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Pakistan’s army is building an arsenal of ”tiny” nuclear weapons—and it’s going to backfire

Abingdonboy

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Pakistan has the fastest growing nuclear arsenal and, within the next five to ten years, it is likely to double that of India, and exceed those of France, the United Kingdom, and China. Only the arsenals of the United States and Russia will be larger.

In recent years, Pakistan has boasted of developing “tactical nuclear weapons” to protect itself against potential offensive actions by India. In fact, Pakistan is the only country currently boasting of making increasingly tiny nuclear weapons (link in Urdu).

Pakistanis overwhelmingly support their army and its various misadventures. And the pursuit of tactical weapons is no exception. However, there is every reason why Pakistanis should be resisting—not welcoming—this development. The most readily identifiable reason is that, in the event of conflict between the two South Asian countries, this kind of weaponization will likely result in tens of thousands of dead Pakistanis, rather than Indians. And things will only go downhill from there.

Why would Pakistan want “the world’s smallest nuclear weapons”?
In late 1999, Pakistan’s general Pervez Musharraf (who took power of Pakistan through a military coup in Oct. 1999 and remained in power until 2008), along with a tight cabal of fellow military officials began a limited incursion into the Kargil-Dras area of Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir. While planning for this began in the fall of 1998, by the time Pakistani troops were discovered there in May of 1999 Pakistani forces had taken territory that was several miles into India-administered Kashmir.

Because the Pakistanis had the tactical advantage of occupying the ridge line, India took heavy losses in recovering the area from the invaders. The so-called Kargil War was the first conventional conflict between India and Pakistan since the two conducted nuclear tests in May 1998. International observers were wary that the conflict would escalate either in territory or aims, with the potential for nuclear exchange.

Fearing such escalation, then Pakistani prime minister Nawaz Sharif sought support from China and the United States. Both were adamant that Pakistan respect the line of control, which separated the portions of Jammu-Kashmir administered by India and Pakistan.

Under international pressure and branded an irresponsible state, Pakistan withdrew its forces from Kashmir. It initially claimed that the intruders were mujahedeen—but this was later found to be pure fiction. While Pakistan was isolated internationally, the international community widely applauded India’s restraint. The Kargil War provided the United States with the opportunity to reorient its relations away from Pakistan towards India, while at the same time, demonstrated to India that the United States would not reflexively side with Pakistan.

In retrospect, the Kargil war catalyzed the deepening security cooperation between the United States and India. It also galvanized a serious rethink in India about its domestic security apparatus, intelligence agencies’ capabilities, and overall military doctrine.

Crucially, India learned from this conflict that limited war is indeed possible under the nuclear umbrella. In Oct. 2000, air commodore Jasjit Singh, who retired as the director of operations of India’s air force and headed India’s Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses until 2001, laid out the lineaments of an India’s limited war doctrine. However, no apparent effort was made to make this a viable military concept immediately and India persisted with its defensive posture. In late Dec. 2001, Pakistani terrorists from the Pakistan-backed military group Jaish-e-Mohammad attacked India’s parliament in New Delhi.

In response, India’s government began the largest military mobilization since the 1971 war, which resulted in the liberation of Bangladesh, then East Pakistan. Just as the crisis was subsiding, another group of Pakistani terrorists, Lashkar-e-Taiba, attacked the wives and children of Indian military personnel in Kaluchak, Kashmir. India again seemed poised to take military action but ultimately backed down. The crisis was officially defused after India held elections in Kashmir later that fall. Pakistan concluded that its nuclear arsenal had successfully deterred India from attacking.

As Walter Ladwig has written, analysts identified several problems with India’s posture during that crisis. First, the Indian army took a long time to mobilize which gave Pakistan time to internationalize the conflict and to bring international pressure to bare upon India. Second, the mobilization of India’s strike corps had no element of surprise. Even Pakistan’s modest surveillance capabilities could easily detect their movements, and given their “lumbering composition,” could quickly discern their destination. Third, according to Ladwig, India’s holding corps’ were forward deployed to the border but lacked offensive power and could only conduct limited offensive tasks.

