There was nothing “strategic” about the session. It wasn’t even a poor rehash of an introductory class on nuclear strategy and the trajectory older nuclear powers took, and which was found wanting in almost all its facets.
The first problem always is the old and stale debate between deterrence optimists and pessimists. Nuclear weapons are good. They secure states. They are a cheaper option. No, they are bad. They can be stolen. They don’t secure anything. The United States and the Soviet Union lost wars despite nuclear weapons. In the case of Pakistan, there’s greater danger of their falling in the hands of the terrorists, blah, blah.
These are not strategic assertions. These are polemical positions. Like most polemical positions, they select their own facts and ignore the rest.
The fact is that nuclear weapons are bad, as are all weapons or anything that can be turned into a weapon. But nuclear weapons can cause mass destruction, unlike most other weapons, regardless of the fact that conventional gravity bombing killed more civilians in World War II than the two atomic bombs dropped over Hiroshima and Nagasaki. And those bombs were nothing compared to what the nuclear-weapon states possess now.
So, we have a problem and that problem is not just Pakistan-specific. It relates to all the states that have nuclear arsenals.
So, why do we have nuclear weapons? Do they help in winning wars? No. You do not take a knife to a gunfight and you don’t take a nuclear weapon to an irregular war. A pistol can’t perform the function of a sniper rifle and vice versa. The function of nuclear weapons has then to be placed properly.
If a war does happen, despite nuclear weapons, then the weapons have already failed. Their only use is to prevent wars. They are not war-fighting weapons. This is why the concept of tactical nuclear weapons is bollocks. The United States, during the Bush era, had begun talking about ‘forward deterrence’, which meant using tiny yields in areas of actual fighting. It was and remains a stupid theory not only because it strikes a blow to the normative standard that a nuclear-weapon state will never use nuclear weapons against a non-nuclear one, but because such use is useless even operationally. Laying an area waste can be good revenge but it doesn’t translate into a strategic victory.
Deterrence is the primary and only function of nuclear weapons. And in that, the best mode is counter-value targeting. Adversaries know that both or all can kill millions in a city and, therefore, none will come to blows. One speaker at the session advised Pakistan to have offensive deterrence and talked about counter-force targeting and TNWs. It surprises me that some of us are still flaunting ideas that have been debated and buried in the West. Counter-force targeting relied on the argument that nuclear weapons could actually be used against enemy forces selectively, which would pressure the enemy into showing the same restraint. Developed by Robert McNamara as a supplement to the broader, three-phased Flexible Response doctrine, this came to be called the No-Cities doctrine.
Today, no one takes this seriously. Even McNamara offered a mea culpa, much before his death. In any case, this kind of targeting strategy would demand a developed and deployed second strike capability. That has immense cost. Also, counter-force targeting relies on offence rather than defence.
Speakers in Pakistan are also fond of citing the stability-instability paradox, another concept that has no physical and psychological space in the context of South Asia. The paradox relied on the fact that the Centre will hold (Germany, which was to be the main battle ground) while the periphery can remain unstable. In other words, while the rest of the world fights the proxy, ideological wars between the United States and the Soviet Union, central Europe will remain stable.
How does this work in South Asia? The only argument that proponents can come up with is that Pakistan and India can fight sub-conventional wars. Kargil is cited as an example. (It’s a bad example but that’s another topic.)
After the Kargil conflict, India began its own studies of how to punish Pakistan without escalating a conflict. Later, after the 2001-02 stand-off fiasco in which India lost over 700 soldiers without fighting a war with Pakistan and realised it couldn’t gain any advantage, it started developing the Cold Start Doctrine (CSD): combining the twin features of fast surgical strikes with forward deployment of self-sustained Independent Battle Groups (IBGs).
While we make much of CSD, it’s more a wish than reality. There’s no space for the “famed” stability-instability paradox in South Asia except to keep conferences alive. Neither sub-conventional war nor surgical strikes is a strategic option. Neither can, if at all, go beyond tactical gains that can only accumulate strategic losses.
