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Ababeel…and what next?

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Ababeel…and what next?
Home / Today's Paper / Opinion / Ababeel…and what next?
By Ayaz Amir
January 27, 2017
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Islamabad diary

Pakistan has tested a missile with a range of 2200 kilometres and capable of carrying multiple nuclear warheads, and the usual patriots – no shortage of this clan here, which elsewhere would be called hawks – are agog with excitement.

We are a nuclear power and have been for some time. Yet the strange thing is that instead of steadying the national ship and giving us some confidence, our super-hawks despite this capability get rattled every time there is a sneeze or cough from India. An Indian defence minister, army chief or super-hawk – there being plenty of this kind over there too – has only to let out some inanity about a cold-start doctrine or teaching Pakistan a lesson, and retired generals and self-appointed analysts here can be counted upon to mount the ramparts, beat their drum and raise the alarm.

What is with us? Israel has a nuclear arsenal but it keeps its mouth shut about it. The world knows it has nuclear weapons and for Israel that is enough. But we must keep talking about our nuclear prowess, in season and out. Israel never says its defence is invulnerable. It lets the facts speak for themselves. Hezbollah, Israel’s only credible rival in the Middle East, also never boasts about its toughness and resilience, qualities it has in ample measure. For it too actions speak louder than words.

This logic applies not to us. We must keep talking about our military and nuclear strength, and we must do so endlessly, perhaps not so much to frighten our enemies as to reassure ourselves. A nation more sure of itself would not lay so much store by verbal protestations.

But Ababeel, the multiple-warhead missile, is about testing not boasting. And the question this latest test raises is: how much of a nuclear deterrent does Pakistan require? In a rational world one nuclear bomb, with the attendant deliver capacity, would be enough. The other side can have a hundred bombs to match that one bomb, but that one bomb capable of wiping out Delhi or Mumbai (since we are talking of India) will be a sufficient deterrent.

We, however, have a veritable arsenal – bombs, missile delivery systems, cruise missile capability, and now even tactical nuclear weapons ostensibly for battlefield use. Anyone would say we were spoiled for choice. Yet instead of being satisfied with this varied capability Pakistan continues to dip into its scarce resources to engage in a never-ending arms race with India.

India doesn’t have to attack us. It need only keep us engaged in this folly and its ends – of keeping Pakistan tied down in an endless quest for security – will be achieved.

But the military are their own strategic masters, formulating their deterrence doctrines without a nod or suggestion from any other quarter. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto started Pakistan down the nuclear track. That credit cannot be taken away from him. But since his time nuclear doctrine has been the close preserve of the army command. What the army command decides, the nation, willy-nilly, follows. For nuclear doctrine – the narrative of deterrence – has been turned into a holy cow. No one dare question it for that amounts to a breach of patriotism.

Civilians in any event are careful to keep their hands off this subject – first, because they lack the expertise, not tutored in the hocus-pocus of deterrence; and, second, because the civilian leadership for the last 30 years if not more, from all sides of the political spectrum, has been more interested in such concrete endeavours as lining its pockets than worrying itself over such abstractions as nuclear doctrine.

There couldn’t be a neater division of labour: the military into defence, security, missiles and, let us not forget, defence housing authorities; and the civilians into dubious deals with fat commissions thrown in, overseas properties and offshore accounts – the military atop the commanding heights of national security and the civilians holding aloft the banner of democracy and ‘democratic continuity’.

This is a blanket amnesty scheme: all follies forgiven in the name of national security and all sins condonable at the altar of democracy.

Pakistan cannot invade and conquer Kashmir, whatever the Reverend Hafiz Saeed’s opinion on this subject. To hear him is to get a lesson in strategy Clausewitz would have found hard to configure. But Pakistan has enough strength to deter any Indian adventurism. So what is it afraid of?

Our generals should be teaching the nation assurance and self-confidence. Instead, serving or retired – and the retired ones are the worst – they continually feed a sense of chronic insecurity, aided by an entire army of retired foreign office hawks. As we know, there are no hawks like armchair hawks.

Pakistan has problems but they lie not in the realm of security or an imaginary nuclear imbalance. Pakistan is not educating its people and it is not creating enough wealth for national uplift and regeneration. Our economy is not ticking the way it should and our country is ridden with debt that soon would be unsustainable.

These are our problems, compounded by the fact that we have a ruling class that would scarcely find its match anywhere for unabashed corruption and incompetence. Are multiple-headed nuclear missiles the answer to these problems?

