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This article was first published 13 years ago

World needs to ensure that Pakistan's nukes are safe

Last updated on: May 25, 2011 12:51 IST

Image: Media personnel gather at the gates of the Mehran naval aviation base after troops ended operations against militants in Karachi
Photographs: Akhtar Soomro/Reuters B Raman

India can help the US in insulating Pakistan's nuclear establishments and arsenal from terror attacks, believes B Raman

The daring commando style raid in a naval base at Karachi on May 22 by terrorists of the Pakistani Taliban has highlighted once again the poor state of security at a sensitive infrastructure in Pakistan and the undetected infiltration by extremist elements into the Pakistani armed forces.

Since the Pakistani Taliban came into existence in July 2007, it has organised a number of such raids into the establishments of the armed forces including into the General Headquarters, the sanctum sanctorum of the Pakistan Army in Rawalpindi. The success of these raids was made possible by the suspected help of insiders, who collaborated with the terrorists, and by the poor state of security.

The issue needs urgent attention

Image: Relatives and officials offer a funeral prayer for Navy officer Lieutenant Yasir Abbas, who was killed when militants attacked the Mehran naval aviation base in Karachi, before his burial in Lahore
Photographs: Mohsin Raza/Reuters

The fact that such raids continue to take place and the security forces and the intelligence agencies continue to be taken by surprise would add to the concerns of the international community regarding the state of security in Pakistan's nuclear establishments and the dangers of the presence inside them of sympathisers who might collaborate with organisations such as Al Qaeda and the Lashkar-e-Tayiba in facilitating an act of  terrorism involving the use of nuclear material seized from such establishments.

There are three possible dangers needing attention. The first is terrorists and their sympathizers wittingly or unwittingly causing radioactive leakages by raiding such establishments and damaging the production process.

The second is terrorists getting hold of easy-to-use nuclear material such as dirty bombs from ill-guarded establishments.

The third is the leakage of the technology to terrorists from sympathetic scientists.

Pakistan claims that a nuclear breach is unlikely

Image: A soldier keeps guard from a watch tower around the compound walls of the Mehran naval aviation base in Karachi
Photographs: Athar Hussain/Reuters

To prevent such dangers, one requires an effective process for the continuous identification and weeding out of suspicious elements from nuclear establishments, a capability for the collection of human and technical intelligence regarding planned raids into such establishments and a  physical security system with multi-layer security that could prevent attacks effectively even in the absence of preventive intelligence.

Repeated physical security breaches inside sensitive infrastructure in Pakistan are due not only to poor preventive intelligence, but also to a single-layer security which was not able to stand up to a determined attempt to breach the security.

The Pakistanis claim that such breaches are unlikely in the case of nuclear establishments where, according to them, there is a multi-layer security and there is a constant vetting of the personnel to detect attempts at infiltration.

Don't be satisfied with Pakistan's oral assurances

Image: Soldiers depart from the Mehran naval aviation base after troops ended operations against militants in Karachi
Photographs: Akhtar Soomro/Reuters

Moreover, according to them, their nuclear arsenal is not kept in a ready-to-use form in one place, but in dismantled parts in a number of places. Thus, to be able to get at a nuclear weapon, the terrorists should be able to raid successfully at more than one place simultaneously, which would be difficult.

The serious failures of intelligence and security at Abbottabad, where Osama bin Laden had been living undetected for over five years, underlined the dangers of totally depending on Pakistan's verbal assurances with regard to security against any kind of terrorism. Un-admitted incompetence and complicity at different levels with terrorists reduce the value and dependability of such Pakistani assurances.

The rest of the world would be as much affected as Pakistan by any breach of the physical security of Pakistan's nuclear establishments. It is, therefore, important that the international community should not remain satisfied with Pakistan's oral assurances alone.

India can't expect to play a role directly

Image: Paramilitary forces depart from the Mehran naval aviation base after troops ended operations against militants in Karachi
Photographs: Akhtar Soomro/Reuters

There has to be a close and continuous interaction between the intelligence and security agencies of Pakistan, US and other NATO countries to ensure that the security of nuclear establishments in Pakistan is not breached.

This means the association of the agencies of these countries in the planning and implementation of security measures in the nuclear establishments.

It is believed that US experts in nuclear security already play a discreet but important role in this matter. Is their role adequate to ensure that what happened in the Karachi naval base cannot happen in a nuclear establishment?

Only the US, which is more knowledgeable than any other country in matters related to nuclear security in Pakistan, will be in a position to answer this question. India, which has an adversarial relationship with Pakistan, cannot expect to play a role in this matter.

Discreet cooperation between India, US is possible

Image: A policeman walks near the front gates of the Mehran naval aviation base after troops ended operations against militants in Karachi
Photographs: Akhtar Soomro/Reuters

But through close interaction with US agencies, it should be able to reassure itself that whatever needs to be done is being done by the US with the cooperation of Pakistan.

India can play a useful role in helping the US in this matter by strengthening its capability for the collection of human and technical intelligence regarding likely threats to Pakistan's nuclear establishments and arsenal and sharing it with the US.

There is little scope for a stand-alone Indian role with regard to the security of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal, but discreet co-operation between India and the US can add value to the efforts being made by the US.