People's Democracy
(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India
(Marxist)
|
Vol. XXXIII
No.
39
September
27, 2009
|
Testing
Times for India's
Nuclear
Policy
Prabir Purkayastha
A
great deal of
controversy has been stirred up recently regarding the yield of Pokhran
II,
after K Santhanam, the former DRDO
scientist and the DRDO co-ordinator for the 1998 nuclear tests went
public
questioning its success. This is not the first time that the yield from
the
thermonuclear (or the hydrogen bomb) in the Pokhran II test has been
questioned. The international experts had even then raised doubt on
this count,
a doubt that had been echoed privately by other experts. Most of the
current
debate is centred on the central premise that India
needs hydrogen bombs for a
credible deterrence. The question that we have to ask is the minimum
credible
deterrence based on the size of the bang we can produce or the very
fact that India
has
nuclear weapons? What level of civilian deaths that will take place due
to a
bigger bomb will satisfy the proponents of the big bomb theory?
A
section of the nuclear
establishment have always been in favour of the big bomb theory � the
bigger
the bomb the higher the deterrence. A reality check will show that a
nuclear
bomb is not possible to use militarily; if you believe in deterrence
theory,
the deterrence effect comes from possessing nuclear weapons and not
their size.
To discuss the threshold of damage in any nuclear exchange is to get
derailed
into how many weapons we should have and what should be their size,
what should
be India's second strike capability and so on. This is the path of
Mutually
Assured Destruction or MAD.
It is this mad MAD nuclear and missile race that broke the back of the
Soviet
economy during the cold war.
CONTROVERSIAL
RESULTS
While
the nuclear race
for a bigger bomb is not a goal that we should favour, it is also true
that the
government of the day including the nuclear establishment believes that
the
people do not deserve to know the truth and it is fundamentally the
preserve of
a select few. That is why the results of the nuclear tests � the
earlier
Pokhran I and now Pokhran II have become controversial.
First
the simple facts. India
in
Pokhran II exploded five devices. While three were miniaturised
devices, two
are important from the stand-point of size. One of them was a straight
forward
fission device (Shakti 2) using plutonium of approximately 12 kilotons
(equivalent to 12,000 tons of an explosion with TNT). This sets at rest
questions about Pokhran I yield, which has also been estimated to be
lower than
the official claims.
The
other device (Shakti
1) was a two-stage boosted fission-fusion device. A boosted fission
device has
a small amount of tritium (a heavy isotope of hydrogen) in it to boost
the
fission in the fissile material. In a hydrogen bomb, the trigger is a
primary,
which is generally a boosted fission device. The boosted fission in the
primary
creates the condition for the second stage �
an adjoining secondary chamber filled with fusion
material. In this secondary, there is
a fusion reaction that increases the yield of the device significantly.
There
have been doubts
regarding the yield of Shakti 1 right from the beginning. Most outside
experts
computed the yield of the device to be to be around 30-35 kilotons and
not 45
kilotons as claimed by the Indian side. It is true that they do not
have full
information regarding important data required to come to any definitive
conclusions. BARC has far more data and is in a position to estimate
the true
yield of explosion much more accurately. Neither is it possible for
BARC to
release all data which would verify the yields independently without
giving
away information regarding weapons design. For the general public,
there was a
reluctance in believing foreign experts, particularly as they did not
have full
data needed to come to a definite conclusion. This is where matters
rested
before Santhanam went public.
It
is now clear � after
Santhanam's public disclosure � DRDO did not agree with the claims of BARC regarding the yield of Shakti
1. From what Santhanam has now made public and what various scientists
have
been saying in private, we have to conclude that the hydrogen bomb was
a
partial success and did not provide its true yield. The first stage �
the
boosted fission primary worked but the fusion stage produced only 15-20
per
cent of the expected yield. Instead of the expected about 45 kilotons,
Shakti 1
produced about 25-30 kiloton yield, consistent with what others have
been
saying from their analysis of the seismic data.
Just
to put these
figures in perspective, let us look at the yields of the only two bombs
ever
exploded in war � the Hiroshima and the
Nagasaki
bombs. The Hiroshima bomb was about 13
kilotons and the Nagasaki
one was 25
kilotons. The Hiroshima
bomb killed an immediate 70,000 and with conservative estimates another 130,000 by 1950. The death figures of
Nagasaki
are
comparable. The circle of total destruction in the two cities was about
1.6 to
2 kilometres, with another outer circle of about 3 kilometres where
fires and
other effects destroyed most buildings and structures. And all this was
done by
bomb yields lower than the test device of Shakti 1!
VANITY
STRATEGY?
