The Nuclear Crescent

Similar documents

How the Pakistan Military Learned to Love the Bomb

STRATEGIC LOGIC OF NUCLEAR PROLIFERATION

Scott D. Sagan Stanford University Herzliya Conference, Herzliya, Israel,

Implications of the Indo-US Growing Nuclear Nexus on the Regional Geopolitics

"The Nuclear Threat: Basics and New Trends" John Burroughs Executive Director Lawyers' Committee on Nuclear Policy, New York (

Summary of Policy Recommendations

GR132 Non-proliferation: current lessons from Iran and North Korea

The 25 years since the end of the Cold War have seen several notable

confronting terrorism in the pursuit of power

South Asia s Nuclear Security (London: Routledge, 2015). Pakistan s Nuclear Weapons (London: Routledge, 2009; paperback edition, 2010).

China-Pakistan Nuclear Relation after the Cold War. and Its International Implications. Zhang Jiegen. Institute of International Studies

Implications of South Asian Nuclear Developments for U.S. Nonproliferation Policy Nuclear dynamics in South Asia

My Journey at the Nuclear Brink By William Perry

Iran Nuclear Programme: Revisiting the Nuclear Debate

Interviews. Interview With Ambasssador Gregory L. Schulte, U.S. Permanent Representative to the In. Agency

POLICY BRIEF. Engaging Pakistan. W h a t i s t h e p r o b l e m? W h a t s h o u l d b e d o n e? December 2008

ISSUE BRIEF. Deep-rooted Territorial Disputes, Non-state Actors and Involvement of RAW

Introduction: South Asia and Theories of Nuclear Deterrence: Subcontinental Perspectives

PANEL #1 THE GROWING DANGER OF NUCLEAR WAR POTENTIAL FLASHPOINTS: HOW A WAR MIGHT START

Indian Unsafeguarded Nuclear Program: An Assessment

National Security Policy. National Security Policy. Begs four questions: safeguarding America s national interests from external and internal threats

Dissuasion and Regional Allies: The Case of Pakistan; Strategic Insights, v. 3 issue 10 (October 2004)

THE CONGRESSIONAL COMMISSION ON THE STRATEGIC POSTURE OF THE UNITED STATES

of the NPT review conference

NPT/CONF.2020/PC.II/WP.30

An Analysis of Past Indo-Pakistan Nuclear Crises 1

US DRONE ATTACKS INSIDE PAKISTAN TERRITORY: UN CHARTER

Report- In-House Meeting with Mr. Didier Chaudet Editing Director of CAPE (Center for the Analysis of Foreign Affairs)"

India and Pakistan: On the Heels of President Bush s Visit

Ontario Model United Nations II. Disarmament and Security Council

CHAPTER S. The history of US-Pak relations has been quite chequered and marked by ups and downs.

India s Nuclear Deterrence: Examination and Analysis

CHAPTER 3 NUCLEAR 1914: THE NEXT BIG WORRY. Henry D. Sokolski

Selvi Bunce. Keywords: Stability of peace, significance of nuclear weapons, peace in South Asia, role of non- State players

Implementing the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons: Non-proliferation and regional security

The next use of nuclear weapons, if followed quickly by others, is nothing the

CHAPTER 20 NATIONAL SECURITY POLICYMAKING CHAPTER OUTLINE

U.S. welcomes India to nuclear elite

Christian Peacemaking: Eliminating the Nuclear Scandal The Challenge of Getting to Zero Part II

Documents & Reports. The Impact of the U.S.-India Deal on the Nonproliferation Regime

STATEMENT. H.E. Ms. Laila Freivalds Minister for Foreign Affairs of Sweden

The Security Dilemma: A Case Study on India and Pakistan

Prospects of Pak-Russia Bilateral Relations

Lawrence Bender Producer. Lucy Walker Director. A letter from the filmmakers

Montessori Model United Nations. Distr.: Middle School Thirteenth Session Sept First Committee Disarmament and International Security

Chapter 8: The Use of Force

A Publication by The Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis, Inc. In Association with The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University

Is stable nuclear deterrence feasible?