In response to these collective inadequacies, and the prospects of enduring threats from Pakistan, the Indian defense community began formalizing what came to be known as “Cold Start.” Ladwig, who wrote the first comprehensive account, claims that the doctrine aimed to pivot India away from its traditional defensive posture, and towards a more offensive one. It involved developing eight division-sized “integrated battle groups” that combined infantry, artillery, and armor which would be prepared to launch into Pakistani territory on short notice along several axes of advance.

These groups would also be closely integrated with support from the navy and air force. With this force posture, India could quickly mobilize these battle groups and seize limited Pakistani territory before the international community could raise objections.

India could then use this seized territory to force Pakistan into accepting the status quo in Kashmir. While Indians insist that this doctrine never existed, other analysts discount Indian demurrals and note slow—but steady—progress in developing these offensive capabilities. Irrespective of India’s protestations, Pakistanis take “Cold Start” to be a matter of Quranic fact.

Worried that its primary tools of using terrorism fortified by the specter of nuclear war, and fearing that India would be able to force acquiescence, Pakistan concluded that it could vitiate “Cold Start” by developing tactical nuclear weapons. As Pakistan’s former ambassador the United States and current ambassador to the United Nations, Maleeha Lodhi, explained, the basis of Pakistan’s fascination with tactical nuclear weapons is “to counterbalance India’s move to bring conventional military offensives to a tactical level.’’

Pakistani military and civilians often boast of their fast growing arsenal of the world’s smallest nuclear weapons and routinely update the world on the progress of the short-range missile, the Nasr, that would deliver this ever-shrinking payload.

Why should ordinary Pakistanis care?
While Pakistanis overwhelmingly applaud their army’s continued efforts to harass India in pursuit of Kashmir—a territory that Pakistan was never entitled to but fought three wars to acquire by force—there are numerous reasons why Pakistanis should be more sanguine, or even alarmed by Pakistan’s development of tactical nuclear weapons.

The first reality that should discomfit ordinary Pakistanis is that there is really no such thing as a “tactical nuclear weapon.” Even the smallest so-called tactical nuclear weapon will have strategic consequences. (Simply calling them “battlefield nuclear weapons” does not obviate this serious problem.) If Pakistan should use such weapons on India, there is virtually no chance that India will be left responding alone. The international community will most certainly rally around India. The response to Pakistan breaking a nuclear taboo that formed after the Americans used atomic bombs on Japan will most certainly be swift and devastating.

Second, as Shashank Joshi, a war studies researcher at the University of Oxford, has argued, these weapons do not have the military benefits that Pakistan’s military boasts, yet they exacerbate the enormous command and control challenges, including the possibility that nefarious elements may pilfer them once they are forward deployed. For one thing, tactical nuclear weapons do not have significant battlefield effects on enemy targets. For another, it is not evident that these weapons are in fact capable of deterring an Indian incursion into Pakistan.

Third, while Naeem Salik, a former director for arms control at Pakistan’s Strategic Plans Directorate, has said that Pakistan has shifted away from merely doctrinal thinking towards “actual nuclear war fighting,” such thinking is hardly viable for the simple reason of faulty math.

Even if, for the sake of argument, one assumes that Pakistan deploys its one hundred odd weapons of 15 to 30 kilotons at India’s major cities, it is unlikely that Pakistan would be able to deploy all of these weapons to conduct a “splendid first strike,” by which Indian capabilities are completely destroyed.

Moreover, it takes considerably fewer weapons of similar magnitude to utterly destroy Pakistan. Pakistan has thoughtfully concentrated all but three corps in central the Punjab region, which is also its most populous province and the country’s industrial and agricultural center. In short, Pakistan will cease to be a viable political entity while India, though grievously hurt, will survive as a state. Even if Pakistan obtains a functioning triad and retains launch capabilities from submarines, they will be launched in defense of a state that, simply put, no longer exists.

There is a fourth problem that should disquiet Pakistanis perhaps even more than the triggering of the destruction of their country through the deliberate or inadvertent use of their micro-weapons—these tactical nuclear weapons are intended to be used first against Indian troops on Pakistani soil. According to a conference report by the Naval Post School, which hosted Pakistan’s military and diplomatic officials, one Pakistani luminary opined that the “Nasr creates a balancing dynamic that frustrates and makes futile the power-maximizing strategy of India.”