We once sold our so-called geostrategic importance as if the world revolved around the pivot of our geography. We are now pinning our hopes for the future on the Chinese corridor – anything for a free ride.

In the cold war there was no missile gap between the United States and the Soviet Union. This was a bogey raised at the time by American hawks and the military-industrial complex and it was so successful that the US entered a mad arms race, creating super-weapons of no earthly use for any kind of strategic balance. There is now an extensive literature on this subject and we in India and Pakistan could do worse than spend some time studying it.

There is no missile gap between India and Pakistan and those who say there is are fooling the Pakistani nation – that, let it be said, for all its vaunted cleverness, is easily fooled. Otherwise it wouldn’t easily suffer the chumps it has for its leaders, or easily put up with the doctrines that pass for nuclear necessity and wisdom.



Email: bhagwal63@gmail.com
 
Bull Shit ! We got a hostile neighbor run by hindu extremists.We need to develop more and more missiles for deterrence.
Yes we do have plenty of problems but first we need to survive to solve those problems. And for our survival tit for tat nuclear deterrence is essential.
 
Ababeel…and what next?
Home / Today's Paper / Opinion / Ababeel…and what next?
By Ayaz Amir
January 27, 2017
Print : Opinion
  • 0
  • 0
l_181935_094345_print.jpg



Islamabad diary

Pakistan has tested a missile with a range of 2200 kilometres and capable of carrying multiple nuclear warheads, and the usual patriots – no shortage of this clan here, which elsewhere would be called hawks – are agog with excitement.

We are a nuclear power and have been for some time. Yet the strange thing is that instead of steadying the national ship and giving us some confidence, our super-hawks despite this capability get rattled every time there is a sneeze or cough from India. An Indian defence minister, army chief or super-hawk – there being plenty of this kind over there too – has only to let out some inanity about a cold-start doctrine or teaching Pakistan a lesson, and retired generals and self-appointed analysts here can be counted upon to mount the ramparts, beat their drum and raise the alarm.

What is with us? Israel has a nuclear arsenal but it keeps its mouth shut about it. The world knows it has nuclear weapons and for Israel that is enough. But we must keep talking about our nuclear prowess, in season and out. Israel never says its defence is invulnerable. It lets the facts speak for themselves. Hezbollah, Israel’s only credible rival in the Middle East, also never boasts about its toughness and resilience, qualities it has in ample measure. For it too actions speak louder than words.

This logic applies not to us. We must keep talking about our military and nuclear strength, and we must do so endlessly, perhaps not so much to frighten our enemies as to reassure ourselves. A nation more sure of itself would not lay so much store by verbal protestations.

But Ababeel, the multiple-warhead missile, is about testing not boasting. And the question this latest test raises is: how much of a nuclear deterrent does Pakistan require? In a rational world one nuclear bomb, with the attendant deliver capacity, would be enough. The other side can have a hundred bombs to match that one bomb, but that one bomb capable of wiping out Delhi or Mumbai (since we are talking of India) will be a sufficient deterrent.

We, however, have a veritable arsenal – bombs, missile delivery systems, cruise missile capability, and now even tactical nuclear weapons ostensibly for battlefield use. Anyone would say we were spoiled for choice. Yet instead of being satisfied with this varied capability Pakistan continues to dip into its scarce resources to engage in a never-ending arms race with India.

India doesn’t have to attack us. It need only keep us engaged in this folly and its ends – of keeping Pakistan tied down in an endless quest for security – will be achieved.

But the military are their own strategic masters, formulating their deterrence doctrines without a nod or suggestion from any other quarter. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto started Pakistan down the nuclear track. That credit cannot be taken away from him. But since his time nuclear doctrine has been the close preserve of the army command. What the army command decides, the nation, willy-nilly, follows. For nuclear doctrine – the narrative of deterrence – has been turned into a holy cow. No one dare question it for that amounts to a breach of patriotism.

Civilians in any event are careful to keep their hands off this subject – first, because they lack the expertise, not tutored in the hocus-pocus of deterrence; and, second, because the civilian leadership for the last 30 years if not more, from all sides of the political spectrum, has been more interested in such concrete endeavours as lining its pockets than worrying itself over such abstractions as nuclear doctrine.

