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Counter Pak nuke tactics

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StormShadow

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Counter Pak Nuke Tactics


In Pakistan’s nuclear strategy, the primary task of its nuclear weapons is not to deter that of India’s, but to avoid an engagement with a superior military capability. Rawalpindi is aware of the risk of having to confront India as long as it pursues terrorism. But, it believes its nuclear weapons provide a shield that constrains India from militarily punishing it.

India has responded to this strategy by suggesting and illustrating (with Kargil) that there is space to fight a conventional war even in the presence of nuclear weapons. Over time, India has also tweaked its military doctrine to make this viable. This has obviously disturbed Pakistan. For, if an Indian conventional response can still be tailored to remain below Pakistani red lines, then its nuclear weapons have obviously failed.

Pakistan cannot afford this. It has to keep its nuclear weapons relevant and in the face of India, and the world, if it has to prevent a military offensive provoked by self-sponsored terrorism. It is in this context that the idea of battlefield use of nuclear weapons, or what are colloquially called tactical nuclear weapons (TNWs), comes in handy. The very nature of such weapons projects a lowering of the nuclear threshold. The objective is to reclaim the space that India maintains exists for a conventional war despite the presence of nuclear weapons.

In playing this game, Pakistan is not seeking to exploit the military aspect of the TNW. It has no illusions about the military effectiveness of the weapon. At the same time, Pakistani decision makers well understand that escalation control, even in the event of a single use of a tactical nuclear weapon, could well have profoundly tragic consequences. But, the policy of brinkmanship is used by the country for deterrence. In TNW, Rawalpindi has found another tool of keeping India, and by extension the international community, on the edge. In its scheme of things, Pakistan would not have to use the TNW, but only the threat of their use, to deter India.

Pakistan is using its TNWs, therefore, to send a political signal, not to win on the battlefield. In fact, it realises that in order to prevail even in a tactical situation, it would need a large TNW arsenal, which may be beyond the capacity of its fissile material accumulation. But, the purpose of the threat to use low-yield nuclear weapons on military targets is not to cause battlefield damage of a substantive nature, but to threaten to create a new situation that deters India from a conventional response.

Pakistan’s strategy of exploiting the political potential of TNWs is based on two assumptions. One, their use would bring about a sufficient material and psychological shift in hostilities to stun India into a halt. Confronted with the prospect of further escalation, the nature of Indian polity would choose war-termination over escalation. This, Pakistan believes, would checkmate India’s ability to exploit its superior conventional capability since it would not have the will to act. A second assumption that Pakistan makes is that TNW use would not be seen as provocation enough by India, or the rest of the world, to merit a nuclear response that would lead to further escalation. So, the international community will stop India from continuing its conventional campaign or undertaking nuclear retaliation. As is evident, Pakistan is not miscalculating India’s capability, but its credibility to act.

India’s response to Pakistan’s TNW must address these assumptions. In fact, India does not need to develop TNWs of its own, but to focus on enhancing the credibility of its nuclear deterrence. Pakistan does not doubt India’s capability, but its political will in mounting retaliation. It tends to believe that India, despite the use of the TNW, would face an asymmetry of interests in mounting a nuclear response. The doubt in the mind of the adversary appears to be whether India with a strategic culture of military restraint would find it prudent, and more importantly, morally acceptable to inflict damage (and risk more on itself) in response to a threat that is not itself mortal.

It is this doubt that India must remove from the adversary’s mind. Having based its deterrence on the threat of punishment, it is imperative that the assuredness or the certainty of retaliation to cause unacceptable damage be sufficiently and credibly conveyed. This could be achieved by reinforcing the public profile of the nuclear command and control at both the military and the political levels. There is need for greater transparency of structures and processes that assure nuclear retaliation. Knowledge of the fact that measures are being taken (without these being disclosed) to ensure survivability of the arsenal, as well as the chain of command at the primary, secondary and tertiary levels, and of the communication systems, should be occasionally mentioned. Secondly, it should also be made widely known that Indian troops have the ability to fight through tactical nuclear use. This would send a message of preparedness to handle such use without bringing conventional operations to a halt or even confronting the political leadership with the choice of war termination, as assumed by Rawalpindi. Thirdly, strengthening the profile of the Strategic Forces Command in public perception is necessary. The knowledge of the existence of the organisation that is mandated and is prepared to handle deterrence breakdown would assure the Indian public, while also sending a signal of intent and purpose to the adversary. Fourthly, better evidence and communication of political resolve to undertake retaliation is necessary. Periodic statements from authoritative levels like the National Security Adviser or Commander-in-Chief, SFC, or occasional news reports about meetings of Political Council of the National Command Authority would signal the seriousness of government’s attention to the nuclear backdrop that confronts India.

The purpose of the Indian nuclear weapon is narrow and limited to safeguarding the country against nuclear coercion, blackmail or its possible use. The path it has chosen to achieve this is through the suggestion of deterrence by punishment. This strategy seeks to deter nuclear use by conveying a certainty of retaliation in response to a first use, irrespective of its yield or choice of target. For India, therefore, any use of the nuclear weapon would have strategic implications. Pakistan may have introduced a new element with TNW, but India must let it be known that it would play the nuclear game according to its own rules.

The author is an Indian Council of Social Science Research senior fellow at the Centre for Air Power Studies, New Delhi.