Obviously,
if we are
thinking of the strategic value of nuclear weapons, even with the
boosted
fission device and a partial fusion of the secondary, India
has the
capability of producing a bomb with 50-100 kilotons capacity. With a
boosted
fission design alone, a capacity of 45-50 kilotons can be achieved by
just
scaling up the fissile material and the tritium in its core. The
question we
need to ask is whether we are truly talking about the need for a
hydrogen bomb
or is it vanity strategy � others have it and if we want to play with
the big
boys we must have it too!
It
is not surprising
that BARC and the nuclear establishment are caught on the wrong foot.
Having
claimed full credit for a hydrogen bomb, they cannot now go back and
accept its
partial success. The BJP and the Congress have both agreed with the US
that they
will do no more testing, irrespective of what they may claim in public.
The BJP
has even more to lose � once they accept that Pokhran 2 failed, then
its
advance over Pokhran 1 is non-existent. Why then did they subject the
country
to sanctions imposed after Pokhran II? The role of ex-president Kalam
and Dr R
Chidambaram has been controversial from the beginning. They have used
their
stature to endorse claims they probably were aware were not correct.
Having
done that and taken the bow from the nation for a successful hydrogen
bomb
test, they can now not go back and sing mea culpa.
Santhanam
and others are
now asking that India
should conduct more tests to perfect its hydrogen bomb. This is where
we must
part company. Yes, quite possibly the tests that were done were not
fully
successful. However, the belief that only a successful hydrogen bomb
test will
put us in some elite club is foolish. The issue is not more tests, but
can India
own up to
the disarmament view � all countries possessing nuclear weapons must
give them
up. It is not a altruistic utopian requirement but crucial to the
survival of
the globe. It is here that India
is caught in a double bind � it wants to be an official nuclear power
and also
argue that it will not sign the CTBT. The only way it can bargain on
CTBT is if
it stands up says what it always did earlier � all nuclear weapons
states
including India, Pakistan and Israel
should give a time bound
program for getting rid of their nuclear weapons. Under such
conditions, India
would be
willing to sign the CTBT.
Why
are we saying that
all countries need to give up nuclear weapons? Simply put, the nuclear
threshold today is much lower now than earlier. The technology for
producing
fissile material is not only known but also costs far less than it did
at the
time of the Manhattan
project. The technology � either uranium enrichment through centrifuges
or
plutonium in reactors � is becoming much more easily accessible. The
NPT regime
has no bar on either enrichment or running reactors. Therefore, unless
the
nuclear weapon states agree for disarmament, we are likely to see their
monopoly go as more and more states break through the current nuclear
firewall.
Almost
40 years after the signing
of the NPT, the global �bargain� -- that non-nuclear countries would
not
develop nuclear weapons, and that five nuclear-armed countries would
take
good-faith disarmament steps for the eventual elimination of nuclear
weapons --
is in deep crisis. While the non-nuclear weapon countries kept their
side of
the bargain, nuclear disarmament of the nuclear weapons countries was,
at best,
meagre. Even this halting disarmament process between the US and Russia has come to a
standstill
after 1991-92 and is now threatened. The US strategic doctrine (The
Nuclear
Posture Review), which states that nuclear weapons can be used
against
non-nuclear weapon countries, and even in a first strike (�preventive�
and
�pre-emptive� war), is now its accepted doctrine (�National Security
Strategy of the United States of America� document prepared in
2006). This is a brazen assertion that the
United States is not
bound by either
international law or any canon of civilised behaviour amongst nations:
others
should give up nuclear weapons but the US reserves the right to
use such
weapons even against the countries who have given them up.
BREAK
TIES
WITH AMERICA
We
had warned at the time of the
India US nuclear deal that the price India was paying for this
tie-up
was giving up its strategic independence while gaining only nuclear
fuel. It
was clear from the beginning that India was not going to get
enrichment and reprocessing (ENR) technology and was being pushed into
an expensive
and dependent path of nuclear energy development. More than a year has
passed
since the government survived the confidence motion on the nuclear
deal. The
balance sheet today is that apart from nuclear fuel, India
has not gone any where on the
deal. India has not
even
taken up the issue of ENR with the US, after US managed the G7 to endorse
a ban on
ENR technology for India.
The French Areva and Westinghouse/GE reactor deals are shrouded in
mystery. It
appears that these companies want a complete exemption of liability in
order to
supply equipment, for which India
would have to pass a special nuclear liability act. If the only gain
from the
deal was nuclear fuel, India
would have been far better off to argue this case before the
NSG.
India
has some tough choices. It can
either play ball with the US, accept its junior partner status and sign
on the
dotted line � in this case the CTBT. In that case it will have to
revise its
strategic understanding. Or it can break with the US. It
can do this the way
Santhanam and the nuclear hawks want � test again and go into a nuclear
doghouse. Or it can put at centre stage the global disarmament agenda.
Both
these mean breaking with the US,
something that this government does not want to do. What we need is
that India breaks
with the US
and also puts global disarmament
on the table. This is the only sane course for India
and indeed all humanity.