[sacw] The Bus Must Return With No-War Pact

Harsh Kapoor aiindex@mnet.fr
Wed, 17 Feb 1999 23:02:19 +0100


FYI
South Asians Against Nukes
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From: Times of India, Thursday 18 February 1999

The Bus Must Return With No-War Pact

By SIDDHARTH VARADARAJAN

THE famous bus journey to Wagah is still a few days away but the Prime
Ministers of India and Pakistan must already be feeling burdened by the
baggage of expectations. Despite the jingoistic pronouncements leaders in
both countries make from time to time, public sentiment in the subcontinent
overwhelmingly favours peace and normalcy. Last year's nuclear tests have
raised to infinity the stakes Indians and Pakistanis have in the pacific
resolution of all outstanding disputes. That is why most people want Mr
Nawaz Sharif and Mr Atal Bihari Vajpayee to exchange more than a hug. They
want an agreement that will make impossible the danger of nuclear war.
Desirable though it may be, undoing the overt nuclearisation heralded by
Pokhran II and Chagai is not possible at the present time. What India and
Pakistan must do, however, is take steps to ensure that their nuclear
weapons are never used against each other, either by accident or design.

New Delhi, which has a declaratory policy of not being the first to use
nuclear weapons, wants a similar commitment from Islamabad. But for
Pakistan, no-first-use is a non-starter. Islamabad argues that nuclear
weapons are the only insurance it has to prevent a massive conventional
attack by India. Despite the obvious difference in nuclear doctrines,
however, it is possible for India and Pakistan to reach an agreement which
can minimise the danger of nuclear war and address Pakistan's sense of
insecurity. Such a compact would have three components:
* an uncaveated non-aggression treaty;
* an agreement not to deploy nuclear weapons against each other, and, if
possible, not even to weaponise or induct these weapons;
* a bilateral agreement not to test any more nuclear weapons.
So far, India has been frosty towards Pakistan's offer of a no-war pact,
although the reasons are not entirely clear. Of course, Islamabad has also
never been very forthcoming about what exactly its proposal entails. In
particular, there is some confusion about whether or not the offer is
linked to Kashmir and covers the ``covert war'' that Pakistan is waging
there.

Military Sense

It is nevertheless in India's interest wholeheartedly to embrace the
concept of a non-aggression treaty. No one in India -- other than lunatics
and incorrigible hawks -- seriously contemplates recovering
Pakistan-occupied Kashmir through military means. Nor is going to war
against Pakistan over its support for Kashmiri militants a realistic or
worthwhile option.

Besides giving a fillip to bilateral relations, a non-aggression pact
would also sidestep Pakistan's reluctance to agree to a no-first-use
policy. If India pledges never to attack Pakistan first -- and Pakistan
agrees to the same -- this is equivalent to a no first use pledge, as a
nuclear first strike by Pakistan would be a violation of the pact. This
makes sense from Pakistan's point of view too, since it claims it needs
nuclear weapons to pre-empt a conventional attack by India.

As for non-deployment and, possibly, non-weaponisation, this too makes
eminent sense for both countries. If `deterrence' is the only rationale for
deployment, both countries already have a proven capability which should
render them immune to nuclear blackmail, regardless of whether this
capability is fully weaponised and deployed in forward positions on hair
trigger alert, or kept unassembled and dealerted.

Pressure on US

Finally, since India and Pakistan have been unable to forge a domestic
consensus on accession to the CTBT, they should consider signing a
bilateral agreement that commits them to forswearing further nuclear tests.
In fact, such an agreement would give India and Pakistan both a bargaining
chip and the moral authority to press the demand that the five nuclear
powers -- and especially the US -- end their programme of developing new
weapons through computer and laboratory testing, dealert their stockpile,
adopt a no first use doctrine, and disarm.

It will take more than one meeting between the two Prime Ministers for
India and Pakistan to go down such a path. But it is vital that the work
begin immediately. Mr Vajpayee must not allow Pakistan's insistence on
discussing Kashmir to come in the way. Likewise, Mr Sharif must give up the
`agreement on Kashmir first' line that his government has used so far to
frustrate progress on other fronts. The two leaders have a golden
opportunity to go down in history as men who finally brought a modicum of
sanity to the relationship between their countries. Let us hope they are
brave enough to seize the moment.

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