If the turbulent history of this region had any lessons, the world’s engagement in this region must have been aimed at promoting strategic balance rather than disturbing it. A stable nuclear security order is what we need in South Asia. Any measures that contribute to lowering of the nuclear threshold and fuelling of an unnecessary arms race between the two nuclear-armed neighbours are no service to the people of this region. India’s triad-based nuclear doctrine, its aggressive ‘Cold Start’ strategy and its introduction of anti-ballistic missile system constitute ‘overkill’ for the region’s stability.
With Narendra Modi’s India now opening its doors to the world’s military industries, the region faces a spectre of an apocalyptic arms race with far-reaching implications for the world’s peace and security. A nuclearised region cannot afford any more adventurism, not even a limited conventional war that India’s devious Cold Start doctrine seeks to impose on Pakistan through quick and intense conventional offensive. What could be the response of any conventionally weaker state to such a threat? The only credible response has to be a counter force, which in the India-Pakistan scenario means tactical warheads.
Obviously, in the face of India’s fast developing capabilities, including its dangerous weapon-inductions, aggressive doctrines and devious nuclear cooperation arrangements enabling diversion of nuclear material for military purposes, equally dangerous options in response are inevitable. The situation is being aggravated by growing nuclear and military disparities in the region as a result of country-specific preferential treatment that India is receiving in terms of its access to nuclear technology in violation of the global non-proliferation regime.
This brings into focus the US-India nuclear deal and the subsequent carte blanche that India has received in the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) for access to nuclear technology in violation of equitably applicable criteria. India is also seeking exemption in the FMT similar to those it has been granted under the iniquitous US-India deal. This enables India to keep its eight ‘civil’ nuclear reactors and the breeder programme outside IAEA safeguards which can produce a significant amount of weapon-grade plutonium. Pakistan is opposed to any FMT exemptions and is also concerned over NSG’s discrimination against it.
It was indeed ironic that the NSG, which was set up in response to the first act of nuclear proliferation by India’s first nuclear test in 1974, and works on the basis of consensus to prevent further proliferation, decided unanimously to reward the perpetrator of such proliferation. Given the consensus rule, any one of these 46 nations could have blocked this decision. The fact that they did not do so was because their profit motives got the better of their principles or they simply lacked the courage of their convictions.This discriminatory country-specific waiver undermines the international non-proliferation regime and detracts from its credibility and legitimacy.
Against this backdrop, issues of nuclear and strategic stability in this volatile region need to be predicated on the principle of indivisible security. Only criteria-based approaches on the basis of equality and non-discrimination between the two defacto nuclear weapon states would be sustainable. The NSG must rectify its lopsided approach and allow a criteria-based treatment to Pakistan on a par with India. Its discriminatory approach does not serve the cause of peace and stability in the region and weakens the global nuclear security process.
The policymakers in world’s major capitals, especially Washington, should also have been working ‘extra time’ to promote a sense of security and justice in this region by eschewing discriminatory policies in their dealings with the India-Pakistan nuclear equation, the only one in the world that grew up in history totally unrelated to the Cold War. It was a direct offshoot of a long-standing legacy of India’s conflictual relationship with its two immediate neighbours. Surely, India and Pakistan, as part of their Composite Dialogue, have already agreed on a number of nuclear and conventional CBMs, including risk-reduction measures.
They must now move to CBMs on conflict prevention and avoidance of arms race. This they can do only if India is not encouraged or abetted in its Maha Bharata designs and is instead nudged to return to the dialogue table for genuine peace in the region. South Asia needs an environment of peace and security to be able to divert its resources for the economic wellbeing of its people. This requires India and Pakistan to maintain the lowest level of armament. The world’s major powers, too, have an obligation not to widen nuclear disparities in the region and must follow an even-handed approach in dealing with this nuclear equation. In evaluating the doctrinaire approach of the two countries, one thing becomes abundantly clear. India’s nuclear doctrine is status-driven whereas that of Pakistan is security motivated. Pakistan’s nuclear doctrine, though not declared, is based on credible minimum deterrence and strategic restraint and responsibility.
