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Our Nuclear Nightmare

third eye

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Our nuclear nightmare - Rizwan Asghar

If you ever ask nuclear advocates in our strategic community why Pakistan is going down the dangerous road leading towards the development of tactical nuclear weapons (TNWs), the most logical explanation could be a description of the threats emanating from India’s Cold Start Doctrine (CSD).

The CSD is basically a strategy to execute a ‘limited war under a nuclear overhang’; the Indian army has been working on it since 2004. Although the Indians deny the existence of the CSD, the Indian army has repeatedly conducted military exercises to operationalise it.

In order to counter this provocative doctrine, the Pakistani military has developed a short-range nuclear system to dissuade India from contemplating any ‘limited’ strike against our country. However, according to many experts, India’s CSD and the Pakistani move towards TNWs have significantly raised the dangers of nuclear escalation between the two countries. TNWs, as opposed to strategic nuclear weapons, are aimed at ‘counter force targets’ and their deployment is much more convenient than that of strategic nuclear weapons.

Pakistan’s nuclear establishment is of the view that the development of TNWs is designed to ensure ‘full-spectrum deterrence’ when the strategic environment in South Asia is rapidly shifting. It is further hoped that TNWs will substantially strengthen Pakistan’s deterrence abilities. However, there is no strong evidence to suggest that these tactical weapons are really necessary for minimal, credible deterrence.

The small size of TNWs add little to deterrence and only the threat of ‘massive nuclear retaliation’ can stop India from launching limited conventional strikes. If India is not deterred from nuclear attack by 100-plus warheads, it is difficult to understand how a few tactical weapons will make any difference. The Indian armed forces have also repeatedly warned that the Indian nuclear doctrine makes no distinction between tactical and strategic weapons. Even a limited Pakistani nuclear attack would be met with massive nuclear retaliation.

The truth is that Pakistani nuclear experts have rarely, if ever, tried to examine the utility of developing battlefield nuclear weapons. In actuality, the deployment of TNWs will be detrimental to deterrence stability in the region, making the unauthorised use of nuclear weapons more probable. In my opinion, the idea of developing battlefield nuclear weapons seems an ‘overreaction’ to an impractical Cold Start strategy. The CSD is a non-starter as it assumes a capability for high-tech combined-arms warfare that India cannot acquire in the near future.

Many western analysts are afraid that the continuing expansion of India’s and Pakistan’s nuclear capabilities increases the chance of any small conflict escalating into a full-blown nuclear war in South Asia. Because some non-strategic nuclear weapons are deployed against the conventional forces in the battlefield, they enhance the risk of such escalation.

For almost a decade after the 1998 nuclear tests, Pakistan’s nuclear establishment aimed to have only enough weapons for maintaining a ‘credible minimum deterrent’ because we could not waste massive resources to engage in a nuclear arms race with India. However, during the past five years, the nuclear security managers have forgotten the aim of maintaining a ‘modest’ nuclear arsenal.

Some nuclear advocates in Pakistan make out a case that the policy of developing TNWs is similar to Nato’s nuclear posture towards the Soviet Union during the first two decades of the cold war. However, these nuclear advocates not only ignore the many problems of escalation control faced by Nato at that time but also use an analogy that is highly misleading and mistaken in many key aspects.

By the 1960s, it was acknowledged by Nato officials that the use of TNWs could not avert defeat and even their limited use would completely devastate their own territories. The US joint chiefs of staff concluded in their first study of nuclear weapons in 1945: “The atomic bomb...will be primarily a strategic weapon of destruction against concentrated industrial areas vital to the war effort of the enemy nation...On the other hand, the atomic bomb is not in general a tactical weapon suitable for employment against ground forces...because they normally offer targets too widely dispersed to justify the use of a weapon of such limited availability and great cost.”

This shows that if the US military failed to develop a workable force structure to employ TNWs, Pakistan’s nuclear establishment could not be expected to have any genius to perform this miracle.

It is so far unclear if Pakistan will use short-range nuclear weapons to annihilate advancing Indian troops near our big cities. Such an attack would turn Pakistan’s densely populated agricultural heartland into a nuclear wasteland and also cause serious radiation damage to other parts of the country. This was a major reason the idea of employing these weapons against any Soviet advance was eventually abandoned by Nato countries. The fact is that the atomic bomb, in fact, cannot be effectively used as a tactical weapon. The current approach of our nuclear establishment foolishly assumes that if thousands of Indian troops move into Pakistani territory, we can use these weapons against them without killing our own citizens.

Both countries can afford neither Cold Start-type doctrines nor battlefield nuclear weapons. Pakistan should take immediate steps to eliminate tactical weapons and instead focus on its ‘internal’ security challenges. Today, our economy is only one-seventh of India’s and our financial position is rapidly in decline. The government should spend more money on uplifting the economic situation of the people than on misconceived strategies. Finally, our civilian government also needs to play a role in determining the overall military strategy. In the words of George Clemensau: “war is too serious a matter to be left to military generals”.
 
