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India’s Nuclear Policy
Rajesh Rajagopalan
Introduction
India has had an uncomfortable relationship with nuclear weapons. From the early
days of independence, Indian leaders, especially Jawaharlal Nehru, took a very
public and very vocal stand against nuclear weapons. But Nehru, a modernist, was
also convinced that nuclear technology had a role to play in national development.
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To a lesser degree, he also thought that nuclear weapons technology might have a
role to play in national defence if efforts at nuclear disarmament should fail. These
somewhat contradictory strands are still visible today, as they have been through
much of the last six decades of Indian nuclear policy.
But it would be foolish to suggest that Nehru’s perspective on nuclear weapons
was the only determinant in Indian nuclear policy. India’s nuclear policy was
also influenced by India’s international security condition as well as by domestic
variables such as the vagaries of political change and the influence of bureaucratic
elites. Indeed, India’s decision to build a nuclear force was taken only in the late
1980s, much after it had become clear that Pakistan —with Chinese technological
assistance— had made rapid advances in the nuclear weapons programme. As for
bureaucratic influence, some defence scientists played a key role in keeping the
weapons programme alive even when there was no political support or indeed,
active opposition, while other bureaucrats were responsible for creating political
awareness of India’s declining nuclear options. Nevertheless, these variables suggest
a moderate Indian approach to nuclear weapons and thus reinforce the dominant
tendency towards a political rather a military approach to looking at nuclear
weapons. They do not suggest any dramatic changes nor rapid advances in India’s
nuclear weapons programme.
The Purpose of India’s Nuclear Weapons
Indian leaders have generally considered nuclear weapons at best a necessary
evil. Prime Ministers Lal Bahadur Shastri and Rajiv Gandhi sought international
solutions to avoid committing to nuclear weapons; Prime Minister Morarji Desai
shut down the weapons program for a time.
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Even Prime Minister Atal Vajpayee,
who ordered the nuclear tests in 1998, was more ambivalent two decades earlier,
siding with Desai in voting against restarting the nuclear weapons program in 1979.
As a number of analysts have concluded, growing nuclear threats and a progressively
unaccommodating global nuclear order forced New Delhi to move towards a declared
nuclear arsenal in the 1990s.
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This discomfort with nuclear weapons has defined the
manner in which India has viewed nuclear weapons.
Much of the Indian debate about nuclear weapons between the 1960s and the
1990s did not consider how nuclear weapons might be used within the framework
of Indian strategy. The arguments and propositions largely revolved around whether
India should go nuclear, not what India should do with nuclear weapons.
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It was only
in the 1980s that some Indian strategists such as K. Subrahmanyam and General
K. Sundarji started writing about what nuclear weapons might be useful for.
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This
also coincided with greater attention among decision-makers to such questions.
Both Sundarji and Subrahmanyam argued that the kind of bloated nuclear arsenals
that the US and the Soviet Union developed during the Cold War were unnecessary
and wasteful. Nuclear deterrence could be had at far cheaper cost, with a relatively
small arsenal. In essence, as Tellis has argued, what Sundarji and Subrahmanyam
were suggesting was a view of nuclear weapons that emphasized its political rather
than military utility, its deterrence rather than war-fighting capability.
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This view of
the political utility of nuclear weapons is also reflected in arguments about nuclear
weapons providing political space and strategic autonomy, arguments that former
Indian Foreign Minister Jaswant Singh has made.
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Not surprisingly, the eventual
Indian nuclear deterrent emphasized small numbers and a capability to retaliate,
rather than building a deterrent force that would have parity with other nuclear
powers.
But the notion that nuclear weapons are political tools is primarily about how
India views the usability of nuclear weapons. It does not extend to India’s views
about how other states, particularly Pakistan, might see nuclear weapons. In fact
Indian views about what nuclear weapons in others’ hands might do are highly
pessimistic, assuming implicitly that other states might not be as responsible as New
Delhi is or has been. India’s view on nuclear proliferation is one indicator of this
deeply pessimistic view that India has of the possibility of nuclear weapons use by
other states. Though India objected to the Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty (NPT),
it has seen proliferation itself as a threat to international stability and has repeatedly
touted its “exemplary non-proliferation record of four decades and more.”
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Thus the
Indian view of the spread of nuclear weapons is fundamentally different from the
‘more may be better’ arguments of proliferation optimists such as Kenneth Waltz,
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or even the radical rejection of the concept of non-proliferation by China prior to
1991.
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Indian officials do not think that nuclear weapons have stabilized the region;
rather they believe that nuclear weapons in Pakistani hands increase the nuclear risk
in the region because Pakistan is seen as irresponsible.