Institute for Science and International Security

Nuclear Energy and Proliferation in the Middle East Robert Einhorn

Guided Reading Activity 32-1

AP PHOTO/EMILIO MORENATTI. Previewing Pakistan s 2013 Elections. Colin Cookman March

India-Pakistan: Nuclear Stability and Diplomacy

Contents. Preface... iii. List of Abbreviations...xi. Executive Summary...1. Introduction East Asia in

Workshop on implementation of resolution 1540 (2004) ASEAN Regional Forum 1, San Francisco, February 2007

CRS Report for Congress

Security and Insecurity in Northeast Asia

REVISITING THE ROLE OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS

Re: Appeal and Questions regarding the Japan-India Civil Nuclear Cooperation Agreement

Sometimes We Don t Want to Know: Kissinger and Nixon Finesse Israel s Bomb. Victor Gilinsky NPEC Stanford Seminar August 4, 2011

Action for UN Renewal and World Disarmament Campaign. Beyond Obama Priorities Towards Nuclear Abolition

Secretary of State Saudabayev, Your Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen,

Asian Security Challenges

Pakistan s Nuclear Development ( ): External Pressures

"Status and prospects of arms control, disarmament and non-proliferation from a German perspective"

CENTER FOR INTERNATIONAL STRATEGIC STUDIES. Annual Report

India s Grand Strategy

WAR AND PEACE: Possible Seminar Paper Topics

Deterrence in Indo-Pak Context. Majid Mahmood

59. Relations with South and Central Asia

REF: New Delhi 9293 of July SUMMARY; The Embassy has seen no evidence during the past year

Nuclear doctrine. Civil Society Presentations 2010 NPT Review Conference NAC

Union of Concerned of Concerned Scientists Press Conference on the North Korean Missile Crisis. April 20, 2017

NPT/CONF.2015/PC.III/WP.29

UNSC 1540 Next Steps to Seize the Opportunity

Report. Deep Differences over Reconciliation Process in Afghanistan

The Geopolitical Importance of Pakistan

Report of the 10th International Student/Young Pugwash (ISYP) Conference. Astana, Kazakhstan, August 2017

World History Unit 08a and 08b: Global Conflicts & Issues _Edited

4.2.2 Korea, Cuba, Vietnam. Causes, Events and Results

A GOOD FRAMEWORK FOR A GOOD FUTURE by Jonathan Granoff, President of the Global Security Institute

PRESS RELEASE Civilian Uses of Nuclear Energy in Pakistan: Opportunities and Prospects 27 December 2016

KAZAKHSTAN. Mr. Chairman, We congratulate you on your election as Chair of the First Committee and assure you of our full support and cooperation.

International Seminar: Countering Nuclear and Radiological Terrorism. Small Hall, Russian State Duma September 27, 2007

The Centre for Public Opinion and Democracy

Pakistan s Nuclear Command and Control: Perception Matters

Disarmament and Non-Proliferation as Instruments of International Peace and Security

General Assembly 1st (DISEC)

Book Review: Democracy and Diplomacy

Happymon Jacob China, India, Pakistan and a stable regional order

Pakistan s emerging nuclear posture: impact of drivers and technology on nuclear doctrine

FDI Outlook and Analysis for 2018

Conventional Deterrence: An Interview with John J. Mearsheimer

Adopted by the Security Council at its 6191st meeting, on 24 September 2009

Triangular formations in Asia Genesis, strategies, value added and limitations

The Challenges of Nuclear Learning in South Asia

UNIT SIX: CHALLENGES OF THE MODERN ERA Part II

Reconsidering minimum deterrence in South Asia: Indian responses to Pakistan s tactical nuclear weapons

A International Relations Since A Global History. JOHN YOUNG and JOHN KENT \ \ OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS

Transcription:

The Nuclear Crescent Pakistan and the Bomb Joel Sandhu If India builds the bomb, we will eat grass or leaves, even go hungry. But we will get one of our own Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Former Pakistani President (1965) The injection of nuclear weapons to South Asia has long been the subject of intense international concern. Pakistan s nuclear test of May 1998 put to rest years of speculation as to whether Islamabad, long suspected of developing covert weapons capabilities, would openly exercise its nuclear option. Pakistan s Nuclear Buildup Pakistan s nuclear weapons program emerged from a pressing need to counteract political coercion and/or a military offensive by India, especially when Pakistan could no longer count on offsetting security relationship with the United States. Pakistan did not put in place a clear concept of deterrence on how its nuclear option would prevent another conflict with India after Pakistan s crushing loss of and partition with East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) after 1971 or after India s nuclear test in 1974 turned that option into an imperative. Today, defence planners in Islamabad have put in place a comprehensive set of policies and procedures to manage nuclear weapons during times of peace and conflict. However, the security landscape around Pakistan is transforming fast. The shifts in the international and regional environments have created new security concerns for Pakistan as it looks to expand its nuclear arsenal and refine its nuclear strategy. Traditionally, Pakistan s military leaders saw conventional military preparedness and an alliance with the United States as the best way to counter the Indian military buildup. After China conducted its first nuclear 44 spring 2011 scholar warrior

