Kanwal Sibal
India has taken a substantial step forward in acquiring a credible
nuclear deterrent capability with its successful Agni V test on April
19. The security threats to India are almost unique in that we have two
nuclear neighbours who have had military conflicts with us in the past,
who even now lay claims to our territory, whose seek to corner us
strategically and who have long colluded in nuclear and missile matters.
Despite the acuteness of our security challenges our response has
lacked a sense of urgency. While aware of their source and nature, we
have not been able to make up our minds on the size and scope of our
response and the manpower and funds to be allocated to develop the
technologies and capacities to meet these threats.
Approach
We have tended to discount any large scale military threat from
either adversary. We have felt confident about coping with any Pakistani
military adventurism with the strength we possess. In China’s case, our
assessment has been that with the existing border agreements on peace
and tranquillity and sundry CBMs that reflect the desire of both
countries to avoid military tensions on the border, coupled with
political level efforts to set up a mechanism for border negotiations,
the danger from China was more long term than immediate. China, in our
thinking, would also want to preserve the myth of its peaceful rise and
would therefore avoid an unnecessary military conflict with us,
particularly as India poses no military threat to its control over
Tibet.
We have also been able to dodge taking hard national security
decisions by avoiding a military response to Pakistani provocations and a
robust poitical response to those from China. We have not allowed
tensions to escalate, preferring dialogue and engagement instead. If
Pakistan does a Mumbai our answer is dialogue; if China questions our
sovereignty over Arunachal Pradesh or Kashmir, far from picking up the
challenge, we look for a compromise formula to resume military contacts
and gratuitously bolster the image of Sinkiang’s political head by
inviting him to India despite the public upheavel there against Chinese
rule. Even as we are concerned about Chinese strategic inroads into the
Indian Ocean, we endorse maritime cooperation with them in these waters.
Thus, we reinforce our proclivity not to take hard decisions by
making believe that our security dilemmas can be managed through
diplomatic engagement rather than accelerating our strategic military
programmes. In reality, while self-restraint and attachment to peace
mark do our policies, we choose soft options also because we are
conscious of our weakness and lack of military preparedness.
Comparison
The Agni V test needs to be seen in this broad context. Our
Integrated Missile Development Programme began in 1983 but it is only
now that we have successfully tested a real strategic delivery
capability. Compared to China, our progress has been slow, either
because of technical hurdles or inadequate committment of resources to
the task. If the Chinese needed to develop capabilities to counter the
exercise of US power in their neighbourhood, we needed to counter the
exercise of combined Chinese and Pakistani power against us, without
entering into an arms race with China just as the latter has not entered
into one with the US.
The delay in developing our strategic delivery capability compounds
our political difficulties. China is now a mature missile power with
ICBM capability. Its new ballistic missile capable of hitting US naval
assets at a long distance has attracted attention, but otherwise the
upgradation of its long range missiles proceeds quietly. Russia too is
developing a powerful new missile but this too hardly makes news.
India’s missile programme will take some more years to mature and will
therefore continue to be in the public eye, making India, that wants to
project the image of a peaceful and responsible power, look like
pursuing threatening and regionally destabilizing capabilities of the
kind North Korea and Iran are accused of. We have repeated the mistake
we made in acquiring nuclear capability much later than we could and
should have.
Response
While the China dimension of Agni V will not escape expert
commentary, the way our media has played this up reflects our immaturity
as a society in handling sensitive strategic matters. If the Chinese
media were to graphically report how Chinese missile deployments in
Tibet are intended to bring major north Indian cities into their
destructive range, the outcry in India will be huge. Because of our lack
of discretion we have provoked unnecessary polemics against us in the
Chinese media, though the Chinese government, to its credit, has reacted
with maturity.
In actual fact Agni V should have caused no surprise to the Chinese
as India has been transparent about its Agni missile programme and the
planned range of 5000 kilometers. China, in any case, possesses missiles
with even longer range. Earlier it was India that was vulnerable to
Chinese missiles and now the reverse will be true, creating a better
balance in deterrence.
US’s reaction to Agni V is noteworthy as it reflects the new quality
of India-US bilateral relations even in areas that were highly
problematic in the past. In the 90s and early 2000s, the US was pressing
india to curb its missile programme because it was seen as
destabilizing. Even ISRO had been sanctioned because of US
missile-related concerns. The thinking today is entirely different.
While avoiding any specific disapproval of India’s step, the US has
lauded India’s non-proliferation credentials and underlined its no-first
use policy, whch would suggest that India’s missile advance is actually
seen as serving US interests too in creating a better Sino-Indian
strategic balance in the years ahead.
Author is Member Advisory Board at Vivekananda International Foundation and Former Foreign Secretary
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