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This fits a larger pattern of
contradiction which assumes that other powers, Pakistan in particular, will not be as
responsible as India has been.
Indian views about missile defenses are a further indication of the contradictionin Indian views about nuclear weapons. If nuclear weapons are essentially political
weapons, not usable in fighting wars, the logic of missile defenses seems difficult
to understand: clearly missile defenses are needed only if one assumes that nuclear
weapons are going to be used. Nevertheless, New Delhi has pursued a ballistic
missile defence (BMD) system since at least the mid-1990s.
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India’s search for an
appropriate BMD system appears linked to the growth of Pakistan’s missile delivery
capability, including the transfer of Chinese missiles such as the M-11. As with
nuclear weapons, the search for a BMD system has continued despite changes of
political leadership and ideology in New Delhi. At various times, India has sought the
Russian-built S-300, the Israeli-American Arrow, and the US-built Patriot ballistic
missile defence systems. India is also thought to have a domestic BMD system in
development, built around the still under-development Akash Surface-to-Air missile
(SAM). New Delhi’s decade-long search has been unsuccessful possibly because
Indian decision-makers have not given sufficient thought to what kind of system
India needs. Indeed, it is not clear how missile defenses will fit into the existing
Indian nuclear doctrine. India’s official nuclear doctrine has made no mention of a
missile defence system, and it is unlikely that the war-fighting orientation of missile
defenses will sit well with the political/deterrence driven sentiment that dominates
the nuclear doctrine. None of the Indian governments that have been in power since
1995 have given any reason why they want missile defences, though the issue had
created dissension among some of allies of the United Progressive Alliance (UPA)
government when it included communist parties because New Delhi has been
seeking to buy a US-built system based on the Patriot PAC-3. Thus India’s view
of nuclear weapons suggests an element of inconsistency: nuclear weapons are
essentially political weapons and unusable militarily by India, but other states might
not be as restrained. As a consequence, India both opposes the spread of nuclear
weapons and pursues BMDs.
India’s Changing Nuclear Doctrine
India’s nuclear doctrine, in its declaratory form if not in its operational variation,
has undergone some changes since it was first announced in August 1999. The 1999
doctrine was produced by the National Security Advisory Board (NSAB), a group
of non-governmental experts, and its status was thus somewhat suspect. Indeed,
the government formally claimed that the doctrine was not the official doctrine.
However, much of what was stated by the NSAB in the “unofficial” nuclear doctrine
was what had already been stated by various government officials, including the
prime minister, at different times in and out of parliament. The only major difference
between the various official statements and what was stated in the NSAB’s nuclear
doctrine was that the NSAB document discussed the need for a nuclear triad for
India, which the government had not acknowledged until then but which was both
logical and unsurprising. Thus, the government’s coyness about the doctrine was
probably unnecessary.
In any case, when some details of the Indian nuclear doctrine were officially
released in January 2003 it in many ways stuck to some of the main elements of
the 1999 doctrine though there were some important differences. The 2003 nuclear
doctrine was released as a brief press statement, but it did state the key elements of the
doctrine. The actual nuclear doctrine is reported to be a much more comprehensive
document. Below I briefly outline the main elements of the 1999 doctrine and the
changes made in the 2003 version.
The 1999 doctrine suggested a nuclear doctrine that was based on an unspecified
minimum force but one which would also be credible and survivable. In addition,
India would not use nuclear weapons first (no-first use of nuclear weapons or NFU)
and will not use of nuclear weapons against non-nuclear countries (Negative Security
Assurance or NSA). The doctrine emphasized the need for credible nuclear forces
that would be able to survive a first strike against it as well as the need for strict
political control over nuclear forces. The NSAB document also emphasized India’s
nuclear disarmament objectives. None of these were new: what was new, however,
was that the doctrine also talked about a nuclear triad of aircraft, long-range ballistic
missiles and submarine-launched ballistic missiles.
In January 2003, the government released a brief press statement (of just 349
words) that revealed some aspects of the ‘official’ nuclear doctrine. From the press
statement, it is unclear when this doctrine was formulated and its relationship to
the 1999 doctrine, though it could be read as having been the official doctrine
for a while. The press statement revealed that many of the elements of the Indian
nuclear doctrine was the same as in the 1999 doctrine, but a number of caveats
had been added, and some pledges especially that of the NFU and non-use against 100 Major Power’s Nuclear Policies and International Order in the 21st Century
non-nuclear powers had been diluted. There were also details about command and
control aspects that were new.
There were at least three variations of note in the new doctrine. First was the