Rawalpindi

Nuclear Norms

As nuclear neighbours, Pakistan and India need to show more responsibility than the bigger nuclear nations.

By Makhdoom Shahab-ud-Din | July 2022

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine gave birth to a plethora of reverberations. The tremors were felt even through South Asia. While some of these tremors amounted to miniscule political shifts, there is one tremor that has the potential to completely transmute the entire geopolitical landscape of South Asia. This is the nuclear rhetoric and forms a neo-realistic view. The potential threat of using nuclear weapons by Russia hangs like a guillotine upon the world’s people. This unequivocally has a surfeit of negative implications for South Asian countries.

With threats of nuclear use, Russia has become far more unpredictable than it ever was in recent years. This also owes to the fact of how bogged down and inefficient the Russian army has proved to be during its impasse in Ukraine. This is coupled with the international outcry and what we have is a Russia that is being choked at geopolitical and economic levels. Russia has never been a pushover and when push comes to shove, it has the potential of unleashing a nuclear attack which could run amok over all of Europe.

While the probability of such an event to be triggered is very low, it does, however, start a cascading effect in the shift of nuclear norms throughout the world and in particular South Asia. The region is home to not one but two nuclear powers –India and Pakistan. An air of disquiet always looms over the region. It should not be forgotten that when all eyes were on Russia, a crisis befell South Asia when India accidentally launched a cruise missile into Pakistani airspace. These are the type of nuclear norms being developed where one country would misread the trajectory of their own missile launched across international borders. Perhaps, what is more surprising is how Pakistan did not retaliate and everything was resolved without any further escalation. Further similar events could likely lead to a small scale war in South Asia with a heavy toll on the entire region.

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The writer is a journalist, TV anchor, and social media influencer based in Europe. He is an Erasmus Mundus Journalism Scholar and can be reached on Twitter @NewsUpdatesPak. His email address is makhdumshahab@gmail.com

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