A Global Nuclear Winter:
Avoiding The Unthinkable In India And Pakistan
US President-elect Donald Trump’s
off the cuff, chaotic approach to foreign policy had at least one thing going
for it, even though it was more the feel of a blind pig rooting for acorns than
a thought-out international initiative. In speaking with Pakistani Prime
Minister Nawaz Sharif, the New York Times reported, Trump said he wanted “to address and
find solutions” to Pakistan’s problems.
And what big problems they are.
Whether Trump understands exactly
how dangerous the current tensions between Pakistan and India are, or if
anything will come from the November 30 exchange between the two leaders, is
anyone’s guess. But it’s more than the Obama administration has done over the
past eight years, in spite of the outgoing president’s 2008 election promise to
address the on-going crisis in Kashmir.
Right now that troubled land is the
single most dangerous spot on the globe.
War, Famine, and
Radiation
India and Pakistan have fought three
wars over the disputed province in the past six decades and came within a
hair’s breadth of a nuclear exchange in 1999. Both countries are on a crash
program to produce nuclear weapons, and between them they have enough explosive
power to not only kill more than 20 million of their own people, but also to
devastate the world’s ozone layer and throw the Northern Hemisphere into a
nuclear winter — with a catastrophic impact on agriculture worldwide.
According to studies done at Rutgers, the University of
Colorado-Boulder, and the University of California-Los Angeles, if both
countries detonated 100 Hiroshima-sized bombs, it would generate between 1 and
5 million tons of smoke. Within 10 days, that would drive temperatures in the
Northern Hemisphere down to levels too cold for wheat production in much of
Canada and Russia. The resulting 10 percent drop in rainfall — especially in
Asian locales that rely monsoons — would exhaust worldwide food supplies,
leading to the starvation of up to 100 million or more people.
Aside from the food crisis, a
nuclear war in South Asia would destroy between 25 to 70 percent of the
Northern Hemisphere’s ozone layer, resulting in a massive increase in dangerous
ultraviolent radiation.
Cold Start, Hot War
Lest anyone think that the chances
of such a war are slight, consider two recent developments.
One, a decision by Pakistan to
deploy low-yield tactical or battlefield nuclear weapons and to give permission
for local commanders to decide when to use them.
In an interview with the German
newspaper Deutsche Welle, Gregory Koblentz
of the Council on Foreign Relations warned that if a “commander of a
forward-deployed nuclear armed unit finds himself in a ‘use it or lose it’
situation and about to be overrun, he might decided to launch his weapons.”
Pakistan’s current defense minister,
Muhammad
Asif, told Geo TV, “If anyone steps on our soil and if anyone’s
designs are a threat to our security, we will not hesitate to use those
[nuclear] weapons for our defense.”
Every few years the Pentagon “war
games” a clash between Pakistan and India over Kashmir. Every game ends in a
nuclear war.
The second dangerous development is
the “Cold
Start” strategy by India that would send Indian troops across the
border to a depth of 30 kilometers in the advent of a terrorist attack like the
1999 Kargill incident in Kashmir, the 2001 terrorist attack on the Indian
parliament, or the 2008 attack on Mumbai that killed 166 people.
Since the Indian army is more than
twice the size of Pakistan’s, there would be little that Pakistanis could do to
stop such an invasion other than using battlefield nukes. India would then be
faced with either accepting defeat or responding.
India doesn’t currently have any
tactical nukes, only high yield strategic weapons — many aimed at China — whose
primary value is to destroy cities. Hence a decision by a Pakistani commander
to use a tactical warhead would almost surely lead to a strategic response by
India, setting off a full-scale nuclear exchange and the nightmare that would
follow in its wake.
A Regional Arms
Race
With so much at stake, why is no one
but a Twitter-addicted foreign policy apprentice saying anything? What happened
to President Obama’s follow through to his 2008 statement
that the tensions over Kashmir “won’t be easy” to solve, but that doing so “is
important”?
A strategy of pulling India into an
alliance against China was dreamed up during the administration of George W.
Bush, but it was Obama’s “Asia Pivot” that signed and sealed
the deal. With it went a quid pro quo: If India would abandon its
traditional neutrality, the Americans would turn a blind eye to Kashmir.
As a sweetener, the U.S. agreed to
bypass the global nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty and allow India to buy
uranium on the world market, something New Delhi had been banned from doing
since it detonated a nuclear bomb in 1974 using fuel it had cribbed from
U.S.-supplied nuclear reactors. In any case, because neither India nor Pakistan
is a party to the treaty, both should be barred from buying uranium. In India’s
case, the U.S. has waived that restriction.
The so-called 1-2-3 Agreement
requires India to use any nuclear fuel it purchases in its civilian reactors,
but frees it up to use its meager domestic supplies on its nuclear weapons
program. India has since built two enormous nuclear production sites
at Challakere and near Mysore, where, rumor has it, it is producing a hydrogen
bomb. Both sites are off limits to international inspectors.