There couldn’t be a neater division of labour: the military into defence, security, missiles and, let us not forget, defence housing authorities; and the civilians into dubious deals with fat commissions thrown in, overseas properties and offshore accounts – the military atop the commanding heights of national security and the civilians holding aloft the banner of democracy and ‘democratic continuity’.

This is a blanket amnesty scheme: all follies forgiven in the name of national security and all sins condonable at the altar of democracy.

Pakistan cannot invade and conquer Kashmir, whatever the Reverend Hafiz Saeed’s opinion on this subject. To hear him is to get a lesson in strategy Clausewitz would have found hard to configure. But Pakistan has enough strength to deter any Indian adventurism. So what is it afraid of?

Our generals should be teaching the nation assurance and self-confidence. Instead, serving or retired – and the retired ones are the worst – they continually feed a sense of chronic insecurity, aided by an entire army of retired foreign office hawks. As we know, there are no hawks like armchair hawks.

Pakistan has problems but they lie not in the realm of security or an imaginary nuclear imbalance. Pakistan is not educating its people and it is not creating enough wealth for national uplift and regeneration. Our economy is not ticking the way it should and our country is ridden with debt that soon would be unsustainable.

These are our problems, compounded by the fact that we have a ruling class that would scarcely find its match anywhere for unabashed corruption and incompetence. Are multiple-headed nuclear missiles the answer to these problems?

We once sold our so-called geostrategic importance as if the world revolved around the pivot of our geography. We are now pinning our hopes for the future on the Chinese corridor – anything for a free ride.

In the cold war there was no missile gap between the United States and the Soviet Union. This was a bogey raised at the time by American hawks and the military-industrial complex and it was so successful that the US entered a mad arms race, creating super-weapons of no earthly use for any kind of strategic balance. There is now an extensive literature on this subject and we in India and Pakistan could do worse than spend some time studying it.

There is no missile gap between India and Pakistan and those who say there is are fooling the Pakistani nation – that, let it be said, for all its vaunted cleverness, is easily fooled. Otherwise it wouldn’t easily suffer the chumps it has for its leaders, or easily put up with the doctrines that pass for nuclear necessity and wisdom.



Email: bhagwal63@gmail.com

Mr Ayaz Amir seems U deliberately totally forgot to even hint at the fact that whatever we have done, was totally reactive and keeping the best possible solution to an emerging threat while keeping monetary constraints in mind and that what I call "A Smart Solution". People like U would just keep mum when enemy acquires any capability which is a sever threat to our existence but wud always make hue and cry when we come up with a smart counter solution of it. Let me ask U a few questions.

1: Did we start nuclear race in the region and should we have kept mum when enemy showed its intentions in 1974?
2: Did we start the cold start doctrine which took enemy almost 11 years and billions of dollars worth money to finally claim its ready? Instead we came up with just a test of Nasr and it sent shockwaves around the policy makers of adversary.
3: Did we first go for ICBM? Rather have we even gone there yet? We havent as it didnt serve any purpose as pr existing foreign policy.
4: Did we first announce that after ICBM next target in MIRV?
5: Did we first fire a submarine launched missile?

And the story goes on that proves that neither we are engaging in an arms race nor we have any adverse designs for anyone but whatever we do are best suited for national deterrence and safeguards against any eventuality.

Now coming to you pathetic question as whats next... The next in line is something that ll IN SHA ALLAH blow the brain out of your mind and likes of yours (if there is anything called brain in your skull) and U ll keep on moaning and weeping like this.
Now Shoo and go cry to your Mama.
 
Ababeel…and what next?
Home / Today's Paper / Opinion / Ababeel…and what next?
By Ayaz Amir
January 27, 2017
Print : Opinion
  • 0
  • 0
l_181935_094345_print.jpg



Islamabad diary

Pakistan has tested a missile with a range of 2200 kilometres and capable of carrying multiple nuclear warheads, and the usual patriots – no shortage of this clan here, which elsewhere would be called hawks – are agog with excitement.

We are a nuclear power and have been for some time. Yet the strange thing is that instead of steadying the national ship and giving us some confidence, our super-hawks despite this capability get rattled every time there is a sneeze or cough from India. An Indian defence minister, army chief or super-hawk – there being plenty of this kind over there too – has only to let out some inanity about a cold-start doctrine or teaching Pakistan a lesson, and retired generals and self-appointed analysts here can be counted upon to mount the ramparts, beat their drum and raise the alarm.