He envisages the Nasr’s shells being used to carry atomic explosives that would annihilate advancing Indian armored thrusts in the southern deserts and blunt Indian advances toward major Pakistani cities, such as Lahore. Retired military general S. F. S. Lodhi, in the April 1999 issue of the Pakistan Defence Journal, laid out four stages of escalation in Pakistan’s use of tactical nuclear weapons which aligns with this view as well.

The consequences of Pakistan nuking itself to keep the Indians out should disturb Pakistanis. According to calculations by Jaganath Sankaran, Pakistan would have to use a 30-kiloton weapon on its own soil, as this is the minimum required to render ineffective fifty percent of an armored unit.

Using Lahore as an example, a 30-kiloton weapon used on the outskirts of the city could kill over 52,000 persons. As Indian troops move closer to Lahore and as the population increases, such a weapon could kill nearly 380,000. Sankaran notes, as an aside, that this would “genuinely destroy a larger battalion or brigade.” Consequently, many more Pakistanis would be likely to die than these horrendous figures suggest.

All of sudden, Pakistan’s tactical nuclear weapons don’t look so fun for any Pakistani who thinks through the math.

Fifth, Pakistanis should be derisive of this new weapon in the national arsenal because it cannot do what the army promises: protect Pakistan from an Indian offensive. Would any Indian military planner take seriously Pakistan’s threat to use nuclear weapons on its own soil when the casualties are so high? Pakistan may have been willing to eat grass to get its nuclear weapons, but is it willing destroy its own center of gravity to maintain its ability to harass India with terrorism over territory to which it never had any legal claim? If the Indians do not take this threat seriously, how is it a deterrent against them? What additional deterrent capability do these weapons afford Pakistan that its strategic assets do not that compensates for the enormous risks they convey?

Finally, if India took Pakistan’s threats seriously, it does not have to invade Pakistan to coerce the country’s leaders to detonate one of these weapons on its own soil. Presumably simply looking adequately likely to cross the international border and threaten a major Punjabi city could provoke a “demonstration detonation.”

I am not encouraging a nuclear Armageddon upon Pakistan; rather expositing the limited utility that these weapons confer upon Pakistan.

Even if Pakistan fully inducts these weapons in its arsenal, it still has an army that can’t win a conventional war against India and nuclear weapons it cannot use. This leaves only an industrial farm of terrorists as the only efficacious tool at its disposal. And given the logic of the above scenario, India and the international community should consider seriously calling Pakistan’s bluff. The only logical Pakistani response to a limited offensive incursion is to accept the fait accompli and acquiesce.
So far, the West has seen Pakistan’s nuclear weapons as a proliferation threat rather than a security threat. The implications of this has largely been appeasement. The United States, worried that Pakistan’s weapons may fall into the hands of non-state actors or that Pakistan will once again reopen its nuclear weapons bazaar to aspirant nuclear powers, perpetually argues for engaging Pakistan diplomatically, militarily, politically, and financially. In essence, Pakistan has effectively blackmailed the United States and the international community for an array of assistance exploiting the collective fears of what may happen should Pakistan collapse.

In recent months, some US White House officials have even argued for a potential nuclear deal to reward Pakistan for making concessions in fissile material production, limiting the development and deployment of its nuclear weapons among other activates to address Washington’s proliferation concerns. Unfortunately, Washington has yet to seriously formulate punishments rather than allurements to achieve these ends, even though Pakistan has shown no interest in making such concessions.

There are reasons why the United States and the international community should begin to see Pakistan’s nuclear weapons as a direct security threat. For one thing, these nuclear weapons have always been intended to allow Pakistan to harass India through the use of militant proxies. Consequently, Pakistan has become an epicenter of Islamist terrorism.

Had Pakistan not had these nuclear capabilities, India could have sorted out Pakistan some time ago. Moreover, the critical time period for Pakistan’s nuclear program was in the late 1970s, when Pakistan was on the threshold of obtaining a crude weapon. (We now know that Pakistan had a crude nuclear weapon by 1984 if not somewhat earlier.) The United States even sanctioned Pakistan in 1979 for advances in its program.

The United States relented in its nonproliferation policy with respect to Pakistan after the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan. Reagan, after getting sanctions waived in 1982, began supporting the so-called mujahedeen produced by Pakistan for use in Afghanistan. (Pakistan actually began its own jihad policy in 1974 on its dime without US assistance.)