Pakistan’s long-standing proposal for nuclear and missile restraint, conventional balance and conflict-resolution will go a long way in promoting nuclear and conventional restraint and mutual stabilisation. Likewise, non-induction of ABMs and other destabilising systems could also serve as an arms limitation measure. Arms reduction could follow in due course later as the two sides build up trust and confidence. States may have extra-regional concerns. But to the extent that their force potentials are specific to the regional states, arms limitation and other CBMs can be pursued. They are not mutually exclusive.
India, unfortunately, remains averse to Pakistan’s proposals for strategic restraint and stabilisation in the region. In doing so, it keeps citing its extra-regional concerns although its force potential largely remains Pakistan-specific. On its part, Pakistan’s main concern has always been to offset India’s superior conventional strength. Since Pakistan’s actions in the nuclear and missile fields at each stage are force majeure in response to India’s escalatory steps, an element of mutuality in restraint and responsibility is required for nuclear and conventional stabilisation in our region.
The international community, on its part, should be taking steps that encourage India-Pakistan rapprochement and conflict-resolution, and help promote nuclear restraint and stabilisation in the region. This can be done only through a non-discriminatory, criteria-based approach in dealing with the two nuclear-weapon neighbours.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 5th, 2014.
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COMMENTS (68)
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2nd attempt to reply this macho, ET please allow the reply. @Haider: The Talibans have not yet reacted to the areal bombing campaign and displacement of waziris population in cities. There has been no white flag nor any Fatwa either? Wait for the announcement and then you will watch with awe the performance of the force which causes a storm and moves with the lightening speed. We will simply learn about the aftermath.
Rex Minor
No doubt South Asia is a complex zone and possesses this capacity to gather the global attention due to it continued rift between two nuclear weapon states. Yes we all need peace and conflict resolution and this can only be possible with mutual wish and trust. Whenever CBMs comes in, there was vital trust deficit. Under the shadow of nukes, diplomatic channel should be established. Similarly, India should stop expanding its military posture which pose a direct threat to Pakistan security. There should be lesser chances of provoking security dilemma which can address majority of security threats.
@Hari Om: Hari Krishna or Ram Ram; these are not the good manners for the civilised reader to post on a Pakistan National news paper? Say your piece of disagreement and part with peace.
Rex Minor
Pakistan is migraine of world as once said by Hillary Clinton.There can't be parity btw India and Pak , only migraine need to be cured for better world.
The writing of this author, a former foreign secretary of Pakistan and known for his anti-India venom, betrays a foul stench of envy and inferiority complex.
Very well explained Shamshad sahab you are the best. And you have given a complete solution to the Pak-Indo nuclear gesture and stabilizing factors
@Jack Hoff: Well,..when an Indian troll hides behind a British name, disguise himself as his former masters, then you can read his 5 point drivel. Pablum.
Author is wrong to suggest that there can be a arms race between India and Pakistan. If at all, then only at Pakistan's own peril, because Pakistan will go bankrupt. The choice is Pakistan's.
Pakistan should spend more on defense. That's the answer since the Kashmir issue will not be solved for another 1000 years. Kashmir has been a part of India long before the Muslim hordes invaded our lands and converted my brothers and sisters.
Most of the ‘misadventures’ starting from 1948 came from which particular end and why?
@Jack Hoff: You have fathomed the gist well. Your name should be "Hats Off"
I agree with you that those who take to adventurism must suffer from fear. Most Indians will be thrilled at your desire to seek balance with neighbors, knowing well the opponent will become bankrupt. Since both Indian and Pakistani desires match, Pakistan must immediately increase its Defense budget a few hundred per cent. Secondly, You falsely believe that India has progressed because of assistance of others, not due to its abilities and responsible behaviour. That Pakistan does not have the ability to compete with India is a fact that should be accepted and plans made to correct the imbalance. Instead non conventional warfare through use of terror groups was resorted to. So what if more Pakistani citizens died from the blow back rather than Indians that were supposed to. What Pakistan will achieve is balance with Afghanistan, every attack on Afghan soil being responded with a more vicious attack on Pakistani territory --- thanks to the Taliban, good and bad, sitting on both sides of the border. When the chicken are coming home to roost, dreams of megalomania remain strong. With bureaucrats with your mindset in the Establishment, Pakistan needs no enemies, home grown dreamers being good enough.
