Why India Wants France's Dassault Rafale Fighter Jet:
They Can Carry Nuclear Weapons
India has signed a deal with France for 36 Dassault Rafale fighter jets.
The jets may end up lugging nuclear bombs, as officials told The Indian
Express this month that the jets are “to be used as an airborne strategic delivery
system.”
That’s a polite way of saying India’s jets could drop nukes — one mission which
Dassault specifically designed the multi-role Rafale to do. There’s also
precedent here, as France previously sold and supplied spare parts for India’s
Mirage 2000s, which are the most important delivery platform for New Delhi’s
nuclear weapons.
“We expect the same degree of cooperation
from France when we modify and use the Rafales for that role,” a second
military official told the Express.
But if you’re from Pakistan or China and
you’re worried — don’t sweat. Thirty-six Rafales are not enough to give India
an advantage over its nuclear-armed neighbors. India’s upcoming ballistic
missiles pack significantly greater range and are far more difficult to stop.
***
When India detonated five nuclear bombs in
two days in 1998, the South Asian power emerged as a fully-declared nuclear
armed state. A few weeks later, Pakistan blew up five nukes at an underground
testing site.
The United States imposed sanctions on
both countries, but France didn’t.
India weaponizing its nukes proved to be a
different story, largely owing to extreme secrecy and compartmentalization
within the government and military. Since the Indian Air Force barely knew the
specifications of the country’s nukes, it could hardly design appropriate
delivery systems.
India had no experience mating nuclear
warheads to ballistic missiles, and its launchers in the 1990s were either too
slow to fire — veritable suicide during a nuclear war — or too unreliable to
depend upon.
This left India’s 1970s-era Mirage 2000s
to take on much of the job. But the warheads were an awkward fit, and only
highly skilled pilots could take off with the cumbersome payloads attached
underneath their planes’ bellies — making the jets aerodynamically tricky to fly.
Nor did Dassault initially design the
Mirage 2000 with nuclear weapons in mind. As a result, the Indian Air Force
feared its planes’ fly-by-wire systems could be knocked out by the
electromagnetic pulses from the detonating bombs.
“In the early 1990s, the air force was
thinking of one-way missions,” a senior Indian Air Force officer told the
Atlantic Council’s Guarav Kampani writing in International
Security. [I]t was unlikely that the pilot deployed on a nuclear
attack mission would have made it back.”
“The modification of aircraft for safe and
reliable delivery of a nuclear weapon turned out to be a huge technical and
managerial challenge that consumed the [state-owned Defense Research and
Development Organization’s] attention for six years and perhaps more,” Kampani
wrote.
“There was a major problem integrating the
nuclear weapon with the Mirage.”
India has come a long way since. It has
upgraded its Mirages, possesses up to 120 nuclear warheads, has completed its
first ballistic missile submarine and has three different (and more modern)
kinds of Agni ballistic missile launchers already deployed, with longer-range
iterations on the way.
But the submarine Arihant is more of a
test-bed than a credible weapon system. India’s land-based launchers lack
rigorous testing regimens and still suffer from reliability issues.
The most advanced operational launcher, the Agni-3, numbers fewer than 10 in
service, according to the Federation of American Scientists.
Most Indian launchers are older Prithvis,
which are short range and slow to prepare. New Delhi does not possess
MIRVs — devastating clusters of nuclear warheads which ride together aboard a
single missile, break apart and rain down on their targets. Nor is it likely
that India has the will or expertise to develop them.
“Despite India’s considerable progress in
developing credible ballistic missiles, its fighter-bombers still constitute the backbone
of India’s operational nuclear strike force,” FAS analysts Hans Kristensen and
Robert Norris wrote in a 2015 review.
India also possesses dozens of 1960s-era
Jaguar attack jets — developed by France and Britain — which serves in a
secondary nuclear attack role.
But you can see why India prefers aircraft.
They’re technologically simple compared to missiles, can be recalled and are
highly visible to an adversary, creating a deterrent effect. That’s good for
keeping the peace, but during a war, they’re more easily spotted and shot down.
And the same is true for the canard delta
wing Rafale. To be sure, the plane has a longer range, a lot more thrust and a
greater payload capacity than the older Mirage 2000.
So the planes — specifically designed with
nuclear weapons in mind — will give India a modestly more effective strike
force than the aging one it has now.
But regardless, India
will only buy … 36 Rafales. That’s just two squadrons, and far below the 126
fighters planned several years ago. (That deal collapsed.) So the nuclear
competition with Pakistan won’t change because of the jets.
What would change it? Commissioning more
ballistic missile submarines, building longer-ranged missile launchers and ramping up production
of fissile material which could produce more and more powerful bombs … all of
which India is doing.
This first appeared in WarIsBoring
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