Quite apart from our inability to develop a doctrine for the placement of nuclear capability as one component of state policy, which essentially means we don’t know what the hell to do with them apart from arguing for them in and through dead theories, we have also shown an utter lack of thought apropos of the changing nature of war itself.
Cyber-war is a reality. It means the keyboard and the internet. It means the issue of safety and security of nuclear weapons is not just about someone stealing a weapon or nuclear materials or even attacking a facility. Those possibilities are largely passé. The new threat is someone getting into the command and control systems. That’s the new game. I am not sure we — or any of the nuclear-weapon states — are prepared for that. Nothing can be foolproof. As someone said, for every proof there’s always a fool. There’s also the issue of technologies that can neutralise the adversary from the air, even from space.
Finally, as Charles Perrow noted in his seminal work, accidents and incidents are inevitable in high risk technologies. And disasters are not just man-made. They can also be natural. Fukushima is a good example.
The idea should be to debate these issues objectively and without acting as polemicists. Nuclear weapons were important and will remain so for some time to come. But is there a cut-off point for that?
Published in The Express Tribune, May 7th, 2013.
COMMENTS (37)
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@jaimi: India already has a no first use policy. Pakistan doesn't and continues to flex its nuclear might.
in 1964 mmediately after testing its first nuclear weapon, China promised to “never at any time or under any circumstances be the first to use nuclear weapons.” This “no-first-use pledge” was explicitly and unconditionally included in China’s defense white papers. All N. countries must must follow chinese way.,
@Lala Gee: "oreover, preemption is not a divine prerogative of India only, Pakistan also possess the same power and privileges."
The only country who has been initiating wars all through the 65 years is Pakistan. So anyone aware of the history would certainly not put it past Pakistan to start another one. What you need to remember is that every war started by Pakistan was finished by India.
@Lala Gee: Your reflexive foolishness has by now become a feature of many forums. Your education may have stopped with a medieval fable that the rest of us outgrew by the time we were Ten; but there are serious issues that we think need examination. Like that goat of yours, you probably won't know what hit you, or why! It is on the articulate ignorant like you that the extremists in Pakistan depend - successfully, it would appear.
@Ali tanoli:
so i think god bless Dr khan of pakistan any one will think ten times before taking any PUNGA.
Including the TTP? They have already captured Waziristan. Have driven out people from Swat. They routinely target people in Quetta. And now Karachi is living in fear of them.
@Jalil Ahmed (India): Excellent comments. In addition, billions were spent to produce these toys and only God knows how many would be added in the future to make the country fully secure from external threat and now millions to safeguard them lest they should fall in the wrong hands which West and others apprehend. Had this colossal amount usefully spent on the energy sector, it could have improved the economy of Pakistan as more energy generation would have provided the boost in various sectors namely, industries, exports, employment, agriculture output and more importantly the relief to millions who have to bear 12 to 16 hrs power shut-down daily.
@Bubba Babu, or bibi, i am not talking about proxy wars or anti states elements which are every where in the world what i mean is full scale invasion like iraq or afghanistan.
@Gp65:
"@nrmr44: Thoughtful and thought provoking."
Once a hyena and a goat were drinking water from a stream, and the hyena admonishes the goat for muddying the water. The goat tries to clarify, how could she possibly dirty the water being at downstream? How dare you accuse me of lying, the hyena said, and killed the goat. This story is more befitting than the drivel of @nrmr44, and perhaps more thought provoking. However, it would be wise not to consider Pakistan as the goat in the story. Moreover, preemption is not a divine prerogative of India only, Pakistan also possess the same power and privileges.
@bubba bebe Afghanistan didnot even have full scale army since the human race started trillions years ago but they defeated many powers with gorilla war and war is there habbit its a nature of that area and why should pakistan get distroy it self when its hands are full with india and other mad neighbours but one thing they did wrong they should be nuetral that time which does not happend. jaye pakistan and pak army.