What is with us? Israel has a nuclear arsenal but it keeps its mouth shut about it. The world knows it has nuclear weapons and for Israel that is enough. But we must keep talking about our nuclear prowess, in season and out. Israel never says its defence is invulnerable. It lets the facts speak for themselves. Hezbollah, Israel’s only credible rival in the Middle East, also never boasts about its toughness and resilience, qualities it has in ample measure. For it too actions speak louder than words.

This logic applies not to us. We must keep talking about our military and nuclear strength, and we must do so endlessly, perhaps not so much to frighten our enemies as to reassure ourselves. A nation more sure of itself would not lay so much store by verbal protestations.

But Ababeel, the multiple-warhead missile, is about testing not boasting. And the question this latest test raises is: how much of a nuclear deterrent does Pakistan require? In a rational world one nuclear bomb, with the attendant deliver capacity, would be enough. The other side can have a hundred bombs to match that one bomb, but that one bomb capable of wiping out Delhi or Mumbai (since we are talking of India) will be a sufficient deterrent.

We, however, have a veritable arsenal – bombs, missile delivery systems, cruise missile capability, and now even tactical nuclear weapons ostensibly for battlefield use. Anyone would say we were spoiled for choice. Yet instead of being satisfied with this varied capability Pakistan continues to dip into its scarce resources to engage in a never-ending arms race with India.

India doesn’t have to attack us. It need only keep us engaged in this folly and its ends – of keeping Pakistan tied down in an endless quest for security – will be achieved.

But the military are their own strategic masters, formulating their deterrence doctrines without a nod or suggestion from any other quarter. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto started Pakistan down the nuclear track. That credit cannot be taken away from him. But since his time nuclear doctrine has been the close preserve of the army command. What the army command decides, the nation, willy-nilly, follows. For nuclear doctrine – the narrative of deterrence – has been turned into a holy cow. No one dare question it for that amounts to a breach of patriotism.

Civilians in any event are careful to keep their hands off this subject – first, because they lack the expertise, not tutored in the hocus-pocus of deterrence; and, second, because the civilian leadership for the last 30 years if not more, from all sides of the political spectrum, has been more interested in such concrete endeavours as lining its pockets than worrying itself over such abstractions as nuclear doctrine.

There couldn’t be a neater division of labour: the military into defence, security, missiles and, let us not forget, defence housing authorities; and the civilians into dubious deals with fat commissions thrown in, overseas properties and offshore accounts – the military atop the commanding heights of national security and the civilians holding aloft the banner of democracy and ‘democratic continuity’.

This is a blanket amnesty scheme: all follies forgiven in the name of national security and all sins condonable at the altar of democracy.

Pakistan cannot invade and conquer Kashmir, whatever the Reverend Hafiz Saeed’s opinion on this subject. To hear him is to get a lesson in strategy Clausewitz would have found hard to configure. But Pakistan has enough strength to deter any Indian adventurism. So what is it afraid of?

Our generals should be teaching the nation assurance and self-confidence. Instead, serving or retired – and the retired ones are the worst – they continually feed a sense of chronic insecurity, aided by an entire army of retired foreign office hawks. As we know, there are no hawks like armchair hawks.

Pakistan has problems but they lie not in the realm of security or an imaginary nuclear imbalance. Pakistan is not educating its people and it is not creating enough wealth for national uplift and regeneration. Our economy is not ticking the way it should and our country is ridden with debt that soon would be unsustainable.

These are our problems, compounded by the fact that we have a ruling class that would scarcely find its match anywhere for unabashed corruption and incompetence. Are multiple-headed nuclear missiles the answer to these problems?

We once sold our so-called geostrategic importance as if the world revolved around the pivot of our geography. We are now pinning our hopes for the future on the Chinese corridor – anything for a free ride.

In the cold war there was no missile gap between the United States and the Soviet Union. This was a bogey raised at the time by American hawks and the military-industrial complex and it was so successful that the US entered a mad arms race, creating super-weapons of no earthly use for any kind of strategic balance. There is now an extensive literature on this subject and we in India and Pakistan could do worse than spend some time studying it.

There is no missile gap between India and Pakistan and those who say there is are fooling the Pakistani nation – that, let it be said, for all its vaunted cleverness, is easily fooled. Otherwise it wouldn’t easily suffer the chumps it has for its leaders, or easily put up with the doctrines that pass for nuclear necessity and wisdom.



