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global_zero_commission_on_nuclear_risk_reduction_report

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GLOBAL ZERO COMMISSION ON NUCLEAR RISK REDUCTION REPORTDE-ALERTING AND STABILIZING THE WORLD’S NUCLEAR FORCE POSTURES<strong>nuclear</strong> attack <strong>on</strong> any scale.Regarding the <strong>nuclear</strong> chain of command, the StrategicForces Command (SFC), headed by a senior officer fromthe Indian Army, Air Force or Navy <strong>on</strong> a rotati<strong>on</strong>al basis,commands the land-based missile forces. Naval and airforce units are dual-capable (c<strong>on</strong>figured to employ either<strong>nuclear</strong> or c<strong>on</strong>venti<strong>on</strong>al armaments) and remain in the parentservice until a crisis arises, at which time they “chop”(transfer over) to the SFC and receive specific <strong>nuclear</strong> missi<strong>on</strong>sand targets.The prime minister authorizes their use through the Nati<strong>on</strong>alSecurity Council. The deputy prime minister or a Cabinetminister may assume this authority as a successor in theevent of the prime minister’s incapacitati<strong>on</strong> during c<strong>on</strong>flict.Approval of use passes down to the chairman of the Chiefsof Staff Committee, and then to the Commander in Chief ofthe Strategic Forces Command, which is resp<strong>on</strong>sible for thedeployment, targeting, and employment of <strong>nuclear</strong> forces.A two-man rule for arming and launching <strong>nuclear</strong> weap<strong>on</strong>sand a system of firing codes and electr<strong>on</strong>ic interlocks havebeen put in place to enhance security at lower levels in thechain of command. In the event of a decapitating <strong>nuclear</strong>strike that wipes out the top leadership, commanders in thefield <strong>report</strong>edly can take matters into their own hands andretaliate at their own discreti<strong>on</strong>. 26As India “operati<strong>on</strong>alizes” it <strong>nuclear</strong> forces, it is improvingthe resilience and reliability of <strong>nuclear</strong> c<strong>on</strong>trol, but it stillneeds to substantially strengthen both positive c<strong>on</strong>trol (thecapability to survive and carry out wartime missi<strong>on</strong>s) andnegative c<strong>on</strong>trol (the capability to prevent accidental, unauthorized,or inadvertent use). And India needs to locate andstrike an appropriate balance between positive and negativec<strong>on</strong>trol. Meanwhile, the Indian <strong>nuclear</strong> posture carries <strong>risk</strong>.It is not as survivable, stable, and c<strong>on</strong>trollable as it needs tobe. Its virtues bear noting, however. It provides for a lowlevel of alert, relatively ample warning and decisi<strong>on</strong> time,26 Kanti Bajpai, “India and <strong>nuclear</strong> weap<strong>on</strong>s,” in Routledge Handbook ofIndian Politics, ed. Atul Kohil and Prerna Singh (Ox<strong>on</strong>, England: Routledge,2013), p. 34.and growing survivability.Similar pressures for “operati<strong>on</strong>alizati<strong>on</strong>” are building in Pakistan,which like India normally keeps its 100 or so <strong>nuclear</strong>weap<strong>on</strong>s disassembled and separated from the missiles andplanes that would deliver them in wartime. In a crisis bothcountries will come under pressure to assemble and matethe weap<strong>on</strong>s to their delivery platforms, and move them toforward locati<strong>on</strong>s.The Pakistani <strong>nuclear</strong> posture suffers from many of the samedeficiencies as India’s posture. It has a l<strong>on</strong>g way to go to establishadequate positive and negative c<strong>on</strong>trol. And gearing<strong>nuclear</strong> operati<strong>on</strong>s to early first-use is destabilizing. In short,Pakistan’s <strong>nuclear</strong> posture carries excessive <strong>nuclear</strong> <strong>risk</strong>.The c<strong>on</strong>tours of Pakistan’s emerging <strong>nuclear</strong> “operati<strong>on</strong>alizati<strong>on</strong>”are described below. 27Regarding their peacetime storage, Pakistan’s <strong>nuclear</strong> weap<strong>on</strong>s,like India’s, are kept unassembled and separated fromthe n<strong>on</strong>-<strong>nuclear</strong> explosives as well as from their deliveryvehicles, but it is believed Pakistan could assemble themquickly. Only the Strategic Plans Divisi<strong>on</strong> (SPD) is resp<strong>on</strong>siblefor carrying out mating procedures, readying the systemfor launch and firing the missiles.After the attacks <strong>on</strong> September 11, 2001, Pakistan’s militaryrelocated <strong>nuclear</strong> weap<strong>on</strong>s comp<strong>on</strong>ents to new sites and redeployedthe arsenal to at least six secret locati<strong>on</strong>s. Pakistanhas also implemented various security measures to safeguardagainst unauthorized or accidental use, and theft, 28including:• Layers of c<strong>on</strong>centric tiers of armed forces security pers<strong>on</strong>nelguarding <strong>nuclear</strong> weap<strong>on</strong>s facilities;27 See Zia Mian, “Commanding and C<strong>on</strong>trolling Nuclear Weap<strong>on</strong>s,”C<strong>on</strong>trolling the Bomb, ed. Pervez Hoodbhoy (Oxford: Oxford UniversityPress, 2013), pp. 204-36.28 Shaun Gregory, “The Terrorist Threat to Pakistan’s Nuclear Weap<strong>on</strong>s,”CTC Sentinel, Combating Terrorism Center at West Point, vol. 2 issue 7,July 2009, https://www.ctc.usma.edu/v2/wp-c<strong>on</strong>tent/uploads/2010/06/Vol2Iss7-Art1.pdf25

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