Pakistan
should be able to join the NSG alongside India.
By Sobia Paracha
For about a decade there have been forceful discussions in South Asia about U.S. efforts to mainstream India into
the non-proliferation regime and enhance nuclear cooperation with the country
that famously denounced the regime as discriminatory and “Nuclear Apartheid.” This has been seen in
Islamabad as harming Pakistan’s strategic interests.
Pakistan’s policies vis-a-vis the nonproliferation regime
will be influenced by the evolution of India’s case for Nuclear Suppliers Group
(NSG) membership, for obvious security reasons. The tenacious efforts of the United States to
conduct nuclear trade with India and make it a member of the NSG will reduce
Pakistan’s space in the nonproliferation regime and it is highly probable that
the doors for Pakistan’s nuclear mainstreaming will close permanently if India
becomes a member of the non-proliferation regime before Pakistan. However,
there is also a case for viewing Pakistan as a prospective
member of the NSG on its own merit if the international
criteria is developed multilaterally, with due consideration of the strategic
interests of all parties and the goal of balancing them with the possibility of
strengthening the non-proliferation regime.
With the existing asymmetry of military and economic
potential between India and Pakistan, advocating a criteria based on
international norms of nonproliferation for any future NSG memberships is
Pakistan’s best bet. Pakistan for some time, has been advocating a criterion-based approach for
any future addition of non-NPT states to the NSG. However, there hardly is
a universal criterion for the case of non-NPT states. For some states, the
criterion can be as simple as the possibility of nuclear trade and business for
their companies. Others might also like to include the non-proliferation
credentials of a given state. The Chinese stance of seeking to develop criteria before
considering the Indian or Pakistani case for NSG membership falls in the
category of states that still want to have a principled approach to nuclear
trade, rather than rubbing the geoeconomic and geopolitical interests of big
powers in the faces of small countries. The derogatory approach of the United
States toward smaller states is obvious specifically in two ways: first, the
way Washington has tried to influence (read browbeat) the smaller states’ decisions regarding
Indian membership in the NSG; and second, its partial demands for Pakistan
(and not India) to improve its non-proliferation credentials to be considered
for NSG membership.
However, the measures of nonproliferation credentials
discussed to establish Pakistan’s case are mainly related to vertical proliferationand
strategic stability with India. Interestingly, onward nonproliferation and the
establishment of optimum safety and security measures are the only established
nonproliferation norms internationally. Controlling arms buildup is not an
international norm and all states that have decided to adopt a moratorium on
further testing or production of fissile materials have done so based on their
own strategic calculations, rather than to fulfill their NPT obligations. This
puts a question mark on the U.S. demands that Pakistan sign the CTBT and
facilitate the FMCT as a bargain for nuclear mainstreaming. Both of these are
noble goals in terms of inching the world closer to nuclear disarmament.
However, it is unfair to ask Pakistan to choose between its strategic
imperatives and NSG membership. It is a cost bigger than Pakistan can realistically bear.
Similarly, the NSG is not the right platform to discuss
issues related to strategic stability between India and Pakistan, like Indian
conventional modernization and Proactive Defense Strategy, and Pakistan’s
development of short-range nuclear weapons. These are issues of genuine
concern, but the prospective provision of NSG membership to Pakistan does not
provide the United States enough leverage to push Pakistan against its stance
on full-spectrum deterrence. Also, pressure in this regard would only enhance the Pakistani sense of alienation and
further increase its reliance on nuclear deterrence.
A relatively fair criteria, which may or may not be
universal, should consider the potential of each prospective member to enhance
the international nonproliferation agenda. Again, this has to be based on the
potential to contribute to international efforts to promote nuclear safety and
security and curb onward proliferation, as vertical proliferation has a
separate set of dynamics and has not traditionally been considered as a measure
of a state’s nonproliferation credentials. China, Russia and the United States are all
modernizing their arsenals but this has never cast doubts on
their nonproliferation credentials, since all three are committed to
controlling proliferation to other countries and non-state actors. One could
argue that all these states are de jure nuclear weapons states
under NPT while India and Pakistan are not. Yet if both states could
accept the obligation of non-nuclear weapons states, why would they resist
joining the NPT in the first place?
So how can Pakistan contribute to the nonproliferation
agenda? Pakistan is a de facto nuclear weapons state with
complete nuclear fuel cycle capabilities. The NSG is better off with Pakistan
inside the regime than outside. Even though Pakistan does not possess
remarkable business potential like India, it has demonstrated an interest in developing its
civilian nuclear sector for energy, medical, and R&D
purposes. The Energy Security Action Plan of the Planning Commission of
Pakistan envisages increasing the share of nuclear in the total energy mix from 0.67 percent to 15.11 percent. In any
case Pakistan’s potential for both nuclear imports and exports is better than
many current NSG member states.
Also, Pakistan has established positive safety and
security records. Today it can contribute to the improvement of nuclear safety
and security of other states through its Nuclear Security Summit-mandated Centers of Excellence, by participating in the IAEA IPPAS(International
Physical Protection Advisory Service) missions, etc. No state in the world can
claim an impeccable nuclear safety and security regime, but some need to do
more work than others. Both India and Pakistan are developing states with a
need for capacity building.
There is no reliable methodology to grade a given state’s
nuclear safety and security parameters; however, it is more important that all
states have confidence in international cooperation to this end. Pakistan’s
engagement with the United States, IAEA, Nuclear Security Summit process, and
other multilateral platforms for improving its nuclear safety and security
complexes is an important way in which Islamabad is helping reduce
national and international nuclear risks. This is also reflected in the confidence the U.S. government places in Pakistan’s
nuclear safety and security efforts. One clear way in which Pakistan
can benefit from NSG membership would be streamlining its export control
procedures. Once it can formally communicate with individual member states,
especially in terms of licensing and end-user certification issues, it will be
better able to fill the gaps in the implementation of its export control laws.
The pace of progress on Pakistan’s strategic export
controls and strengthening the safety and security regime is partially
influenced by its desire to become a mainstream nuclear state.
Despite highlighting its reservations about how the 2008 India-U.S.
nuclear deal will impact strategic stability in South Asia, especially when an
India-specific waiver was issued by the NSG, Pakistan did not oppose the deal.
That’s because there was an implicit understanding that in
the future Pakistan will be a candidate for such a deal as well. There
is a general understanding in Islamabad, stated a Foreign Ministry official who
desires to remain anonymous, that Pakistan’s aim is not to get Indian
membership blocked in the NSG but also enter the NSG along with India.
However, the behavior of the nonproliferation regime in
the last decade toward Pakistan, if combined in the future with India’s formal
membership in the NSG, will leave no incentive for Pakistan to continue its
international engagement with the nonproliferation regime bodies.
Sobia Paracha works as a consultant with
Islamabad Policy Research Institute (IPRI), Pakistan. The views expressed
here are personal and do not necessarily reflect the views of IPRI.
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