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nuke escalation,India limits its response to Pakistan’s provocations

indian_foxhound

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Indian leaders have further undermined our deterrence by repeatedly proclaiming that they do not want war. This is the one point on which there is consensus in New Delhi but consensus is not wisdom. Even if war is not an option, taking it off the table is the height of strategic stupidity. As long as India is unable to threaten Pakistan with military retaliation, Pakistan has little incentive to stop supporting terrorist actions against India. Diplomacy provides few useful responses.

Stopping the dialogue is a shortterm measure that will not deter Pakistan. Seeking international support is equally useless because even if the other powers support India diplomatically — which itself is a mighty big if considering Pakistan’s talent for leveraging its strategic location — it will have little impact on Pakistan, as they have repeatedly demonstrated. Diplomacy can aid military power but it cannot replace it.

Retaliatory Option

India needs to consider all of its options, including the use of force. While force should not be the first option for all problems, force has to be an option at least in responding to attacks. The fear that any military operation would automatically result in nuclear escalation is halfbaked wisdom from a superficial reading of Cold War history.

The nuclear relationship between Washington and Moscow was very different because both sides deployed nuclear weapons on a hairtrigger, which meant that the slightest disturbance had the potential to set off a nuclear conflagration.

That is not the situation in South Asia where neither side deploys ready-to-use nuclear weapons. Pakistan refuses to join India in adopting a no-first-use of nuclear weapons pledge, which is understandable, given their inferiority in conventional military strength.

But this is taken as an indication of Pakistan’s irrationality, which only strengthens Pakistan’s deterrence because it effectively paralyses the Indian leadership.

Pakistan might have a first-use doctrine but it is first-use as last resort, much as Israel keeps nuclear weapons to ensure its survival. First use does not mean Pakistan will lob nuclear bombs as soon as the first Indian soldier crosses the border. As long as Indian action does not threaten the survival of the Pakistani state, it is unlikely that Pakistan will reach for nuclear weapons.

India does have the option of engaging in limited military retaliation, especially in ***. Civilian and military leaders need to jointly reconsider the Fernandes-Malik proposals so that military retaliatory options are available to deter Pakistan and, if deterrence fails, to respond to Pakistan’s provocations.

Without it, we will be condemned to repeat the facile dialogue-no dialogue debate after the next provocation, which is surely coming.In the aftermath of yet another Pakistani transgression, we are back to the tired old arguments about whether or not India should be talking to Pakistan. Proponents argue that nothing has been gained whenever India stopped talking to Pakistan, as it did after every major provocation. Their opponents argue that dialogue has not stopped Pakistan’s provocations.

Both sides are right and therein lies the simple truth that New Delhi refuses to acknowledge: dialogue or the lack of it has little impact on Pakistan. The reasonPakistan continues to provoke is that India has eschewed any retaliation for fear of nuclear escalation. Because Pakistan does not fear Indian retaliation, India’s deterrence is dead. To prevent Pakistani provocations, India needs to resurrect its deterrence and that requires considering using military force.

Pakistan’s nuclearisation has ended India’s ability to deter Islamabad from provocations. Consequently, Pakistan has provided unprecedented levels of support to terrorist groups, which includes not only terrorist attacks in India but also against the Indian mission in Afghanistan.

Fearing nuclear escalation, both the BJP and the UPA governments have limited their responses to diplomatic protests and calling off dialogue. These are ineffectual responses that only serve to illustrate Indian helplessness. Pakistan knows that India will eventually have to return to talks.

Strategic Stupidity

It is not as if Indian leadership has been unaware of the problem. After Kargil, thendefence minister George Fernandes and army chief General VP Malik suggested that India could explore limited conventional war options that would punish Pakistan without risking escalation.

Unfortunately that idea has not been pursued. After Operation Parakram, the Indian Army proposed a “cold start” doctrine. It was a plan for faster mobilisation because one lesson of Operation Parakram was that Indian military mobilisation took very long, which allowed international pressure and strategic secondguessing to undermine the Indian leadership’s will to order a military retaliation. But Cold Start envisaged a much larger war and it might not be an appropriate response for anything but a catastrophic terrorist attack.

