What's new

Nuclear Mainstream

third eye

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Aug 24, 2008
Messages
18,519
Reaction score
13
Country
India
Location
India
An informative article.
Some parts in red / bold are downright hilarious - thats the only word that comes to mind.
Amazing psyche !!



Nuclear mainstream - Newspaper - DAWN.COM


PAKISTAN seeks to join the mainstream of the international nuclear order with Beijing’s support. Washington has offered words of qualified encouragement. A June 2015 US-Pakistan joint statement “emphasised the desirability of continued outreach to integrate Pakistan into the international nonproliferation regime.” But Pakistan’s path to the mainstream faces many obstacles.

The immediate objective of Pakistan’s mainstreaming diplomacy is to be accorded a civil nuclear deal like that given to India by the Nuclear Suppliers Group in 2008. Islamabad also seeks to become an NSG member, alongside India. Or, failing this, to block India from becoming a member. The NSG operates by consensus, meaning if India became a member it could block Pakistani membership in the future.

India is pushing hard for admission in 2016, with support from the Obama administration and other NSG members, including Australia, Canada, France, Japan, Russia, and the UK. There is not yet consensus about Indian membership, but New Delhi’s case is advancing. The window for Pakistan’s mainstreaming into the global nuclear order is closing.

Since Pakistan is already receiving nuclear reactors from China — and since it cannot finance reactors elsewhere — why does it need or want to be an NSG member? Presumably, the answer has to do with standing in the nuclear order equivalent to India and not being frozen in an ‘inferior’ position.

India was able to secure a nuclear deal by leveraging international commercial interest in its nuclear market, and by offering improved strategic political relations to the US and others. Pakistan lacks these means of suasion, making a commercial N-power path to mainstreaming unlikely. For Pakistan, the path to success lies in n-weapon-related initiatives.

Pakistan has worked hard to build diverse nuclear capabilities, which it will retain as a necessary deterrent against perceived existential threats from India. At this juncture, Pakistan’s military leadership can choose to accept success in achieving a ‘strategic’ deterrent against India, sufficient to prevent nuclear exchanges and a major conventional war. Alternatively, it can choose to continue to compete with India in the pursuit of ‘full spectrum’ deterrence, which would entail open-ended nuclear requirements. These choices lead Pakistan to two starkly different nuclear futures and places in the global nuclear order.

Pakistani officials reiterate their intention not to enter an arms race with India, but the growth in Pakistan’s N-weapons complex suggests otherwise. More nuclear weapons and more fissile material will not deter India to a greater extent than is already the case. On the other hand, more nuclear weapons and more fissile material will not help Pakistan address its internal political, economic, and security challenges. Nor will these programmes help Pakistan join the nuclear mainstream.

By choosing to accept success in achieving the requirements of “strategic” deterrence, Pakistan is in a position to consider nuclear initiatives that would clarify its commitment to strengthening nuclear norms, regimes, and practices, and that would address widely held perceptions that its nuclear weapons are a major source of danger in South Asia. We propose that Pakistan consider five nuclear weapon-related initiatives that have previously been inconceivable: Shift declaratory policy from ‘full spectrum” to ‘strategic’ deterrence; commit to a recessed deterrence posture and limit production of short-range delivery vehicles and tactical nuclear weapons; lift Pakistan’s veto on FMCT negotiations and reduce or stop fissile material production; separate civilian and military nuclear facilities; sign the CTBT without waiting for India.

These initiatives are easy to dismiss — but none would impair Pakistan’s successful accomplishment of strategic deterrence against India. By rejecting them and continuing to compete with India, Pakistan is unlikely to be mainstreamed. By adopting them, Pakistan places India in a position of having to match Pakistan or risk losing entry into the NSG. Adopting these initiatives would, however, require difficult and fundamental adjustments to Pakistan’s thinking about nuclear weapons. Precisely because these initiatives would be so difficult and unusual for Pakistan, they would change perceptions about Pakistan and its place in the global nuclear order.

Taking even some of the five initiatives would clarify Pakistan’s commitment to adopt similar practices as other states with nuclear weapons. They would reduce risks of escalation that could lead to nuclear war. And they could facilitate Pakistan’s entrance into the nuclear mainstream, while strengthening nonproliferation norms, bolstering global disarmament hopes, and setting the bar higher for new entrants into the NSG.

The steps we propose lend themselves to mainstreaming. More importantly, these steps would advance Pakistan’s national, social, and economic security interests.

The writers have authored the report A Normal Nuclear Pakistan, published by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and the Stimson Centre.

Published in Dawn, August 27th, 2015


@vsdoc @nair @Nair saab @MilSpec @doppelganger @levina @Bang Galore @Star Wars @JanjaWeed @Abingdonboy
 
No nuclear power except the US and Russia is geared for nuclear war fighting. That race finished before it began for the rest. That is the real nuclear club that really matters. The N2.

Everything else, including grandiose "full spectrum" talk, is adolescent locker room organ measuring and fireman games.

I remember the discussion on de-hyphenation in the old days here.

It seems the ripples are still strong. The further we get from the center.
 
Anyone Indian who reads this article would chuckle, specially after reading the line marked in red.
India's nuclear résumé is comparable with that of the elite club of nuclear weapons states, and it doesn't have a reason to worry. Since Pakistan reserves the right for first strike so the onus of preventing a nuclear war in the region is also on Pakistan.
The reason why amassing of nuclear arsenal by Pakistan has not alarmed many is because it claims its nuclear policy is not open ended. They follow a regressive nuclear policy which is ultimately bound to weaken them....like Ajith Doval says. Or may be this is the Indian strategy.

Did not get any notification.
I'm assuming @Bang Galore @Star Wars @JanjaWeed @Abingdonboy also did not get any alert because only the first five tags get notification.
 
Anyone Indian who reads this article would chuckle, specially after reading the line marked in red.
India's nuclear résumé is comparable with that of the elite club of nuclear weapons states, and it doesn't have a reason to worry. Since Pakistan reserves the right for first strike so the onus of preventing a nuclear war in the region is also on Pakistan.
The reason why amassing of nuclear arsenal by Pakistan has not alarmed many is because it claims its nuclear policy is not open ended. They follow a regressive nuclear policy which is ultimately bound to weaken them....like Ajith Doval says. Or may be this is the Indian strategy.


Did not get any notification.
I'm assuming @Bang Galore @Star Wars @JanjaWeed @Abingdonboy also did not get any alert because only the first five tags get notification.
Thanks for sharing this . Was unaware of this.
 

Back
Top Bottom