This is a unedited draft of my guest post on Saurav Jha's blog on IBNLive
Recently,
India Today magazine carried
a column by Manoj Joshi that was very critical of the DRDO's ballistic
missile defence (BMD) program. Joshi argued that the DRDO chief's claims
about the BMD shield being ready after just six tests, in what appear to be
controlled conditions, were unrealistic; that a project of such strategic
importance lacked proper direction from the outset; and even questioned the
need for such a system in the Indian context. The article is so full of
inaccurate assumptions, misleading remarks, and false statements, that it’s
hard to know where to start refuting them. But I thought it would be useful to
rebut some of his more outrageous claims.
False Argument #1: India's missile shield is not ready
for deployment.
To be
fair, Joshi doesn’t state this explicitly, but drives the reader towards
this conclusion by questioning the adequacy of the tests the missile shield was
subject to. This, is spite of the presence of
multiple
credible
sources
in the public
domain that attest to the fact that the entire BMD system has been subject
to full-up tests, in
its "final
user configuration". Moreover, the column's title leads one
to believe that the government is indeed 'baffled' over the DRDO chief's claim, although Joshi presents scant evidence to show that this is indeed the case. Even
the ubiquitous 'unnamed sources' that usually form the basis of such theses are
conspicuous by their absence.
False Argument #2: A Prithvi missile launched from a distance of 70 km can in no way mimic the flight profile of a 2000 km range missile.
This is
incorrect. As long as the inbound reentry-vehicle comes in at the correct angle
and terminal velocity, it matters not for a terminal phase BMD system whether
it was launched from 2000 km away or 70 km away. And there is no reason a
Prithvi's trajectory cannot
be modified to mimic that of an intermediate range ballistic missile (IRBM)
in the terminal phase. The day the DRDO builds a Sprint/Spartan
type system, there shall be no alternative but to test it against
"proper" long-range missiles. But to the best of my knowledge, they
aren't building a Sprint/Spartan right now, so why use an expensive Agni as a
target when a much cheaper (and convenient) Prithvi will suffice?
False
Argument #3: "With nuclear weapons around,
only a shield that will guarantee blocking every single missile is the only one
worth having".
This one
claim is perhaps the most puzzling of all, and demonstrates a very limited
understanding of how ballistic missile defences are supped to work. If India
deploys even a marginally effective BMD system, it will seriously limit an
enemy country's nuclear strike options and impose excessive costs on them
should they decide to build more warheads and delivery vehicles to neturalise
India's advantage.
Let me
explain what I mean by building a hypothetical scenario. Suppose that the
continent of Westeros is in the midst of a cold war, with the Starks of
Winterfell facing off against the powerful Lannisters of Casterly Rock. The
Lannisters are known to possess a limited number (say forty) of nuclear
warheads mounted on ballistic missiles. At most, that means they can hit 40
targets, if Lord Tywin decides to target each missile against a different city.
To counter it, the Starks decide to put into operation a BMD shield to cover
the North, Riverrun, and the Vale of Arryn. Let us assume that this shield has
a rather poor anticipated kill probability of 80%. How do the Lannisters
respond? The easy way out would be to assign multiple missiles to a smaller number
of targets. They select eight of the most important targets and assign five
missiles to each in the hope that at least one of those five will make it
through. Almost at once, the Starks' BMD system has protected 32 targets,
thousands of lives, and tons of precious resources without having fired a
single shot. This is called 'virtual attrition'. The Lannisters may well decide
to enlarge their arsenal to 200 warheads and missiles and get back their
earlier effectiveness numbers, but there is every chance that this will be
either impossible or terribly expensive. And the moment the Starks give their
system a minor upgrade to increase its effectiveness to 90%, they (the
Lannisters) will be back to square one, requiring another 200 missiles to
restore the status quo. The economics of the competition are loaded in favour
of the Starks -- an ABM system is expensive to set-up, but it can be expanded
and upgraded at a fraction of what it would cost the Lannisters to build more
missiles and warheads and then set up the infrastructure for their deployment,
maintenance, and upkeep.
Applying
the lessons of this scenario to India tells me that inflicting a bit of this
same virtual attrition on Pakistan's nuclear arsenal wouldn't be a bad thing at
all. Several well-meaning analysts consider a nuclear war 'unthinkable' and see
a war as 'lost' as soon as the first nuclear warhead goes off. In the process
they end up advocating an all-or-nothing approach to national defence makes
very little strategic sense. One expects pragmatic policy-makers to be made up
of sterner stuff. It is their job to make the nation as secure as possible, to
rationally think about nuclear war, to devise strategies to win it if it
takes place, and ensure the continued functioning of the state after the dust has
settled. And rational thinking dictates that given a choice between losing,
say, Delhi alone versus losing Delhi and Jaipur, the correct decision would be
to save Jaipur, no matter how much it offends some. Sitting around twiddling
thumbs and calling either "unthinkable" is NOT an option.
False
Argument #4: "None of the DRDO's claims have
been verified by third parties, say, any of our armed forces. In contrast,
China's January 2010 test was authenticated by the Pentagon".
This is a
dishonest line of argument, comparing the user evaluating an indigenously
developed weapon system with a foreign defence department secretly observing a
test being performed by another country. The two are hardly equivalent! We do
not know whether the Chinese system was verified 'independently' by their
military. As for the Pentagon, its statement only states that American
satellites detected an interception. There is little to indicate that it
verified the operation of every little component of the system: the search,
tracking, and fire control radars, the communications system, the command and
control system, and so on. Surely, the users'
representatives from the Air Force and Army
a user team from the Indian Army, present at Wheeler Island at the time of the
test, got to examine the operation of the entire system in more detail than a
few foreign satellites observing a Chinese test?
False
Argument #5: "the system will be ready for
"two places", presumably Mumbai and Delhi. But what about Kolkata,
Bangalore, Hyderabad, Lucknow and the rest of the country?"
The
deployment in two places is only supposed to be an initial deployment. Every
new weapon is deployed in phases, and there is no reason the BMD system should
be any different in that regard. In fact, setting it up in several cities at
once without it being given a thorough shakedown would be the far riskier
option, strategically and economically.
False
Argument #6: Building a missile shield would force
Pakistan to build "field greater numbers of missiles with nuclear
weapons", compromising India's interests.
In
support of this suggestion, Joshi quotes Air Vice-Marshal (retd.) Kapil
Kak: "For an unstable and fragile state like Pakistan, India's BMD could
indeed be destabilising, as this would substantially reduce the value of
Pakistan's nuclear and missile arsenal, tempting it to increase the same."
My reposnse to this is, yes, it may be so but why is destabilisation
necessarily a bad thing? Pakistan has more than once pronounced its willingness
to use nuclear weapons if war breaks out, and hasn’t shied away from protecting
terrorist entities it actively supports with these weapons. Short of a direct
threat of unprovoked nuclear war, the situation is already about as unstable as
it could get for India. Now with the Pakistani economy in doldrums, wouldn't it
make sense for India to "destabilise" the strategic equation by
forcing Pakistan to pour more money and resources into an arms build-up it
cannot afford?
Acknowledgements: I would like to extend my sincere
gratitude to Rahul M, Nitin V, and Dr. Sanjay Badri-Maharaj for contributing
their considerable knowledge and views, and their assistance in critiquing this
rebuttal.
1 comment:
Hi greeat reading your post
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