In 2008, when the Obama
administration indicated it was interested in pursuing the 1-2-3 Agreement,
then Pakistani Foreign minister Khurshid Kusuni
warned that the deal would undermine
the Non-Proliferation Treaty and lead to a nuclear arms race in Asia. That is
exactly what has come to pass. The only countries currently adding to their
nuclear arsenals are Pakistan, India, China, and North Korea.
While Pakistan is still frozen out
of buying uranium on the world market, it has sufficient domestic supplies to
fuel an accelerated program to raise its warhead
production. Pakistan is estimated to have between 110 and 130
warheads already, and it’s projected to have developed 200 by 2020, surpassing
the United Kingdom.
India has between 110 and 120
nuclear weapons. Both countries have short, medium, and long-range missiles,
submarine ballistic missiles, and cruise missiles, plus nuclear-capable
aircraft that can target each other’s major urban areas.
A New Uprising in
Kashmir
One problem in the current crisis is
that both countries are essentially talking past one another.
Pakistan does have legitimate
security concerns. It has fought and lost three wars with India over Kashmir
since 1947, and it’s deeply paranoid about the size of the Indian army.
But India has been the victim of
several major terrorist attacks that have Pakistan’s fingerprints all over
them. The 1999 Kargill invasion lasted a month and killed hundreds of soldiers
on both sides. Reportedly the Pakistanis were considering arming their
missiles with nuclear warheads until the Clinton administration
convinced them to stand down.
Pakistan’s military has long denied
that it has any control over terrorist organizations based in Pakistan, but
virtually all intelligence agencies agree that, with the exception of the
country’s home-grown Taliban, that is not the case. The Pakistani army
certainly knew about a recent attack on an Indian army base in Kashmir that
killed 19 soldiers.
In the past, India responded to such
attacks with quiet counterattacks of its own, but this time around the
right-wing nationalist government of Narendra Modi announced that the Indian
military had crossed the border and killed more than 30 militants. It was the
first time that India publicly
acknowledged a cross-border assault.
Meanwhile the Indian
press has whipped up a nationalist fervor that has seen sports
events between the two countries cancelled and a ban on using Pakistani actors
in Indian films. The Pakistani press has been no less jingoistic.
In the meantime, the situation in
Kashmir has gone from bad to worse. Early in the summer Indian security forces
killed Burhan Wani, a popular leader of the Kashmir independence movement.
Since then the province has essentially been paralyzed,
with schools closed and massive demonstrations. Thousands of residents have
been arrested, close to 100 killed, and hundreds of demonstrators wounded and blinded
by the widespread use of birdshot by Indian security forces.
Indian rule in Kashmir has been
singularly brutal. Between 50,000 and 80,000 people have died over the past six
decades, and thousands of others have been “disappeared” by security forces.
While in the past the Pakistani army aided the infiltration of terrorist groups
to attack the Indian army, this time around the uprising is homegrown.
Kashmiris are simply tired of military rule and a law which gives Indian
security forces essentially carte blanche to terrorize the population.
Called the Special Powers Act —
modeled after a British provision to suppress of Catholics in Northern Ireland
and mirroring practices widely used by the Israelis in the Occupied Territories
— the law allows Indian authorities to arrest and imprison people without
charge and gives immunity to Indian security forces.
Avenues to Peace
As complex as the situation in
Kashmir is, there are avenues to resolve it. A good start would be to suspend
the Special Powers Act and send the Indian Army back to the barracks.
The crisis in Kashmir began when the
Hindu ruler of the mostly Muslim region opted to join India when the countries
were divided in 1947. At the time, the residents were promised that a
UN-sponsored referendum would allow residents to choose India, Pakistan, or
independence. That referendum has never been held.
Certainly the current situation
cannot continue. Kashmir has almost 12 million people, and no army or security
force — even one as large as India’s — can maintain a permanent occupation if
the residents don’t want it. Instead of resorting to force, India should
ratchet down its security forces and negotiate with Kashmiris for an interim
increase in local autonomy.
But in the long run, the Kashmiris
should have their referendum — and both India and Pakistan will have to accept
the results.
What the world cannot afford is for
the current tensions to spiral down into a military confrontation that could
easily get out of hand. The U.S., through its aid to Pakistan — $860 million
this year — has some leverage, but it cannot play a role if its ultimate goal
is an alliance to contain China, a close ally of Pakistan.
Neither country would survive a
nuclear war, and neither country should be spending its money on an arms race.
Almost 30 percent of Indians live below the poverty line, as do 22 percent of
Pakistanis. The $51 billion Indian defense budget and the $7 billion Pakistan
spends could be put to far better use.
By Foreign Policy In Focus columnist
Conn
Hallinan
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