India’s Nuclear Doctrine: A Case of Strategic Dissonance or Deliberate Ambiguity

IF 0.2 Q4 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
IPRI Journal Pub Date : 2018-08-01 DOI:10.31945/IPRIJ.180202
A. Sultan
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

India‟s ongoing nuclear modernisation does not seem compatible with its declared nuclear doctrine of 2003. Several influential voices from within the country have argued for the need to review its nuclear posture. As a consequence, and to restore the credibility of its deterrence posture, some former senior Indian decision-makers have hinted that the country may have already moved from its traditional posture of No First Use (NFU) and could possibly contemplate a comprehensive first-strike against Pakistan. This potential shift in India‟s nuclear posture, along with operationalisation of second-strike capability, suggest that India may have drifted away from its stated policy of Credible Minimum Deterrence (CMD). It is not yet clear whether this shift is real, intended to maintain deliberate ambiguity, or else a result of prevailing dissonance within India‟s strategic elite. The resultant discord between its declaratory position and its ongoing developments may force Pakistan to take remedial measures that could lead to action-reaction syndrome, thus, causing instability in South Asia.
印度的核理论:一个战略不协调或故意模棱两可的案例
印度正在进行的核现代化似乎与其2003年宣布的核学说不相容。国内一些有影响力的声音主张有必要重新审视其核态势。因此,为了恢复其威慑姿态的可信度,一些前印度高级决策者暗示,该国可能已经改变了不首先使用核武器的传统姿态,可能会考虑对巴基斯坦进行全面的第一次打击。印度核态势的这种潜在转变,以及第二次打击能力的运作,表明印度可能已经偏离了其既定的“可信最低威慑”(CMD)政策。目前尚不清楚这种转变是真实的,还是有意保持模棱两可,或者是印度战略精英内部普遍不和谐的结果。巴基斯坦所宣布的立场与其目前的事态发展之间的不协调可能迫使巴基斯坦采取补救措施,从而可能导致行动-反应综合症,从而造成南亚的不稳定。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
IPRI Journal
IPRI Journal INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
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