@nrmr44: Thoughtful and thought provoking.
Every nuclear power needs to remember one point - when it acquired nuclear weapons, it automatically made itself a target for the same. From that follows one fear. If from a weaponized country you have a section too backward to understand, but with a growing image of guerrilla capability, which even bluffs that it has captured a working bomb, the potential targets will not have the luxury to wait and verify. No-first-strike promises notwithstanding, those targets will act. And there can be only one action - an unlimited nuclear strike to blanket any possibility of a retaliatory strike being launched.
If you wear a gun in public and have no intention of using it, it is advisable to keep your hands clear and visible to everyone. Otherwise you will be shot in the back without a chance.
Today, there is only one country which flaunts both its guns and its hands.
If Kargil had been seen by India as an attempt by Pakistan to invade behind the threat of its nuclear capability, I would say that its choices would have been very limited. If some fool like Hafeez Saeed tries a bluff tomorrow it will be a close call between a blanket nuclear attack by India or the US.
Unlikely? Isn't that what Ayub Khan calculated when he sent irregulars into J&K in 1965? Pakistan's strategies have always had one problem - they leave no second option to their enemies!
Ejaz Sb, I have the utmost respect for you and your analysis.
But your liberal use of theoretical-war jargon as the driving force of your point is starting to make you sound increasingly like Zaid Hamid.
Regards,
Will read the Tom Clancy novel when I feel like it.
@Ali tanoli
Your nukes didn't stop the American's from promising to bomb you back into the stone age if you didn't side with them against the Afghan Taliban. And lets not forget that the Taliban were defeated and removed from Kabul with nothing other than B-52's, special forces, and the help of Afghan war lords - nukes wouldn't have helped Afghanistan either.
@fari, islam is means peace but peace and freedom is not free.
@Bubba Babu, or bibi, i am not talking about proxy wars or anti states elements which are every where in the world what i mean is full scale invasion like iraq or afghanistan.
Pak is an Islamic and ideological state and Islam is against destroying and killing innocent people and the people who do not take part in war. But in the case of nuclear weapon thay cause mass distruction in which mostly innocent people will be killed. How can we use nuclear weapon as more than 25 crore Muslims are also inhibit India. Thats the whole matter i think.
Was it not India which claimed that their bomb was to match China's? But for good measure, they taunted Pakistan to prove its nuclear capability. A few nuclear explosions should not be allowed to stand between two neighbours. So, Pakistan complied and even detonated an extra one as "moreover". Of course, some bombs are better than the others and some even have a name unlike the others. As for using nuclear weapons, only one country has been hit by them so far. The country that bombed may have done it to save human civilization unlike the one with the Islamic type which wants to destroy it. As long as the great civilizations have plenty of nukes to bomb the world over and over, why are they worried about the barbarians having a few. From Rome to Washington, the western civilization has been busy fashioning the world in its own image. Plans are already in hand to control the new threat that is supposed to come from China. May be the Chinese should consult the Japanese a little more often on how to remain on the right side of the great western civilization.
@Ali tanoli.
Rubbish. Ask the USA, China, UK, France or Russia whether their nukes have stopped conventional attacks against their countries.
@Jalil Ahmed (India): Jalil saheb ! This is the most profound observation of this decade ! Excellent !
@Ali tanoli: Forgot to tell TTP That did you? They continue to mess with you. Secondly, India has nuclear cability. Did that prevent Musharraf from pulling Kargill?
Nuclear weapons will become immaterial in next 25 years with advancements in missile shield and laser based anti-ballistic missile weapons. It would almost become impossible to use nuclear missiles.
You decided to eat grass rather than give up nukes and the high approval rating of the military (70%+)) would seem to indicate that the people agree with that policy.
every one knows when u got this toy no one dare to mess u so its a super safety messure of century so i think god bless Dr khan of pakistan any one will think ten times before taking any PUNGA.