Also, Pakistan’s introduction of short-range tactical nuclear weapons has increased New Delhi’s apprehensions. In any case, at least formally, the Indian Army has discarded Cold Start.

Fearing nuclear escalation, India limits its response to Pakistan
 
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a nuclear war is not gonna happen unless a terrorist group has hand in pakistan's nuclear weapon. pakistan only threaten india with nuclear war, pakistan know that if pakistan strike with a nuclear weapon there will be an escalated nuclear retaliation from india which will be end of pakistan. what we lack is the political will to fight unconventional war from other side of border.
 
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a nuclear war is not gonna happen unless a terrorist group has hand in pakistan's nuclear weapon. pakistan only threaten india with nuclear war, pakistan know that if pakistan strike with a nuclear weapon there will be an escalated nuclear retaliation from india which will be end of pakistan. what we lack is the political will to fight unconventional war from other side of border.

I agree with you... nuke war is hard unless some brainwashed jump in....
 
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Both China and India have a "No First Use" policy.

But Pakistan does not have such a policy, at all. And they have a nuclear arsenal that is much bigger than India's.

India does not have a "No First Use" Policy. :-)
 
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a nuclear war is not gonna happen unless a terrorist group has hand in pakistan's nuclear weapon. pakistan only threaten india with nuclear war, pakistan know that if pakistan strike with a nuclear weapon there will be an escalated nuclear retaliation from india which will be end of pakistan. what we lack is the political will to fight unconventional war from other side of border.

Yah, and India is gonna be all fine and dandy after it attacks Pakistan right? :lol:
Indians are a brainwashed folk..
 
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I agree with you... nuke war is hard unless some brainwashed jump in....
Are you trying to suggest that there are none in the PA? For example, there's was even a worthy named Gen Hasan who commanded the FCNA during the Kargil war who was part of the 'gang of four' which planned the Kargil disaster, as saying that Siachen will be easily captured after cutting off Kargil and adjoining areas because Hindu banyas can't fight'!!!!! :woot: :omghaha: And holding out the threat of using nukes would make the Hindus shake with fear! :rofl: :cuckoo:

Well, that's the psyche of the senior officers in the PA. They think that they can run roughshod over India by showing their nuke muscle. But don't they know that two can play the game? Don't they know that there would be dozens of 'Hiroshimas' in Pakistan too if they dared press the red button? They are living in a dreamworld under the impression that a nuke war is the prerogative of the PA only and that India does not have the license to retaliate.

Reality doesn't seem to be part of PA's doctrinal concepts!
 
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a nuclear war is not gonna happen unless a terrorist group has hand in pakistan's nuclear weapon. pakistan only threaten india with nuclear war, pakistan know that if pakistan strike with a nuclear weapon there will be an escalated nuclear retaliation from india which will be end of pakistan. what we lack is the political will to fight unconventional war from other side of border.



Who knows Pakistan will hand over it to there soldiers and they will attack India with Nuke. Pakistani army has history of hiding inside Salwar of Terrorirsts,,

a nuclear war is not gonna happen unless a terrorist group has hand in pakistan's nuclear weapon. pakistan only threaten india with nuclear war, pakistan know that if pakistan strike with a nuclear weapon there will be an escalated nuclear retaliation from india which will be end of pakistan. what we lack is the political will to fight unconventional war from other side of border.



Who knows Pakistan will hand over it to there soldiers and they will attack India with Nuke. Pakistani army has history of hiding inside Salwar of Terrorirsts,,
 
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Both China and India have a "No First Use" policy.

But Pakistan does not have such a policy, at all. And they have a nuclear arsenal that is much bigger than India's.
who told you that ? some “reports“ hmm i thought chinese ppl dont care about foreign reports . btw Indian govt officials have never uttered a single number . speculate .have a look at no of reactors and since when they started operating for a start .

on topic : the jingoistic nuke clause seems the only argument nowdays.blah blah blah
 
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hahahha look at the Article... and look at the Indians comments lol... totally what Article actually explain How India will ***** up if India try to attack Pakistan... and here Indians are talking about ham ye kardengay woh kardeengaay non sense ** as usual!
 
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