test in 1964, India began taking measures to ready its own nuclear option. Pakistani elites saw the writing on the wall and lobbied for Islamabad to follow suit. Led by Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, the nuclear lobby in Pakistan tried to persuade the government to start a nuclear weapons program, but to no avail. The call was denied by the then Pakistani military establishment who opted for conventional defence and alliance as the best response to India s expanding military capability. However, two key events changed this strategy and accelerated Pakistan s nuclear weapons pursuit. First, the United States imposed an embargo on military supplies to Pakistan in 1965 following the Indo-Pakistan War that year. Second, the partition of Pakistan with East Pakistan after 1971 led many in Islamabad to believe that a Pakistani nuclear weapon may have prevented Indian intervention and the subsequent dismemberment of East Pakistan from the West. The previously ignored nuclear option stood vindicated when Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto came to power. He launched Pakistan s nuclear weapon program in January 1972. To bypass the multitude of nonproliferation pressures and hurdles that challenged the acquisition of nuclear weapons, Pakistan developed a highly secretive and personalized decision making system that gave extraordinary autonomy to the heads of the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC) and the Khan Research Laboratories (KRL). 1 This allowed Islamabad to acquire a nuclear deterrent quickly, cheaply, and secretly. 2 China s also played a significant role in assisting Pakistan to acquire nuclear weapons, including the export of warhead designs and allegedly enough highly enriched uranium (HEU) for several warheads. Pakistan s surreptitious nuclear activities also allowed KRL director Abdul Qadeer Khan to diversify his nuclear network into an illicit exporter of nuclear technology. Following the international revelation of the A.Q. Khan network, the Pakistani government reorganized the nuclear structure and put in place effective command and control arrangements. 3 Threat Perception and Nuclear Strategy Pakistan s development of a nuclear deterrent in the late 1990s was a direct result of competing threat analyses and concerns over the country s national security that were repeatedly advocated and defended by the country s decision-makers since the 1950s. 4 An analysis by Khan and Lavoy suggests that Pakistan faces a four-dimensional threat. First, is the prospect of an outright military war with India that could escalate to the verge of nuclear war. Second, tensions on Pakistan s western border have exploded into a wider insurgency scholar warrior ä spring 2011 ä 45

throughout the country with direct implications for the country s nuclear security should terrorist get hold of fissile materials. Third, is the possibility of a nuclear-armed Iran and a negative security situation in the Persian Gulf. Fourth, Pakistan s military forces could be entangled in domestic political violence in a major internal security situation with or without the involvement of external powers, such as India, thereby creating a linkage between domestic unrest and the nuclear deterrent. 5 The primary role of Pakistan s nuclear arsenal in its security strategy is deterrence vis-à-vis a larger and wealthier India and to offset the military imbalance. On the one hand, Pakistan matches India s military modernization by acquiring comparable weapons, equipment, and training. 6 On the other, Pakistan counts on offsetting security relationships by engaging in strategic alliances with the United States and China. Nonetheless, Pakistan continues to sees nuclear weapons as the surest crises stability measure. The government in Islamabad wants sufficient nuclear forces for a second-strike capability, reliable and accurate deliverable means as well as a robust command and control system. Taken together, these are Pakistan s requirements for a strategy of minimum deterrence against a more powerful India. As such, some would argue that nuclear weapons have provided the ultimate security that Pakistan has sought, lending credence to Kenneth Waltz s argument about the stabilizing effect of nuclear weapons. 7 Nuclear Doctrine Pakistan s nuclear doctrine is centered on a minimum deterrent; it has repeatedly eschewed a no-first use policy, and remains a non-signatory to the Nuclear Non- Proliferation Treaty (NPT). After the 1998 nuclear test and the creation in 1999 of the Strategic Plans Division (SPD) charged with controlling the country s nuclear weapons and facilities Pakistani defense planners recognized the imperative of creating a controlled, transparent, and larger structure if national security was premised on nuclear weapons. Despite a statement by senior military official alluding to situations where nuclear weapons might be used, Pakistan s nuclear doctrine is deliberately ambiguous. 8 The perception in Pakistan is that its nuclear force is necessary to support the country s conventional military to deter a potential attack by India. Despite three major wars between the two rivals and numerous other skirmishes, these events did not spiral out of control a state Ashely J. Tellis calls ugly stability. 9 46 spring 2011 scholar warrior