In other words the gist of this article, can be summarized as below
1) Pakistan will continue to sponsor terrorism as an instrument of its foreign policy. 2)) India must not be allowed to build up its conventional forces, so that they are not able to retaliate effectively against Pakistan for sponsoring terror. b) Pakistan should be allowed the use/development of tactical nuclear weapons to deter India from attacking Pakistan using India's superiority in conventional weapons. 3) India should not be allowed to retaliate massively by using its strategic nuclear weapons against any use of tactical nuclear weapons by Pakistan. 4) India's must open up its economy to benefit Pakistan. 5) The world owes Pakistan a debt and should give into its blackmailing, allowing it to proliferate nuclear weapons for profit and also because Pakistani proliferation allows more Islamist entities to possess nuclear weapons and thus balance out the power of the evil west.
Shamshad Ahmed Sahib, thank you very much for remembering India, in your writings and in your dreams.
I sincerely hope that India progress much much more in the field of space, nuclear, medical, weapon technologies. So much in times to come that, forget you, entire Pakistan remember it day, night, good and bad dreams. India should also progress in education, agriculture, rural development and what not to make you more envy of its progress. Thanks a lot for remembering India.
Strength is good thing and better for India and Pakistan but both require cooperation not confrontation . Who knows that after 20-30 years from today China can threaten India and Pakistan likewise China is threatening Japan , Vietnam and South Korea today and once enemies these three countries are now friends in fear of China ?
The regions stability went out of the window when Pakistan decided to use covert forces to conduct statecraft. Both in Afghanistan and in Kashmir. You can't have stability with non-state militia & an unelected army dictating terms.
Duly elected govt. of any country has a legitimate stake in ensuring the security of the country through all available, legitimate means. Legitimacy of a state is obtained by having monopoly control over coercive forces (army/Police etc.). A state that doesn't have that is the source of instability.
@Rumpa Spliter: No sir, no global dimensions?. The G7 have agreed to appease against Russian rising economic power and avoid ww3 nuclear confrontation in Europe. It is upto the Eastern powers now and while the chinese are trying to attain nuclear free korea with the help of south korea, Indian new man is considering cooperating with the Japanese to make a nuclear alliance against China and possibly Pakistan.
Rex Minor
: Nuclear war cannot be a regional war. By nature ,It has gobal dimension and consequences. Indians consider their country a cvilisation state thus will deal with strategic challenge from their own historic, civilizational perspective. Author is right in pointing out the strategic restraint ,which should include all forms of security threats including terrorism. Experts estimate Indian currnet potential to make at least four thousand Pultonium bombs,increasing by the day and only going to increase with Fast Breeders now beginning to come on line. Pakistan;s decision makers should keep this potential in mind before going up the escalation ladder as it might turn out to be detrimental for many other nations from East to West Asia who have been involved one way or other in this mad conflict. Not sure, they will like to sacrifice themesleves to for satisfied South Asian equation as demanded by one party.
@Rashid
A load of nonsense, misuse of resistance movements in the use of nuclear arms consiparacies. No sir, nuclear wars can only be conducted or avoided by State actors. Nuclear weapons have not deterred India and Pakistan military pastures against each other, not did the absence of nuclear arms deter the aggressor from raining death from the sky on the people of Japan and even harmless Libya. The author has written a very good article with technical finesse, and strategic theories which are logical scenarios; But logic is not truth, when you see Indians going for a chaiwala and replacing a competent economist and Pakistan electing a Prime Minister after finaly ending the influence of the military in running the civilian adminstration and the judiciary, who has once again did the hat trick by involving military back into the civilian arena, who have in a short period displaced a million plus peoples from their protected environment.
