New Delhi

Second Strike Capability

India is utilizing all means to develop a second-strike capability.

By Burhan Ahmed Lodhi | October 2022


The thought and practice of actual warfare has been repudiated by nuclear weapons. As an alternative, it concentrates on strengthening state capacities to dissuade the adversary state from suffering the repercussions of the first strike. The ability of a state to respond to a nuclear attack with a nuclear counterattack is known as a second-strike capability. However, when the hostile state recognises that attacking will eventually trigger huge retaliation or mutually assured destruction a second strike becomes credible.

India was the first state in the South Asian region to acquire nuclear capability in 1974. Consequently, Pakistan started its nuclear programme and demonstrated such a capability in May 1998 as a response to the security dilemma vis-à-vis its eastern neighbour. At first Indian nuclear weapons were Pakistan-centric..However, with its growing relations with the United States and the signing of multiple agreements of strategic nature, India has seen itself as a regional hegemon.

The U.S.-India Nuclear deal is said to be based on peaceful use of nuclear technology. However, Charles D. Ferguson, President of the Federation of American Scientists, wrote in Arms Control Today on February 13, 2015, that India was short on uranium. “If the nuclear deal were to fall through, India would be forced to stop running about half of its indigenously fuelled reactors or only operate its nuclear submarine fleet at approximately 50 percent capacity.”

After the Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons, commonly known as Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) came into force, nuclear states that ratified the treaty were bound to not send fusible material to states that had not signed the NPT. Following this, India and Pakistan relied on their limited indigenous sources to meet the demand for uranium and platinum. India used 475 tonnes of uranium annually for both weaponry and civil use. Due to inability of governmental institutions in managing uranium extraction and increased demand of natural resources by 7 to 8 percent per year, India’s extraction of uranium immensely decreased to 350 tonnes annually. Consequently, it was bound to lower the weaponry use of feasible material for the sake of running its civil nuclear reactors. Although, the Civil Nuclear Deal in 2008 gave India enough access to imported uranium for running its civil reactors and after that it could easily use its indigenous uranium and platinum in feasible missiles and weapons against Pakistan and China for enhancing its second-strike capability. According to Economic Times, on March 31, 2022, India imported 100 tonnes of Uranium from the USA under the 2008 deal.

Limited to imported feasible material from the U.S., the deal also lowers the credibility of the NPT and, consequently, India is now importing Uranium from Australia, France, and Kazakhstan, etc. Altogether, in realist philosophy, the U.S., to divert India from building bilateral relations with Russia and promoting the Indo-Pacific Strategy in Asian waters, violated its own proposed treaty. Furthermore, instead of bringing India and Pakistan to NPT, the U.S. deliberately indulged both countries in an unending nuclear arms race.

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