Looking Ahead Unlike India, whose rise to major power status has been assisted by a nuclear weapon capability, Pakistan s nuclear capability has exposed a number of the country s weaknesses, including civil-military relations, the rise of extremism, and revelations of proliferation. The security of Pakistan s nuclear weapons and facilities has been a key concern in recent years with the rise of terrorist attacks and insurgencies and the expansion of landmass falling under the control of the insurgents in the country. The latest developments in the region have increased fears that terrorist could target or penetrate nuclear facilities and put Pakistan s nuclear security at risk. For example, Pakistan s nuclear facilities such as the Khushab facility and the Gadwal enrichment plant are within close proximity of areas under attack from the Taliban. 10 In recent years, senior Al-Qaeda leaders have repeatedly expressed their interest to gain control of Pakistan s nuclear weapons. 11 Events and experiences in and around Pakistan over the last four decades have institutionalized the role of nuclear weapons for the country s strategic independence and geographic integrity. These include 1971 war over East Pakistan and the nuclear explosion by India three years later; the 1979 invasion of Afghanistan by the Soviet Union; the Kashmir crises in 1990; and finally the 9/11 attacks on the US and the 2001-2002 military crisis with India. There is now a near absolute consensus in Islamabad on the importance of nuclear capability in the country s polity. To this end any new security trends and threats are likely to push the nuclear establishment to modernize and expand the Pakistani nuclear force. For example, in response to emerging US-India strategic partnership, and specifically the US- India civil nuclear deal, Pakistan s National Command Authority (NCA), the main nuclear decision-making body, publicly stated that any deal that would shift the nuclear balance would force Pakistan to reassess its minimum nuclear deterrent requirements. 12 The implication of this statement is that Pakistan would seek to match an expansion in India s nuclear force potential. Pakistan s future nuclear weapons policy will depend on a number of developments at the regional and international level and rooted in the evolving Asian power balance. These include: how the regional dynamic will affect the relationship and power balance between India and Pakistan and prospects for conflict resolution between the two neighbors; how the war on terrorism develops and the role Pakistan plays in it; how the United States acts in Asia (particularly with China and India) and the Islamic world (in particular with Iran); and developments between Pakistan s military establishment and the scholar warrior ä spring 2011 ä 47

civilian government. Looking ahead, Pakistan will continue to pursue strategic military equilibrium by match developments taking place in India. As such, Islamabad s response to a rising India will have direct impact the regional security environment and the Asian power balance. Joel Sandhu is a Research Associate at the Global Public Policy Institute in Berlin, an independent think tank focusing on effective and accountable governance. Notes 1. Khan, Feroz H., and Peter R. Lavoy. Pakistan: The Dilemma of nuclear Deterrence. The Long Shadow: Nuclear Weapons and Security in 21 st Century Asia. Ed. Muthiah Alagappa. California: Stanford Universty Press, 2008. 217-219. 2. Beijing has been known to supply Islamabad with various levels of nuclear and missile related assistance since the 1970s. 3. International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS). 2007. Nuclear Black markets: Pakistan, A.Q. Khan and the Rise of Proliferation Networks. London: IISS. 4. See for example, Samina Ahmed, Pakistan s Nuclear Weapons Program: Turning Points and Nuclear Choices, International Security, Spring 1999, Vol. 23, No. 4. 5. Khan and Lavoy: 2008. 217-218. 6. Ibid. 221-222. 7. Sagan, Scott D., Kenneth N. Waltz. The Spread of Nuclear Weapons: A Debate Renewed. New York: W.W. Norton, 2003. 8. See statement by Lt. Gen. Khalid Kidwai, head of Pakistan s Strategic Plans Division, in Nuclear Safety, Nuclear Stability, and Nuclear Strategy in Pakistan, Concise Report of a Visit by Landau Network - Centro Volta, January 2002. Accessed on 21 Dec 2010. <http://www. pugwash.org/september11/pakistan-nuclear.htm> 9. Tellis, Ashley J. Stability in South Asia. Documented Briefings for the US Army. RAND Corporation. 1997 10. Tisdall, Simon. Pakistan Nuclear Projects Raise US Fears. The Guardian. 3 May 2009. Accessed on 20 Dec 2010. <www.guardian.co.uk> 11. Al-Qaeda Commander Threatens US. AlJazeera.Net. 22 June 2009. Accessed on 21 Dec 2010. <http://english.aljazeera.net> 12 Lavoy, Peter R. Pakistan s Nuclear Posture: Security and Survivability. Nonproliferation Policy Education Center. Available at http://www.npec-web.org 48 spring 2011 scholar warrior