@ Naveen sorry bro I do not agree with u tat INDIA doesnt hav Hydrogen bomb, wen u nd I both very well know tat India has nd can produce fusion materials nd manufacture its own supercomputers, as u need supercomputers for hydrogen bombs. Its not about expenditure, its about ur power, India sees China as its immediate rival not Pakistan. In future we wil face problems frm western kntries too specially USA, so India needs Hydrogen Bomb nd tats th reason we built them.
@Deep: You're wrong, India doesn't have an H-bomb. Too expensive and useless a venture since nobody is going to use them anyway .
Pakistan has atomic bombs while India not only has atomic bombs but also it has Hydrogen bombs, thanks to India's capability to produce fusion materials nd supercomputer on its own. A hydrogen bomb is 500-1000 times more powerful than an atomic bomb. But India has already declared no 1st use of its nuclear bombs so Pakistan do not need to worry about India and also India is more worried about China nd its economic development tan to fight war with Pakistan. In Asia only India nd China have Hydrogen Bombs.
@Jalil Ahmed (India):
Excellent observation. @Mirza and @GP65 must read your comment.
@Jim:
"Therefore, it should be stripped of nuclear weapons."
And for this, you/re begging US to do that. Why don't you do it yourself?
Once a nation has put in millions to start an arms/nuclear "factory", you can't just switch it off. The production carries on. And not just production, the industry then also needs to maintain these weapons. You can't just manufacture them and then let them hibernate. It is very expensive to maintain the bombs as well as the delivery systems (rocket fuels have a life). So much money has gone into it, so many vested interests, so many employed in it. You think governments will just shut it down? Forget it.
@Mirza: You are wise man Mirzaji and tour words will meet the fate that such words often do - fall on deaf ears.
all other powers need nuclear weapons because their threat is from outside, in case of Pakistan's, your threat is from inside.Well, ask strategist, without any exception, everyone would agree that Pakistan never deserved to have nuclear weapons. And that is why in spite of the dreaming by Pakistani elite of getting a nuclear technology deal like that of India form other countries, no country has offered them any sort of nuclear deal,except of course their higher then mountain friend.
Despite the nuclear weapons on both sides there was a war between Pakistan and India at Kargil. It were not the nuclear weapons or WMD but the US general Zini’s visit to Pakistan and Sharif’s spontaneous visit to the US on its Independence Day that stopped the war not the WMD. There is no good WMD or bad WMD. They are all killing machines and cannot be condoned. However, if there ever was an argument for Pakistan developing WMD was that India has much bigger army and resources and we cannot have an effective deterrent without nuclear weapons. Having done that we are still nurturing a huge army and all other expensive war toys and not even protecting our civilians. You last line asks “is there a cut-off point?”That cut-off point has long surpassed and we are depriving our country of education, healthcare, energy and other basic necessities to continue to stock pile WMD at the cost of our malnourished children.
The question is how many "more" nuclear weapons does Pakistan "need" when the state cannot even keep the lights and power on for any length of time? Money is being spent on more "advanced" nuclear delivery systems while just how many megawatts of electrical generating capacity has been added to the national grid over the past decade???
Pakistan case is different from every other nuclear power. It has nukes plus a crazed idea of Islam and its superiority and universality that it wants to enforce on the world. It is a paranoid, delusional state unlike any other in the world. It is an irresponsible nuclear power that negotiates with the world with a gun to its own head. It has also recklessly threatened to use nuclear weapons. Therefore, it should be stripped of nuclear weapons.
"Nuclear weapons were important and will remain so for some time to come. But is there a cut-off point for that?"
Yes, the cut-off point would be at achieving nuclear capability enough to completely wipe the enemy twice.
Nuclear weapons are a reality. And while we all enjoy a good pro vs cons debate, we have to draw a line somewhere because sadly we cannot afford such a massive defence infrastructure. Something will have to give.
Well, I can't agree more, but yes the CSD is certainly a hawkish doctrine albeit at a tactical level. But we need to realize the problems associated with "bite and hold" strategy. We moreover, need to add to our cache coz there are threats to CMD.