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Why India Wants To Reverse Its ‘No First Use’ Nuclear Policy? BBC Report

Indian defence minister Rajnath Singh recently hinted that New Delhi could reconsider its “no first use of nuclear weapons” policy, a statement that has raised much more than eyebrows in neighbouring Pakistan and China to some extent. EurAsian Times gets you a report from the BBC analysed by Christopher Clary and Vipin Narang.

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Rajnath Singh recently reaffirmed a long-standing position of India’s nuclear weapons policy: that it would not be the first to use the destructive weapons in a battle. But he afterwards questioned how much longer that commitment would remain. He told the media that while India had “strictly adhered to” the policy thus far “what happens in future depends on the conditions”.

He was indicating that India’s “no first use” doctrine is neither absolute nor permanent and intimating that in a conflict, nothing would compel India to stick by it.

These were not off-the-cuff remarks. Singh was speaking at Pokhran, the site of India’s nuclear weapons tests in the late 1990s. He tweeted the seemingly scripted remark from his official account and the government’s Press Information Bureau put out a press release quoting the statement.

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As such, it was the most official signal to date that India’s “no first use” doctrine might give way to something more obscure. The implication was that one day India might decide that it would have to use nuclear weapons first to safeguard its security.

What is the ‘no first use’ doctrine?

During the Cold War, the US, the Soviet Union, France, and the United Kingdom all reserved the right to use nuclear weapons first in a severe conflict. There were two typical scenarios for first use:

(1) that a country in danger of conventional military defeat on the battlefield would employ so-called tactical nuclear weapons against adversary military forces to forestall that defeat, or

(2) that a country fearing an adversary would attack it with nuclear weapons would pre-empt that attack with a nuclear first strike designed to destroy as much of the adversary’s nuclear arsenal as possible.

When India announced its nuclear status with weapons tests in 1998, it rejected the idea of “nuclear war-fighting”. It would design its nuclear forces for “retaliation only” and as a consequence, it said, it could have a more limited arsenal.

India joined China in offering a no first use doctrine.

When China first tested nuclear weapons in 1964, it declared it would “never at any time and under any circumstances be the first to use nuclear weapons”. The fact that India never fully believed China’s commitment was one ironic reason behind India’s own decision to overtly test nuclear weapons in 1998.

Except for China, no other country besides India currently offers a no first use declaration.

North Korea at one point floated one, but few believed it, given that Pyongyang’s stated motivation to pursue nuclear weapons included defeating a combined South Korean and American invasion through the nuclear first use.

While periodically the US has considered the wisdom of a no first use pledge as a means to lower Russian and Chinese fears in a hypothetical crisis, and as part of a general commitment to reducing the political salience of nuclear weapons, it has refused to do so to date.

India’s most likely adversary, Pakistan, explicitly preserves the right to use nuclear weapons first. It has threatened to use battlefield nuclear weapons to forestall a conventional military defeat at the hands of the Indian army – a deterrent threat that has so far constrained India’s ability to retaliate to a stream of terrorist and militant violence in India that Delhi has blamed on Islamabad.

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