Counter Pak Nuke Tactics -The New Indian Express
 
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A nation you had 3 wars with built nuclear weps right after you....that was india's biggest failure. Least you could hve done is borrowed a pair of balls and than stop pak.
 
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Nuke weapons are only for show of power
In the Presence of Nuke Weapons the USSR was broken
Pak Nuke power is An Indian fear
 
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A nation you had 3 wars with built nuclear weps right after you....that was india's biggest failure. Least you could hve done is borrowed a pair of balls and than stop pak.
They never had or have that pair of ballz.
 
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Well as long as BJP is in power Political Will will always be there

It is when A coalition government is being run at Center with congress as major partner and remote control PM in place then will is the question mark. But i still believe the public backlash and indian news media would make any government press the N button the moment a tactical nuke is used against India by Pak.

Interestingly, I think atm there is a small change happening within pakistan which may avoid such thing forever.The Nawaz Sharif government did get weakend a lot by Imran Khan march and protests and hence the Kashmir jingoism is used to make everybody shift focus. But Mr Sharif is a man who wanted to see a developed pakistan with good peaceful future for pakistanis. He was honest at heart and still is. Or else Atal behari Vajpayee who is very good at knowing the true face of any human at first look wont have liked him. But He is severely undermined by Army who is hell bent at ensuring democracy does not get too strong. This in the long run would hamper pakistan.

As more time flies by and if modi delivers the development promises and reforms, there is a good chance that India would once again start developing every aspect of its Industry and partner many nations by inviting as well as freeing up its economy. Under such a siatuion the investments of strategic nature by all countries would isolate pakistan more as every nation would like to protect its interest. It is this which may create big problems for pakistan nuclear doctrine. Its not about pressure from countries from world over but rather drying up new investments which would finally make pakistani Awaam also questioning the political class and governing class of why they are not making efforts when their neighbour is developing faster and becoming more stronger in terms of economic and social prosperity.


Thus the whole tactical nuke story would start to fall apart as time goes by as will of the people would slowly triumph over everything.

BTW a question to all Pakistani PDFS here. May be @Oscar can help me on this. Since you are an experienced moderator and a rational thinker, do you really think this nuclear and Kashmir talk is helping Pakistan. I am not saying India is developed and we need more effort to make India Better. But what about pakistan really. Like India has some elemets of religious nature pakistan also has but why such elements gets more importance in your country. Why not strengthen the democracy and develop pakistan more? Do u agree with my assessment above. i may be wrong but love to hear a good healthy analysis on this.
 
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Nuke weapons are only for show of power
In the Presence of Nuke Weapons the USSR was broken
Pak Nuke power is An Indian fear

...The precense of Nukes was the reason that there was never a direct confrontation in Cold War.
Except, It was mainly proxies.
 
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The last time Hindu Extremists were voted to power in India under Atal Bihari Vajpaye, they turned Pakistan into a nuclear power in 1998.

Also, let's not forget India's 10-month long egg laying military exercise of 2002.
 
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the best counter of pak nukes is

india must keep her nukes in storage always :angel:
 
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Yes without the balls we made more than 90000 pairs of balls rot in our jails .. lolz

No, the Bengali sentiments did. If India had any balls, it would have seriously finished off Pakistan, and definitely NOT allowed Pakistan to get nukes, which were solely acquired to make India cease to exist, if time came.

Balls = Israel taking out Syrian/Iraqi assets and nuclear reactors.
Balls = Israelis bombing their nemesis at will.

Truth is, you never had the capability or will. Keep crying and bringing in 1971. Heck you don't even have the balls to take back Kashmir land that Pakistan invaded, and part of which proudly signed off to China. All India could do was, break off talks.

LOL.
 
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They never had or have that pair of ballz.
You are right. India never had the balls to confront Pak. Than all the India threat theories are make-believe, right?

No, the Bengali sentiments did. If India had any balls, it would have seriously finished off Pakistan, and definitely NOT allowed Pakistan to get nukes, which were solely acquired to make India cease to exist, if time came.

Balls = Israel taking out Syrian/Iraqi assets and nuclear reactors.
Balls = Israelis bombing their nemesis at will.

Truth is, you never had the capability or will. Keep crying and bringing in 1971. Heck you don't even have the balls to take back Kashmir land that Pakistan invaded, and part of which proudly signed off to China. All India could do was, break off talks.

LOL.

All the capability and will reside with Pakistan. Please put them to action and take the Indian Kashmir...
 
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Heck you don't even have the balls to take back Kashmir land that Pakistan invaded, and part of which proudly signed off to China

Actually Pakistan didnt hand over territory to China, just stop claiming territory China had under it's administration.
 
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No, the Bengali sentiments did. If India had any balls, it would have seriously finished off Pakistan, and definitely NOT allowed Pakistan to get nukes, which were solely acquired to make India cease to exist, if time came.

Balls = Israel taking out Syrian/Iraqi assets and nuclear reactors.
Balls = Israelis bombing their nemesis at will.

Truth is, you never had the capability or will. Keep crying and bringing in 1971. Heck you don't even have the balls to take back Kashmir land that Pakistan invaded, and part of which proudly signed off to China. All India could do was, break off talks.

LOL.

Well we can understand the pain of all the 90000+ pairs of balls rotten in Indian prisons. We don't have to finish off Pakistan. It will die slowly but surely. If Pakistan can make India cease to exist then India can make small piece of land call Pakistan evaporate like dust.
 
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