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India, Pakistan Hold Nuclear Talks
Gabrielle Kohlmeier
Efforts to ease tensions between nuclear-armed rivals India and Pakistan
continued in June, despite a change in government in New Delhi. In
nuclear confidence-building talks June 19-20, the two South Asian
nations agreed to continue a 1998 bilateral moratorium on further
nuclear tests and establish a hotline between each countrys
foreign ministry.
The communications link is designed to prevent misunderstandings
and reduce risks relevant to nuclear issues, according to the
countries joint statement.
A hotline between their senior commands has already been used to ease
tensions after violence on the Kashmir border, but the new link will
be upgraded, dedicated, and secured, and will connect the foreign
ministries, reducing the likelihood of an accidental nuclear war caused
by a lack of communication. India and Pakistan also agreed to renew
a nuclear test ban, except in extraordinary circumstances.
These talks marked the first discussions on mechanisms to prevent
the use of nuclear weapons, and the first movement on the Lahore Memorandum
of Understanding (MoU) of February 1999, designed to reduce the risks
of a nuclear exchange due to an accident or misunderstanding. (See
ACT, January/February 1999).
In their joint statement June 20, India and Pakistan vowed to continue
bilateral discussions and hold further meetings towards the implementation
of the Lahore MoU of 1999.
The talks came after the Bharatiya Janata Partys (BJP) unexpected
defeat in Mays Indian national elections. The BJP, led by Prime
Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee, had shocked the world and Pakistan
in 1998 by carrying out nuclear tests soon after coming to power.
Pakistan matched Indias move soon thereafter, raising the prospect
of a nuclear exchange when both countries came to the verge of full-scale
war in 1999 and 2002. (See ACT, March 2004).
Tensions had begun to ease, however, in 2003 after Vajpayee and Pakistani
President Gen. Pervez Musharaff took steps to improve relations. Vajpayees
defeat raised concerns that this progress might be undone. Concerns
grew more pronounced when the talks, initially scheduled for May 25-26,
were postponed indefinitely at the request of the new Indian government.
Those concerns were dispelled on May 27 when the Congress party and
its coalition partners, which comprise the governing United Progressive
Alliance, put forth their policy agenda. The Common Minimum Programme
stated that [t]he UPA government is committed to maintaining
a credible nuclear weapons programme while at the same time it will
evolve demonstrable and verifiable confidence-building measures with
its nuclear neighbours.
More pointedly, it reiterated new Prime Minister Manmohan Singhs
assurances that close ties are a priority, stating that [t]he
UPA will give the highest priority to building closer
ties
with its neighbors in South Asia
Dialogue with Pakistan on all
issues will be pursued systematically and on a sustained basis.
Still, challenges remain in easing nuclear tensions, particularly
as the talks have not yet slowed either countrys missile or
military modernization programs.
On May 28, Pakistan initiated the first of two missile tests within
less than a week, test-firing its Ghauri V, which is believed
to be based on North Koreas Nodong missile. It has a range of
1,500 kilometers enabling it to reach most cities in northern India.
On June 4, Pakistan test fired a Hatf missile. Musharraf insisted
the tests were not meant as a hostile sign to India, but were undertaken
to ensure the reliability of Pakistans nuclear arsenal. Pakistani
officials did emphasize, however, that the tests ought to clear up
any false impressions that Pakistan will roll back its nuclear program.
Some countries reacted with disapproval to the missile tests. Japans
foreign ministry issued a statement June 4 expressing deep regret
over the missile tests, calling on Pakistan to respond sincerely
to the efforts of the international community to promote the non-proliferation
of weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missiles.
Some of Indias governing Congress party also expressed dismay,
accusing Pakistan of starting an arms race. But the official response
was more measured. Indian High Commissioner to Pakistan Shiv Shankar
Menon said India had received prior notice from Islamabad, and was
unconcerned about the two tests. He also rejected the notion that
these tests carried any sort of message.
This tempered response may be related to the recent advances of Indias
own nuclear initiatives. In May, New Dehli released a new Maritime
Doctrine calling for the construction of a two-dozen-ship ballistic
missile submarine fleet by 2030. In the interim, India plans to deploy
a submarine by the end of next year, two years ahead of its originally
scheduled deployment date.
And on June 13, India test-fired a Brahmos supersonic cruise missile,
which, until then, had been in its experimental phase.
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