Email: bhagwal63@gmail.com
i am all about peace between pakistan and india. but this article is total rubbish writer has no knowledge about the ballistic missile shields, how to counter them or the importance of MIRV in the modern world hell he didn't even know what a minimum deterrence means.just one nuke to deter whole indian forces. are you kidding me.
guys have a look at this piece of crap
@The Sandman @Zibago @Moonlight @django @Mentee
 
i am all about peace between pakistan and india. but this article is total rubbish writer has no knowledge about the ballistic missile shields, how to counter them or the importance of MIRV in the modern world hell he didn't even know what a minimum deterrence means.just one nuke to deter whole indian forces. are you kidding me.
guys have a look at this piece of crap
@The Sandman @Zibago @Moonlight @django @Mentee
Plenty of lifafa jurno bruising their blank papers with pens now a days . And this guy claims to be an ex kaptaan :angel: Next icbm test kro :mad:
 
i am all about peace between pakistan and india. but this article is total rubbish writer has no knowledge about the ballistic missile shields, how to counter them or the importance of MIRV in the modern world hell he didn't even know what a minimum deterrence means.just one nuke to deter whole indian forces. are you kidding me.
guys have a look at this piece of crap
@The Sandman @Zibago @Moonlight @django @Mentee


Guys don't have a look at this piece of crap or you guys will lose brain cells. These liberals have lost their minds quite frankly. They were the same ones that were crying when pakistan conducted nuclear test. Our enemy has a massive budget and resource pool to attack us and a simple nuclear missile simply won't do. We needed submarine launched second strike capability and we needed MIRV and we need an advance ballistics missile defence. To compare us to Israel is stupid and foolish bcz Israel despite being smallest and surrounded by enemy nations is far stronger than her neighbors bcz it personally made sure nobody in the area would get nuclear bombs. Our situation is extremely different from Israel. Unbelievable writing to be honest.

These liberals hate the army, they hate the conservative section and they hate the politics. In their hatred they want pakistan to be a subservient nation that does nothing and follows US and India.
 
This Ayaz Amir wouldn't be breathing today if it wasn't for Ababeel and Babur. If you don't like the security given to you by Ababeel you can fvck off to some other place. So darn easy for these liberals to type a few sentences in a column...

Guys don't have a look at this piece of crap or you guys will lose brain cells. These liberals have lost their minds quite frankly. They were the same ones that were crying when pakistan conducted nuclear test. Our enemy has a massive budget and resource pool to attack us and a simple nuclear missile simply won't do. We needed submarine launched second strike capability and we needed MIRV and we need an advance ballistics missile defence. To compare us to Israel is stupid and foolish bcz Israel despite being smallest and surrounded by enemy nations is far stronger than her neighbors bcz it personally made sure nobody in the area would get nuclear bombs. Our situation is extremely different from Israel. Unbelievable writing to be honest.

These liberals hate the army, they hate the conservative section and they hate the politics. In their hatred they want pakistan to be a subservient nation that does nothing and follows US and India.

Exactly. Subservient is the keyword here. 200 million people are not going to be subservient to anyone.
 
Kon lgy GA ? Pehly b Lg chuki kea ukhaar lea, laikin in nashaio'n ki mazeed jl jy gi
right now only those companies are facing sanctions that were involve in developing these missiles.but after ICBM tests expect blanket economic sanctions on whole country by EU and america
 
This Ayaz Amir wouldn't be breathing today if it wasn't for Ababeel and Babur. If you don't like the security given to you by Ababeel you can fvck off to some other place. So darn easy for these liberals to type a few sentences in a column...
Excessive use of alcohol affects ones nervous system , nough said :D
 
right now only those companies are facing sanctions that were involve in developing these missiles.but after ICBM tests expect blanket economic sanctions on whole country by EU and america

They don't have the guts to apply sanctions. They know the consequences of that. The last time they did that they took an oath to never do it again.
 
right now only those companies are facing sanctions that were involve in developing these missiles.but after ICBM tests expect blanket economic sanctions on whole country by EU and america
Gone are the days when ptv and goraas used to scare us from the boogeyman of sanctions . With the organizations like sco and eco in existence who needs extra marital sympathy :P
 
They don't have the guts to apply sanctions. They know the consequences of that. The last time they did that they took an oath to never do it again.
any source of this claim sir.
and lets just be honest with our self here. why do we need icbms ? when every place we need to hit is in our range already.
 

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