Rex Minor
@P: Reversing partition would be a nightmare NOT a dream for most Indians. If India had any interest in reversing partition, it would have tried to do so in 1971 but it did not.
A very well explained analysis. Author has very truly pin pointed the things which are actually adding fuel to the fire. Nuclear weapons though in the post cold war have proved to provide deterrence capability to the states possessing the technology. Same applies to South Asian region where the two potential and historical rivals of he continent despite of having timely tensions and short term conflicts had not gone through full scale nuclear war. Presence of nuclear weapons have actually lower the chances of nuclear weapons. But now India's developments in the military domain are somehow putting Pakistan and China in to a state where they both will not left with any choice but to increase their military capabilities by introducing new and sophisticated weapons in order to deter India. For maintaining the regional peace and stability India would have to slower its pace other wise mistake by one state, will be suffered by both states in the form of destruction and collapse.
@RAshid: Fortunately it doesn't. It is the overall capability of the country that does. Having a strong economy and intellectual capital does. Notice that Germany and Japan are no nuclear powers but carry more weight on the world stage than India and Pakistan put together.
@sudeep: In 50 years India will have 1.6 billion people, so it wil be no big deal if, as the most populous, it will also have the largest economy. Currently the per capita of Sri Lanka is 1.5 times that of India; even a laggard such as the Philippines has a higher per capita than India. For the common person per capita is relevant and not GDP.
Dear Author
India lives amongst very sick societies whose only aim is to bleed India a Thousand deaths, so it has to be very alert all the time and spend valuable resources for such alertness
And about Maha Bharata vision , pl don't worry we do not want 20 crores more on our soil, out of which as Musharrf said 10 % are extremist, and if Bangladesh also wants to be a part another 20 crores
We really Love Mr Jinnah as our liberator
and i agree with @ zoro on the level of your writing
@Dipak: Very well said. Bang on.
Being a civilian diplomat who was a former foreign secretary of Pakistan I expected a better analysis from him. Instead, throughout he has lamented about the world support to India's need of nuclear energy and advised them "to promote a sense of security and justice in this region by eschewing discriminatory policies in their dealings with the India-Pakistan nuclear equation," This article well, articulates the point of view of the Army and not a balanced analysis of a foreign secretary. His worry, that in the long run Pakistan will not be able to maintain nuclear/arms parity and there fore India should be persuaded/forced to restrain; is faulty. I feel that as a seasoned civilian diplomat he should have projected the reality that the parity between India and Pakistan on every aspect is impractical. Knowing that there are no permanent friends or enemies in international relations why does the diplomat not seek parities with China, another neighbor of Pakistan.To day emphasis is needed on internal stability and spend energies on developing a progressive country instead off wasting energies obsessing about India.
@Rashid: "The world capitals are much more concerned whether Pakistan will survive as a viable state or whether it will become another ISIS with nuclear weapons in the hands of terrorists. Let us focus on internal stability and spend energies on developing a progressive country instead off wasting energies obsessing about India." This is the most straightforward and concise comment that sums up the matter realistically.
@SS: Well said. "Nuclear Walmart" hits it right on the head. Nations that are so irresponsible have no right to call themselves nuclear powers. Imagine if the Hamid Guls had let the Taliban have access to nukes in happier times. Imagine what Pakistan's plight would be now. The overhang of ISIS is still a big threat especially in an economically and politically unstable nation.
Maha Bahrata is just a dream by Indians....it'll never come to fruition.
Pakistan should be more concerned by threats from within, not from India.
@unbelievable: When your own country lacks it, why you bother about others ?
Toilet facilities — a luxury for most Pakistanis
http://tribune.com.pk/story/424180/toilet-facilities--a-luxury-for-most-pakistanis/
@Gary: With a fake name, your comment is just Hindu extremist hate boiling over.
