BY WEB DESK
A report examining nuclear security
worldwide suggests India’s “nuclear security measures may be weaker than those
of Pakistan”, but says the risk “appears to be moderate”, while claiming risk
of nuclear theft in Pakistan “appears to be high”.
The Harvard Kennedy School
report, “Preventing Nuclear Terrorism: Continuous Improvement or Dangerous
Decline?”, says it is difficult to judge whether India’s nuclear security is
capable of protecting against the threats it faces though it is likely adversary
threats in India are “less extreme” than those in Pakistan.
Putting Pakistan “at risk
for nuclear theft”, the report says: “Overall, the risk of nuclear theft in
Pakistan appears to be high,” citing “some of the world’s most capable
terrorist groups, an environment of widespread corruption and extremist
sympathies” as risk factors.
While there is “no clear
trend, either upward or downward” regarding the level of risk for Indian
nuclear sites, it highlights a trend “toward increasing risk” in Pakistan as
its nuclear arsenal expands and the strategic doctrine shifts toward tactical nuclear
weapons.
Stronger nuclear security?
“Pakistan has substantially
strengthened its nuclear security in the past two decades,” the report says,
citing changes in organisations governing nuclear security, training, equipment
and approaches to screening personnel, requirements for nuclear material
accounting and control, approaches to strengthening security culture and
“substantial changes in every other aspect of nuclear security covered in the
survey” as reasons for the improved nuclear security.
Measures taken to secure
Pakistan’s nuclear weapons highlighted in the report include: – Allotment of
25,000 troops to guard Pakistan’s nuclear stocks and facilities by the
Strategic Plans Division (SPD) – Equipment of sites with extensive barriers and
detection systems – Separate storage of nuclear weapons components ─ although
this may change as Pakistan shifts towards tactical nuclear weapons intended
for rapid deployment – Equipment of weapons with locks to prevent unauthorised
use – Extensive cooperation with the United States to improve nuclear security
The report also highlights
negative trends including – Absence of recent US expressions of confidence –
Shift towards rapid-deployment tactical nuclear weapons – A ‘probable’ increase
in the number of locations as a result of an increase in the number of weapons
The report says Pakistan
“must protect against almost overwhelming adversary threats” which include
terrorist groups that have demonstrated “that they are willing and able to
launch complex, well-coordinated attacks on heavily defended military targets
within Pakistan”, as was the case in the 2014 attempted hijacking of a naval
frigate by Al Qaeda’s South Asian affiliate “with the idea of using its
anti-ship missiles to attack US naval vessels”.
The report quotes Defence
Minister Khawaja Asif telling parliament ‘these people could not have breached
security without assistance from inside’.
However, despite a variety
of negative US media reports on Pakistan’s nuclear security, “US officials from
President Obama to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff have repeatedly
expressed confidence in Pakistani nuclear security arrangements”.
It also says the US Defense
Intelligence Agency Director “testified in February 2015 that improvements were
continuing”.
“It is notable, however,
that these statements of confidence have not been repeated at recent high-level
US-Pakistani meetings — suggesting that the United States has concerns about
some elements of Pakistan’s nuclear security approach,” it said.
‘Why 2016 will be pivotal
for nuclear security’
The report calls 2016 a
pivotal year for nuclear security, saying “actions in Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan,
Pakistan and elsewhere will affect the shape of the terrorist threat for years
to come”.
The selection of a new US president
may also impact nuclear security initiatives depending on whether or not he or
she makes nuclear security a priority, it says.
US and Russia, the two
countries with the largest nuclear stockpiles, may or may not find ways to
“revitalise their cooperation” in this area after suspension of such measures
following escalating tensions over Ukraine and other issues.
‘Ideal scenario by 2030’
Pakistan and India capping
their nuclear arsenals and agreeing to confidence-building measures or “other
steps that greatly reduce the probability of crises that would lead to the
dispersal of nuclear weapons to front-line forces” are among the report’s ideal
scenarios by the year 2030.
However, Pakistan and India
have continued to expand their arsenals and continue relying on “doctrines
likely to lead to early dispersal of those weapons in the event of a crisis”.
Processes for better
nuclear security have atrophied over time, the report claims, saying, “No
genuinely effective new mechanisms for bringing high-level policy makers
together to advance the field have emerged.”
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