Saudi Arabia matched America’s contributions. While al-Qaeda is not truly the direct descendent of the Afghan mujahedeen, there can be little doubt that the structures built to wage this jihad gave birth to the group. Had the United States remained focused on nuclear weapons in Pakistan, and used a different strategy in Afghanistan, a wholly different future could have been realized.

As tensions between the United States and Pakistan deepen, and as Pakistan’s arsenal expands and permits it to target US assets in South, Central, and Southwest Asia, the United States should begin considering Pakistan’s proliferation of nuclear weapons and delivery vehicles as a direct threat to its security, rather than merely a proliferation problem to be managed.

Pakistan’s army is building an arsenal of ”tiny” nuclear weapons—and it’s going to backfire - Quartz


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Hi,

BS article, more like a scaremongering.
I repeat there will never ever be a nuke war among both nations. Its a stupid idea to suggest that, what separates us is just a line of border, no geographical obstacles or distance.

Effectively firing of nuke from one side will only backfire
 
You know the poster wants a flamewar when he tags the usual suspects.
 
Keep such news coming. Although the chances of a deliberate nuclear exchange between both nations, as pointed out by several members, is quite low, there are still enough risks inherent in Pakistan's nuclear weapons programme to merit a global campaign for Pakistani disarmament.

The prospects for that may look slim right now, but in time, after the dust has settled on the Middle-East, the world can focus on the REAL danger of Pakistani nuclear belligerence. Until that time, spreading awareness is the key.
 
There are few things now going against the nation of pakistan
  1. The image of being terrorist heaven due to inability of the democratic government to wipe out terrorism. This has dented their image a lot. Unfortunately the good or bad terrorists are doing damage to local population also which seems to suggest they are under no control of Democratic elected leaders
  2. The post Iran deal, the world attention particularly USA has turned on to pakistan in a big way
  3. The focus by USA is clearly to ensure China Pakistan relationship can be either contained or broken - Its for USA's own benefit
  4. Recent news of redrafted LSA, Cismoa and other agreements with India... In that thread i clearly suggested that a contingency plan is now being implemented by USA with use of LSA as a cover witha rapid response team for covert ops of taking out the N storages and weapons as a contingency plan
  5. The recent attack in USA where unfortunately some connection of radicalisation in Pakistan has been played over and over in USA media and now mass sentiments is against them
  6. The recent 8 F16 sale being asked to be blocked citing Pakistan being unfair for their role in combating terrorism
  7. Trumps campaign noise

I can assure you Pakistan PM Nawaz Sharif is a man of good heart but at present he seems to be deeply undermined by people and past policies of Gen Musharaff

You will hear more and read more such articles..
 
Here is what I think, Pakistan is allowed to build as many weapons of mass destruction as it wants. But, they will eventually stab their own foot.

If, India keeps growing the way it's growing now. Also if Modi stays in the office for two more terms ( one more term for sure). His influence in the world is growing and he's making a lot of friends. He will use his influence and growing india's economy to force the world to change the way Pakistan thinks and builds weapons of mass destruction.

We can see it has already started, Saudi Arabia, Afghanistan has begin to shift their alliance towards India. U can also see enormous pressure from USA.


India now has a government that is not afraid to act in its interest.
 
Recent news of redrafted LSA, Cismoa and other agreements with India... In that thread i clearly suggested that a contingency plan is now being implemented by USA with use of LSA as a cover witha rapid response team for covert ops of taking out the N storages and weapons as a contingency plan

Can you please provide a link to that thread?

You will hear more and read more such articles..

Seems inevitable. It takes time to build consensus for drastic action. The NYT editorial few weeks back was not at all random. Not for nothing did Noam Chomsky coin the immortal term "manufacturing consent".
 
