them, it’s
impossible to know how well they’ve implemented it,” said Sagan.

Bottom line: “Pakistan knows it has an internal terrorist problem and
a personnel reliability problem as well,” Sagan said. The risk of
terrorists obtaining a Pakistani nuclear weapon “is a huge problem,
and it’s one that can be mitigated somewhat but it can’t be
eliminated.”

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Peace Is Doable

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