Economic
threat may push Pakistan to go nuclear
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By Nadeem Iqbal
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ISLAMABAD - Pakistan has laid down scenarios under which
it may use nuclear weapons as a last resort. These include
when Pakistan considers its survival threatened by India,
not only militarily but economically, or when access to
shared water resources is blocked, says a new report by
Italian nuclear physicists who visited the country recently.
Concern about the two
South Asian rivals' nuclear doctrines has risen in recent
months amid a peaking of bilateral tensions in the wake
of the December 13 attack on the Indian parliament,
which New Delhi blames on Pakistan-based groups. Quoting
Lieutenant-General Khalid Kidwai of the nuclear Strategic
Plan Division (SPD), the report outlined Pakistan's
four nuclear thresholds, adding that "the nuclear
weapons are aimed solely at India".
The report says nuclear
weapons would be used if India crosses the "space
threshold" - if New Delhi attacks Pakistan and
conquers a large part of its territory - and the "military
threshold", if India destroys a large part of its
land or air forces. It also says Islamabad would resort
to nuclear methods if India proceeds to pursue the economic
strangulation of Pakistan, and if India pushes Pakistan
into "political destabilization or creates a large-scale
internal subversion" there.
The SPD acts as a secretariat
for the National Command Authority, created in 2000
to deal with all aspects of nuclear weapons and headed
by Pakistan's president and army chief, General Pervez
Musharraf. It is well known that unlike India, Pakistan
does not have a "no first use policy", which
its officials believe makes up for its smaller conventional
forces.
The report on Pakistan's
nuclear policy, released last month, was prepared by
nuclear physicists Paolo Cotta-Ramusino and Maurizio
Martellini of Landau Network, Italy, an arms-control
institution regularly consulted by the Italian Ministry
of Foreign Affairs. The two were in Pakistan in the
first week of December, before the escalation of tensions
between India and Pakistan that have put them on a virtual
war footing.
Their report consists
of a 25-question survey and has data from meetings with
think tanks, nuclear experts, retired and in-service
diplomats and generals, foreign ministers, journalists,
and peace activists. The study's aim was to assess the
impact of the Afghan war on the security of Pakistan's
nuclear weapons and on continued tensions with India,
which may have serious effects on the nuclear situation
in South Asia.
The report's release
came at a time when India severed road and air links
with Pakistan and when many hawks in India have been
demanding that New Delhi withdraw from the Indus (river)
Waters Treaty signed in 1960 by India, Pakistan, and
the World Bank. All the six rivers - the Indus, Ravi,
Jehlum, Beas, Sutlej and Chenab - flow into Pakistan
from India. A dispute over water emerged between the
two countries soon after independence in 1948, when
India cut off the water supply. The row continued for
almost a decade before the Indus Waters Treaty was signed,
giving rights of exclusive use of the waters of the
Indus, Jehlum, and Chenab rivers to Pakistan, and the
remaining ones to India.
The report's authors
said they asked General Kidwai if the above conditions
for the use of nuclear weapons were too broad and too
vaguely defined. They quote him as saying there would
be no risk of nuclear conflict assuming "rational
decision-making by both countries and if they stay clear
of the nuclear threshold and restrain from aggressive
behavior that could trigger a nuclear reaction".
The two physicists commented,
"It seems that the combination of the diversity
and broadness of the motivations that may justify the
use of nuclear weapons, on one side, and the use of
the nuclear threat to enforce rational decision-making,
ie, a not-too-aggressive behavior, by the opponent,
on the other side, is suggesting a vision of a doomsday
machine for Pakistani nuclear weapons, that is not reassuring.
"It is also clear,"
they continued, "that nuclear weapons are perceived
in Pakistan as an instrument to countervail a manifest
conventional inferiority vis-a-vis the Indian military
force. Presumably Pakistan feels or will feel compelled
to enlarge and diversify its nuclear arsenal so to increase
the nuclear options and make the threat of nuclear retaliation
more credible.
"If this diversification
will move Pakistan away from a doomsday-machine vision,
it will also increase the likelihood of the use of nuclear
weapons in a situation of crisis. Thus, the Indian subcontinent
may follow on a reduced scale [but not necessarily on
a reduced risk] the pattern of the US-USSR [former Soviet
Union] nuclear race during the Cold War."
They suggested that the
alternatives might come from dialogue and arms-control
negotiations directly between India and Pakistan on
one side and from some kind of international constraint
and pressure on the two nuclear programs on the other
side. The report also recalls some of the history of
the Pakistani nuclear program, saying that former army
chief General Aslam Beg had pointed out that by 1989
Pakistan had six devices and by 1991, 15 delivery systems.
It also quotes him as having said that the cost of the
nuclear program between 1975 and 1989 has been in the
neighborhood of US$200 million.
"General Aslam Beg
made some reference to keeping [in the future] the total
number of devices between 75 and 90 just to readdress
the conventional balance vis-a-vis India, which possesses
an army three times as big as Pakistan, an air force
five times as big as Pakistan and a navy six times as
big as Pakistan," the report explained. "The
bombs have been declared by General Musharraf to be
in a 'disassembled state', meaning probably that the
fission core is kept separately from the non-nuclear
[ignition] components. Nevertheless, according to General
Kidwai, the bombs can be reassembled 'very quickly'."
The report quoted Kidwai
as saying Pakistan has "ground and air capability
for the delivery of nuclear weapons", which "apparently
means that bombs/warheads can be delivered by airplanes
and/or missiles". It added, "General Kidwai
said explicitly that nuclear artillery is not part,
at the moment, of the Pakistani nuclear programs."
Regarding the existence
of PALs (permissive action links) to prevent the unauthorized
use of nuclear weapons, the report cited comments by
some in the Islamabad Policy Research Institute that
keeping the weapons in an unassembled state makes PALs
unnecessary. It quotes them as saying PALs would be
needed only if the weapons are assembled and, as a consequence,
putting them together could be interpreted as a sign
that Pakistan is moving toward a quicker nuclear reaction
capability.
Foreign Minister Abdul
Sattar has said there is a possibility that a group
of Pakistani officials may visit the United States to
discuss such issues as the control of nuclear devices.
The Italian physicists identified it as a gray area,
saying that PALs do not exist, but that weapons can
still be assembled "very quickly" and thus,
the reaction during crises can be relatively "very
quick". This raises important questions about the
effective control of nuclear weapons in crises, and
points to an area where international cooperation with
nuclear and non-nuclear weapons states could be developed.
The Italian physicists'
report concluded that an offer of cooperation to improve
security and safeguards of nuclear materials and weapons
can be, and probably will be, positively considered
by Pakistan - provided that some obvious conditions,
such as the protection of classified data and the absence
of intrusive activities, are met.
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