@Huma: "If Pakistan does not appear in your ‘calculus’ than why are you here reading the Express Tribune?"
I guess for the same reason people read about Syria or Somalia or other trouble spots which are not in the calculus. These places are interesting and eventful.
@Author Believe me Mr Author ... here in India nobody is bothered or even remember what Pakistan is now ... also one thing is for sure that they feel blessed that Pakistan came into being for obvious reasons ... Actually we here think that the partition should have been ABSOLUTE and COMPLETE... so we could not have face the internal (sic) ie Pakistani induced religious problems. So don't play that Akhand Bharat bogey ... As per other competitions are concerned Pakistan is definitely at No. 1 in the world on Terrorist State List. I wish you could have written about the Democratic Parity with India instead.. Its very obvious that after retirement you have op-ed as your ONLY source of income ... ??
Pray, where/when would Pakistani tacnukes be used? Against an advancing Indian tank column inside Pakistani territory or would they be fired into India, in which case India would have the right to strike back. And then what? Pakistan would use all its nuclear weapons and invite a massive retaliatory strike? India's strengthening of its defense is not directed against Pakistan. In any case, if present developments are a guide, nothing India does can better Pakistan's own efforts at slowly destroying itself. It's time this ex-Foreign Secretary realizes that his usefulness to his country or possible contribution to any sane discussion has long been over.
keep all the politics aside and let ous talk about SAARC development. Namo is also talking about that. We should take lead from that.
Pakistan's credibility as a responsible nation got eroded due to multiple factors. First A Q Khan's nuclear Walmart followed by a history of using Jehadis as instrument of foreign policy in Afganistan and India. Unfortunately no one seem to believe when pakistan says that it is a thing of past when Osama Bin Laden was found recently and Hafiz Saeeds of the world roaming around freely spewing venom.
Also basic assumption being made by the author is that Pakistan's policy is reactive which is improbable. No matter what India does of does not will not change what Pakistan policy makers have decided to do which is driven by its desire of parity, not to talk about being a revisionist state.
Also unlike Pakistan, India has to look at the other rising super power across the Himalayas which it has territorial disputes and has seen how that power is riding roughshod on other smaller countries in the neighborhood. So India tying itself with Pakistan on strategic level is a non starter. If Pakistan wants to spend itself to bankruptcy militarily then it is a choice that the country has to make for itself, it should not blame India for that.
Pakistan is not able to make a needle on its own,Forget about nuclear weapon,All nuclear weapons of Pakistan are belongs to China,One day China and terrorists will take away Pakistan and will rename it Chinastan, and ISP(Islamic state of Pakistan)
What about the act of nuclear proliferation by supplying the know-how of atomic bomb to north korea, syria? Is this not condemnable?
"Arms reduction could follow in due course later as the two sides build up trust and confidence" ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ eh? Indian folklore about Pakistan includes a story about an Indian PM who rode a bus to 'build trust and confidence 'and skidded straight into Kargil.
Have you not learnt any lessons? Why this obsession with India when Pakistan is on fire? Clean up your own created mess and move on.
India's deeply ingrained laearning about Pakistan is that Pakistan cannot be trusted.( the famous taqiyaa philosophy). ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Americans can be fooled by Pakistan not Indians...we know what Pakistan says and what it means. Ditto for Iran and Afghanistan.
What could be the response of any conventionally weaker state to such a threat? The only credible response has to be a counter force, which in the India-Pakistan scenario means tactical warheads." ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ So 'tactical weapons' are ok for Pakistan vis a vis India but not ok for India vis a vis China? I can now see why NS has kept this guy far away from his Govt.
"India’s fast developing capabilities, including its dangerous weapon-inductions, aggressive doctrines and devious nuclear cooperation arrangements" +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ So pls remind me which country has a declared no first use policy and which country tested iIndia's resolve at Kargil? hmmm:).