Reminds me how US deployed its tac nukes against Soviet Union to deter any conventional attack by them on Western Europe. It reflected NATO's military inferiority against USSR.
But soon they realised that tac-nukes were useless military weapons and withdrew it from Europe.
Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it- US definitely learnt it's lessons, I hope others do to. :)

You know the poster wants a flamewar when he tags the usual suspects.
Suspects???8-)
@Abingdonboy did he call us trolls? :confused:
 
Reminds me how US deployed its tac nukes against Soviet Union to deter any conventional attack by them on Western Europe. It reflected NATO's military inferiority against USSR.
But soon they realised that tac-nukes were useless military weapons and withdrew it from Europe.
Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it- US definitely learnt it's lessons, I hope others do to. :)

They had even developed nuclear-tipped artillery shells at one point, and deployed them as well. Now they are all gone, as mature nuclear powers keep assessing and discarding unwise strategies. The Pakistanis, OTOH, don't want to learn from the experience of those before them - they want to make their own mistakes. Talk about empirical research!:lol:
 
Warning = Philosophical + emotional post+++
The problem with N weapons is the shame it inflicts on the user.. Remember the Hiroshima Nagasaki.. The bomb did damage that killed instantly but the damage over next 50 years and many generations is beyond belief. Thats the same thing what will happen if a N flashpoint occurs even if its a tactical TNW of say 10-30Kt by Pakistan ..

The world is very different.. The argument of India being the aggressor loses its sheen when the N button is triggered.... Thats when selected countries of not significant pull may support Pakistan's decision but world will condemn it and so will be china who will never like a N flashpoint and N weapon usage... No one likes it anyways.. I think the repercussions are so huge its beyond belief.. With India Pakistan proximity and wind direction , the damage to the whole of paksitan owing to 500 Km width is far far more...

Imagine the Hiroshima Nagasaki sufferers.. thats whats gonna be the outcome in Subcontinent for 50 years primarily In pakistan...


Its very difficult not to condemn USA at that point of WW2 (even though they knew they are gonna win anyways).. The scientists behind those bombs knew their Sin till their death..

Yet human beings dont understand anything at all.. No lessons learned even after so much time has passed..
 
so will be china who will never like a N flashpoint and N weapon usage...

Initially, the Chinese did have some weird strategic calculations wherein a nuclear exchange between India-Pakistan was seen as a strategic goal in a zero-sum world-view. a sparsely populated South (Tibet and Xinjiang barely have any people) might have convinced them that it is a wise move to foment such a scenario.

But that was then. The Chinese government at one time was not too shy about killing thousands of its own citizens in the name of "ideology". Times have changed and today, China has more to lose than any country in the region. They have painstakingly pulled themselves by the bootstraps, and wouldn't want a derailment of their success story.

Its very difficult not to condemn USA at that point of WW2 (even though they knew they are gonna win anyways)..

The initial folly that a nuclear exchange is "winnable" was an American one. In the late 40s and early 50s, Americans were pretty relaxed about the prospect of a nuclear exchange with the Soviets. Elaborate emergency plans were made, each city had bomb shelters and even private homes had underground bunkers built into them.

There was a story that I am paraphrasing for lack of better recollection. The Americans had some very detailed and specific plans as to how their pilots would escape the blast radius after dropping nuclear bombs. When they asked the French about their plans, they were told there was none. Apparently, the French didn't care about the prospect of landing back "safely" after dropping nukes - what would remain to come back to?

The scientists behind those bombs knew their Sin till their death..

I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds - J. Robert Oppenheimer on witnessing Trinity.
 
At the moment author of the article is "back firing"
 
Keep such news coming. Although the chances of a deliberate nuclear exchange between both nations, as pointed out by several members, is quite low, there are still enough risks inherent in Pakistan's nuclear weapons programme to merit a global campaign for Pakistani disarmament.

The prospects for that may look slim right now, but in time, after the dust has settled on the Middle-East, the world can focus on the REAL danger of Pakistani nuclear belligerence. Until that time, spreading awareness is the key.
Hi,

Good luck with that then. Real danger lmao
 
Recent news of redrafted LSA, Cismoa and other agreements with India... In that thread i clearly suggested that a contingency plan is now being implemented by USA with use of LSA as a cover witha rapid response team for covert ops of taking out the N storages and weapons as a contingency plan.

Interesting. A little off topic but my view is that US will be offered bases/access to Arunachal Pradesh under the pretext of recovering WW2 crashed aircraft. This will be India's bulwark against two front war, involving US in AP. Could be wrong here but I have heard whispers to this effect.
 

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