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Nuclear doctrinal revision in its effects on the India-China dyad
Nuclear doctrinal revision in its effects on the India-China dyad
In the latest
brouhaha over nuclear doctrine revision, Manoj
Joshi offered the sage advice that Pakistan should not be the only referent
in considering evolution of India’s nuclear doctrine. The discussion in the
strategic circles sparked off by the defence minister recently voicing his
personal opinion on nuclear doctrine, was rather Pakistan centric. Joshi
rightly required that any changes in India’s nuclear doctrine would require
reckoning with the effects in respect of China.
This article
attempts to discern possible effects on the India-China nuclear dyad of the thrust
areas of change in India’s nuclear doctrine. Since some of the impulse towards
change is from a consideration of India-Pakistan nuclear dyad, if such change
has no negative implications for the India-China dyad, then the proposed thrust
line of change acquires greater credibility, if not plausibility.
Currently,
India’s nuclear doctrine is fairly well adapted for the India-China nuclear
dyad. By all accounts, China is the primary referent of India’s nuclear
doctrine and the continuing suitability of the nuclear doctrine for the China
front makes for little incentive for change. Both India and China subscribe to
No First Use (NFU). Though to some, Chinese NFU is territorially caveated,
India’s also is with a caveat that it would not hold in case of use of the
other two types of weapons of mass destruction.
Whereas in terms
of numbers, the Indian deterrent’s credibility is maintained at a ‘minimum’,
though flexible, level, for China the numbers are relatively higher –
characterised as ‘limited’ - owing to it having to contend with the US nuclear
arsenal. Both are geared towards nuclear deterrence rather than nuclear
warfighting. While India claims not to believe in non-strategic use of nuclear
weapons and not to have tactical nuclear weapons (TNW), it cannot be plausibly
said that China does not have a more variegated arsenal, since it has
contingencies on the Pacific front, including Taiwan, to think about.
The doctrinal
similarity - particularly on NFU - has led to a diminished focus on China in
discussions of nuclear employment. Doctrinally, since neither side will
initiate nuclear use in conflict, there was little to be gained by wargaming
nuclear use other than for academic interest. Militarily, both sides maintain
strong conventional forces and therefore do not need to rely on nuclear weapons
to either supplement conventional operations or to bail either out of a tight
conventional spot. Politically, the stakes in any envisaged conflict are not of
an order as to compel either side to jeopardise respective economic and power
trajectories by bringing nuclear weapons into a conflict. At worst, a border
was is apprehended and, while this might have horizontal escalatory
possibilities, no plausible vertical escalation scenario has found mention in
discussions so far.
Nuclear related
developments in India point towards a comfort level with the doctrinal status
quo. NFU serves India well on the China front since it is in an asymmetric
situation as of the moment, when it is still catching up with China. The invulnerable
leg of India’s triad is still under development and its recent Agni V test is
only the fourth one so far. To deterrence purists, this might point to a
deterrence deficit that makes India’s deterrence vis-a-vis China a
work-in-progress. They would also bemoan lack of a tested thermonuclear
capability, irrespective of scientific claims dating to the Pokhran II tests to
the contrary. Nevertheless, there is consensus that even if there is distance
to traverse, India’s nuclear posture comprising cumulative progress in terms of
numbers, delivery systems, reach, a ballistic missile defence capability
in-the-works, command and control and survivability cannot be discounted by
China. This implies an Indian self-confidence in its nuclear deterrence, which
in turn disincentivises doctrinal change. Thus, it would appear that the
impetus towards change that arises largely from a consideration of the
India-Pakistan dyad is unlikely to make a dent on India-China doctrinal dyad.
Such complacency merits scrutiny.
There are three
thrust lines of impetus to change. The first is NFU, which was extensively
dwelt on in the recent storm in the doctrinal teacup. The second is more
significant in that it dwells on the doctrinal challenge posed by Pakistani
TNW. The third is in interpreting the punitive quotient of counter strikes:
when unacceptable damage in counter strike is sufficient, is going ‘massive’
necessary? The three need to be examined in their effects on the India-China
dyad.
There is no strident
call currently to jettison NFU in regard to China. India has a finite
deterrence capability – even if it does not satisfy maximalists. There is
however a situation of asymmetry currently brought about by Chinese missiles in
Tibet and its vicinity that have a reach into India’s north Indian heartland,
which India cannot match in reverse any time soon. This implies NFU serves
India, for the moment. In case push comes to shove in conflict, there is the
additional buffer the NFU pledge enables between a contingency and the nuclear
button: rescinding the NFU pledge in the national security interest when
warranted. This would warn off China from breaching possible Indian thresholds,
such as a territorial one imagined variously astride the Se La or Bum La or
Bomdi La ridgelines.
The second
impetus stems from the TNW conundrum. How can escalation control kick in on
breakdown of deterrence? This is possible through proportionate retaliation,
which means operationalising the deterrent accordingly. For the China front,
the implication needs factoring in a lapse in NFU. In case the need arises for
redressing a fast developing adverse conventional situation that has
politically unacceptable manifestations – such as another evacuation of Tezpur
- nuclear weapons provide a fall-back option. Such use obviously would not be
strategic but proportionate to rolling back the adverse situation, such as
tamping down incoming Chinese hordes through disruption of the line of
communication. This would presumably keep the nuclear dimension of the conflict
from spilling onto the Ganga-Brahmaputra basin. This makes for a case not so
much for TNW capability, but for ability for nuclear use in an
operational-level, theatre-specific setting.
The third
impetus is regards a reversion to the formulation of the Draft Nuclear
Doctrine: that of punitive retaliation to inflict unacceptable damage. Clearly,
the ‘massive’ formulation of the 2003 official adaptation makes no sense for
the China front. For escalation control through in-conflict deterrence, there
is a set of targets held in reserve, such as along the China-Pakistan Economic
Corridor in Indian claimed territory. Holding these hostage might be useful in
case of the feared ‘two front’ scenario.
From the
preceding discussion it appears that the thrust lines of change visible in the
India-Pakistan dyad are not irrelevant for the India-China dyad. Manoj Joshi
rightly suggests caution in doctrinal revision, but that should not be
interpreted as favouring the status quo. It is clear that the necessity for
limiting nuclear use in either first use or retaliatory modes holds even
regards conflict with China. Consequently, the minimal recommendation here is
not to shy away from the discussion. However, if we are to heed China’s
response to India’s Agni V test weighing-in in favour of strategic stability,
treading softly might be prudent. Open doctrinal discussion might be a
preferred substitute for doctrinal revision.