By Waqar Ahmed
The US Foreign Policy
magazine had recently reported that India had built two top-secret facilities
in Karnataka to enrich uranium in pursuit of its hydrogen bomb plans.
Ostensibly, at Challakere, Karnataka, South Asia’s largest military-run complex
of nuclear centrifuges, atomic-research laboratories and weapons and
aircraft-testing facilities, the stated aims of the project are to “expand the
government's nuclear research, to produce fuel for India's nuclear reactors,
and to help power the country's fleet of new submarines.”
However, international
experts, especially Adrian Levy, believe, “this new facility will give India a
nuclear capability -- the ability to make many large-yield nuclear arms -- that
most experts say it presently lacks.”
Levy further says that
another of the project's aim is “to give India an extra stockpile of enriched
uranium fuel that could be used in new hydrogen bombs, also known as
thermonuclear weapons, substantially increasing the explosive force of those in
its existing nuclear arsenal.”
Another nuclear expert,
Robert Kelley, after extensive research, has declared that India was pursuing a
larger thermonuclear arsenal, which is the most lethal weapon in history. He
warned that its development “will inevitably usher in a new nuclear arms race”
in the region.
Robert Kelley has been a
former project leader for nuclear intelligence at Los Alamos and also served as
the director of the Iraq Action Team at the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA). He was quoted by a report as saying that “having analyzed the available
satellite imagery, as well as studying open source material on both sites, he
believed that India was pursuing a larger thermonuclear arsenal. He warned that
its development will inevitably usher in a new nuclear arms race in a volatile
region.”
Similarly, a former White
House coordinator for arms control and weapons of mass destruction, Gary
Samore, has stated: “I believe that India intends to build thermonuclear
weapons as part of its strategic deterrent against China.”
The Chinese had
successfully tested a thermonuclear weapon in 1967 and have reportedly improved
on its design. Earlier, India also claimed to have detonated a thermonuclear
bomb on May 11, 1998 in the so-called Operation Shakti-1. However, most analysts,
including Indian themselves, have questioned the yield of the test and many
believe it was an utter failure. The director of the test site preparations
admitted that the yield of the thermonuclear explosion was lower than expected
and it had fizzled.
So far, few in the
international media and strategic experts have noticed the threat and strategic
implications posed to the region by new Indian facilities at Challakere. There
has been silence on the Indian government’s front, with no explanations how the
highly enriched uranium produced at the site will be used. Also, few people in
the US and Europe truly understand about the storage of Indian weapons, how
they are transported and secured.
It should be noted that
the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a nonprofit organization that is headquartered
in Washington, had put India’s nuclear security practices at the 23rd spot
among 25 countries in January 2014. That was only above Iran and DPRK. With
this kind of track record, the rationale forwarded by supporters for India’s
NSG membership is mind-boggling, the assertions premature and against the
current regional security dynamics.
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