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such a pathetic article if you attack pakistan and lets say you are inside pakistan what pakistan would do is blow new dehli blow all the strategic assets of india than who ever is left inside would be met by pakistan army man to man .... every pakistan would come out of home we all have weapons in our homes and believe me Muslims would rule once again india you really dont know pakistan what a bomb it is ...EVERY SINGLE **** IS A ATOM BOMB FOR INDIA REMEMBER THAT

YOUR COLD WAR DOCTRINE WOULD BE FLOOTING IN GUTTERS OF PAKISTAN
 
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such a pathetic article if you attack pakistan and lets say you are inside pakistan what pakistan would do is blow new dehli blow all the strategic assets of india than who ever is left inside would be met by pakistan army man to man .... every pakistan would come out of home we all have weapons in our homes and believe me Muslims would rule once again india you really dont know pakistan what a bomb it is ...EVERY SINGLE **** IS A ATOM BOMB FOR INDIA REMEMBER THAT

YOUR COLD WAR DOCTRINE WOULD BE FLOOTING IN GUTTERS OF PAKISTAN

Sorry !!! We are NOT impressed by your shenanigans
 
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A very good article, supports the US decision not to go for small tactical nukes which is not a 'game changer' or deterrent.
 
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If Pakistan chooses to nuke its own territory its actually doing India a favour.
 
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such a pathetic article if you attack pakistan and lets say you are inside pakistan what pakistan would do is blow new dehli blow all the strategic assets of india than who ever is left inside would be met by pakistan army man to man .... every pakistan would come out of home we all have weapons in our homes and believe me Muslims would rule once again india you really dont know pakistan what a bomb it is ...EVERY SINGLE **** IS A ATOM BOMB FOR INDIA REMEMBER THAT

YOUR COLD WAR DOCTRINE WOULD BE FLOOTING IN GUTTERS OF PAKISTAN

why you are trying too hard to get a rank like "most foolish person of the forum"?
You start trolling everywhere, without knowing the matter of the thread.
 
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Tactical nuclear deterance is a bad idea. There was a very good article on PDF itself. The article stated that Pakistan will require 1000 tactical nukes to eleminate half of indian tank force.
 
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“war is too serious a matter
to be left to military
generals”.

every single word of this line is made for Pakistan.
Military dictatership is not a good thing but reading some person's comment here, I strongly believe that Pakistani people also loves this dictatership more than democracy.
And as far as nukes are concerned, you will never see any Indian saying we will nuke this, we will nuke that.
But Pakistanis are saying it loudly, I remember one politician there saying without giving the chance to other experts-"hum India pe bomb marenge, hum Indiiiiiaa pe bomb marenge, marenge hum nuclear, hum India pe nuclear attack karenge" :lol:
bomb na hua rasgulle(gulab jamun) ho gaye :p.
 
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Pakistani TNW have already proved there incredible effects and pain in. .... to enemies.
There was time when one enemy was suggesting surgical strikes on pakistan and massive simultaneous attacks on Pakistani kee sites by other but ALHAMDOLILLAH TNW were one of the biggest thorn in their throats.
This TNW is most credible weapon after SNW in Pakistani inventory.
THAT'S WAY DIFFRENT PRAPOGANDAL ATTACKS ARE DONE IN HASTE USELESSLY.

ENEMIES ARE FACING OUR TNW WITH FALIOUR IN ALL THEIR DREAMS AGAINST GREAT PAKISTAN.

Pakistan should increse modernise qualitative and quatitatively TNW & SNW as a beautiful gift for enemies.
 
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The article skips one important narrative and hence ignores the very PURPOSE of the TNWs. The TNWs are NOT there to stop India's columns more than they are to provoke India into using its own weapons... weapons that escalate all the way into total conflict where nuclear weapons are dropped on Indian cities and here as well. Mutually Assured Destruction.
 
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Wow! Another genius on nuclear strategy!

United States developed tactical nukes to a level of Artillery Shell Nukes. They moved away from this ONLY AFTER achieving nuclear equilibrium called MAD (mutually assured destruction) which is also loosely associated to Second Strike capability. Pakistan worked on its second strike capability first then moved to tactical nukes. Reports are that Pakistan may be increasing its nuclear weapons at the fastest pace in the world. Now here is how it plays out,

1. India penetrates its forces with intention to capture land at shallow depths hoping to stay below nuclear threshold and backed by massive retaliation threat.

2. Pakistan's conventional forces fail to stop the advance and Indians are closer to over run population centers of lesser significance.

3. Pakistan launches tactical nukes in its own territory on advancing Indian forces.

4. India launches massive strikes of nuclear weapons but fails to destroy Pakistan's nuclear capability (remember Pakistan's second strike capability?)

5. Pakistan launches its massive strikes of nuclear weapons (remember fastest growing stockpile of nuclear weapons?)

6. Both Indian and Pakistani people eat radioactive contaminated grass for 20 years!

7. A sane Indian mind plays this scenario to its political leadership.

8. They say don't attack, it's not worth the result. We will never be elected again if this happens to our country.

9. Insane people fume!

Moral: Nuclear weapons are to stop the war not to fight it.
Moral 2: Article is published in Jang group by a teenage looking author. We all have better things to do in life!
 
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