"India shouldn't be encouraged in its Maha Bharata designs, " +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Strange advice emanating from the masters of the strategic depth .
Let us face it, Author, South asia does not start and end in Pakistan. The problems of the world are much more violent and brutal from Egypt to AfPak, the crescent of islamic countries. Unfortunately Pakistan is currently cooking in its own stew. The religion in this arc is the root cause of the problems. I hope u understand, ET : Pl publish
@sudeep:
So exactly when in the next 50 years does India get basics like toilets and clean drinking water for most of it's people?
Rashid - Your statements or comical. India's nuclear and arms buildup is really against your all weather friend China. Pakistan does not even come into the equation as India has enough bombs presently to reduce Pakistan into a parking lot.
Must say this is a soaring piece of the writers imagination!
Will Pakistan use its tactical nuclear weapons against the TTP in N Waziristan? ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ If the author would open his eyes Pakistan's existential enemy is internal.
This article is very one sided and blinded to the real problems of South Asia.
If Pakistan gives up the path of strategic assets, South Asia will become a peaceful region tomorrow.
Classic Pakistani selective memory. In case you forgot Pakistan got caught red handed selling nuke technology to the likes of N Korea, Libya and Iran - that's why the rest of the World doesn't treat India the same as Pakistan.
Was this written 10 years ago and just replicated again? Its laughable that this article is appearing at this time when all that is going on in Pakistan, Iraq etc. Time to use your skills on development of your people rather than grandstanding.
It appears the author, a former foreign secretary is obsessed with India's future defense strategies. India has to compete with China and all strategies for its future are to deal with China. Pakistan is just a small nuance that India has to deal with, not compete with. I am surprised at low level of intelligence of the author. India does not want to attack or even hurt Pakistan. A stronger and peaceful Pakistan is good for everybody.
Whining, begging, lying, blackmailing, and dishing out unsolicited advise to others seems like a grand pakistani strategy/policy for all her ills. Good luck with that.
@sudeep;
That which you have placed in quotes are neither what Rashid said, nor what he implied. It was what you have interpreted, which is out of place. Rashid is interested in developing a 'progressive' country - his words, not mine. Learn to be sensitive and appreciative of saner voices across your border.
The world and "devious" neighbours aren't taking the bait anymore. The game is up.
@Sudeep 'Pakistan cannot hope to compete with India' Pakistan has developed parity in nuclear weapons with India and that what all matters.
@ sudeep If Pakistan does not appear in your 'calculus' than why are you here reading the Express Tribune?
This incoherent and rambling former foreign secretary explains why Pakistan is isolated in the world, and why its foreign policy is such a mess. He doesn't know what is good for Pakistan...all he knows is .. India should not get this and should not do that.
Please tell these stories somewhere else. The world knows about your "Strategic Assets".
@sudeep: Your comment perhaps should have been directed to the author instead of @Rasheed?
@Author- India has a No first use doctrine, so India is certainly not the one lowering the nuclear threshold.
Secondly if you talk aout criteria based approach, consider a couple of criteria and tell me if India and Pakistan match 1) proliferation track record to other countries 2) Army under civilian rule (civilians are far less likely to atart a war or escalate it) 3) Terrorists likely to seize power.
@Sudeep, I think you meant to address the author not Rashid. Rashid seems to be saying what you are.
What Rashid said.
Rashid, India is planning for the next 50 years, by the end of which it will emerge as the largest economy (surpassing China and US).
Pakistan does not even enter our calculus - we will be 50 times your size by then.
Your logic is beyond ridiculous - 'Pakistan cannot hope to compete with India, for its own faults, so the world owes it to Pakistan to slow down India's rise and enable Pakistan to compete'
The world does not work that way, Rashid. Its time you wake up and smell the coffee
The world capitals are much more concerned whether Pakistan will survive as a viable state or whether it will become another ISIS with nuclear weapons in the hands of terrorists. Let us focus on internal stability and spend energies on developing a progressive country instead off wasting energies obsessing about India.