![]() Online edition of India's National Newspaper Monday, September 03, 2001 |
| Front Page | National | Southern States | Other States | International | Opinion | Business | Sport | Entertainment | Miscellaneous | Features | Classifieds | Employment | Index | Home | |
|
| |
Opinion
| Previous
| Next
Safety first: building confidence during the nuclear transition
By Deepanshu Bagchee & Matthew C.J. Rudolph
Amid all the post-Agra hand wringing, much has been made about
Pakistan's intransigence on cross-border terrorism, India's inability to
think creatively about solutions in Kashmir, and the media's
responsibility in covering the delicate cross-border relationship. And
again Kashmir has grabbed headlines as fresh attacks provoke severe
counter-measures from an NDA Government that feels increasingly
vulnerable.
At just such a sensitive moment, everyone seems to have forgotten the
crucial issue of nuclear safety. The best way to avoid a nuclear accident
or miscalculation is to press forward with India-Pakistan nuclear-related
confidence-building measures (CBMs).
There are two reasons why this issue must be addressed immediately.
First, the Agra summit allowed the leaders of both the countries to meet
face to face for the first time since the Kargil conflict and the October,
1999 military coup in Pakistan. Such normalcy, though not necessarily
warmth, presents an opportunity to negotiate fresh CBMs. Second, the
post-Agra violence in Kashmir proves yet again that as long as India and
Pakistan are unable to resolve outstanding issues, the threat of greater
violence and escalation will persist.
In the future, South Asian nuclear safety may get a boost from an
unlikely source - unilateral Indian action. In a recent research paper,
Ashley Tellis of the U.S.-based think-tank RAND argues that India does not
seek to build a ready nuclear force (www.rand.org/publications/RB/RB63/).
Referring to India's emerging nuclear posture as ``force-in- being'',
Tellis suggests that in the future, India would maintain a nuclear
deterrent consisting of unassembled nuclear warheads under strict civilian
control, with dedicated delivery systems kept away from their operational
areas. These components could be brought together rapidly to create a
usable force during an emergency.
As befits a peaceful democracy, such a policy would establish a
relatively credible logistics-based Indian commitment to ``no first use''.
It would also increase stability in a crisis, and would probably garner
Indian some prestige internationally. However, more than three years after
the 1998 nuclear tests, the composition, size and deployment patterns of
Indian and Pakistani nuclear forces remain unclear, adding to the risk of
miscalculation or accidents. If Tellis is to be believed, India will soon
be settling down to a post-Pokhran II nuclear posture.
But change in bilateral nuclear relations is always fraught with risk,
and until there is an explicit harmonisation of India's declared nuclear
doctrine, made public in August 1999
(www://meadev.nic.in/govt/indnucld.htm), and her actual force posture, a
more robust bilateral regime of CBMs will be crucial.
CBMs would reassure the weaker power Pakistan, increase transparency in
both directions, and smooth the transition to a formalised subcontinental
nuclear status-quo.
Shortly following the nuclear tests, an initial set of CBMs were
negotiated as part of the 1999 Lahore Declaration. The two sides agreed to
provide advance notification of ballistic missile test- flights, maintain
a unilateral moratorium on conducting further nuclear testing, and improve
existing communication links between the Directors General of Military
Operations (DGMOs). Despite the post-Kargil diplomatic chill, the first
two have reportedly been adhered to.
Alas, in the more than two years since Lahore, little fresh progress
has been made. The initial CBMs agreed to then, should now be expanded to
include several further measures.
Communications
First, the two sides should go beyond DGMO-level communications, and
establish dedicated communications systems and protocols between their
respective nuclear command groups. This would facilitate the signalling of
intentions or accident warnings.
According to Mr. P. R. Chari of the New Delhi-based Institute of Peace
and Conflict Studies, ``the need for a common language to understand each
other's signalling, such as sounding different states of alert in an
emergency, is of supreme importance to defuse future crises and avoid
conflict.'' While there would be no way to prevent bluffing in a crisis,
any measures that facilitate pre-launch communication, or extend pre-
launch preparations merit serious consideration.
Missiles
Measures should be developed to make deployment slower, flight- times
longer, and post-launch self-destructions more reliable. Agreeing to a
specified non-deployment zone for missiles could be a useful start.
According to Kent Biringer of the U.S.-based Sandia National Laboratories,
``for shorter-range missiles, decisions to move the missiles away from
borders and out of range of the other side could build confidence and
reduce the potential threat level.''
Verification could be provided through third party satellites or by
cooperative aerial reconnaissance. The latter method is in line with a
proposal from Ambassadors Teresita Schaffer and John Hawes. In a 1999
report from the Washington- based Stimson Center, these veterans of South
Asian and arms control diplomacy suggested that, ``a programme of
cooperative aerial observation would offer immediate, tangible security
advantages for both sides.''
Technical Control
Finally, given the new warmth emerging between New Delhi and
Washington, and the increasing need for the U.S. to reassure Pakistan, a
three-way nuclear safety consultation committee could be formed. As bait,
the U.S. can offer equal access to hardware and technical assistance to
introduce safety-enhancing procedures such as the use of permissive action
links (PALs), which provide a coded-lock on nuclear weapons preventing
unauthorised or accidental use.
Both critics and advocates of overt India-Pakistan nuclearisation can
agree that, in the near term, safety must be a top priority. As the
political leadership on both sides has done little to promote
safety-enhancing nuclear-related CBMs, the time has come to apply public
and elite pressure on these governments to address this matter with the
greatest urgency.
(The writers are, respectively, correspondent for the programme
Worldview India on Doordarshan, and doctoral candidate in Political
Science at Cornell University.)
Send this article to Friends by E-Mail |
|
Section : Opinion Previous : Use helmets, life jackets Next : The bright lights of Shanghai | |
| Front Page | National | Southern States | Other States | International | Opinion | Business | Sport | Entertainment | Miscellaneous | Features | Classifieds | Employment | Index | Home | |
|
Copyrights © 2001 The Hindu Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu | |