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Indian commitment to no first use of nuclear weapons: First step toward global nuclear disarmament

Formerly Professor of Politics, Mumbai University and currently Hon. Director, VPM’s Centre for International Studies, Mumbai. His latest book is India’s Policy of No First Use of Nuclear Weapons: Relevance to Peace and Security in South Asia (Anamika Publishers, New Delhi, 2009).

Cooperation for a Peaceful and Sustainable World Part 2

ISBN: 978-1-78190-655-2, eISBN: 978-1-78190-656-9

Publication date: 30 December 2013

Abstract

India became a NWS (Nuclear Weapons State) most reluctantly in May 1998 despite her demonstration of nuclear weapons capability 24 years earlier in May 1974. Having assumed the new status as the sixth overt nuclear weapons state, India also declared her principled policy governing use of nuclear weapons in the event of a national security threat. The Indian Nuclear Doctrine was called “minimum deterrence” by the BJP-led NDA government, but the Congress-led UPA government in 2004 renamed it as “credible deterrence.”

But the heart of the vibrant Indian nuclear doctrine is its commitment to No First Use (NFU) of nuclear weapons. Nuclear weapons were invented by the United States (U.S.). First-ever use of atom bomb is also made by the Americans and a philosophic foundation for the discussion on NFU was also laid in the U.S. However, having put the NFU in the philosophic parlance, the U.S. in the Cold War International environment professed the doctrine for First Use (FU) of nuclear weapons. It is China that made a first public commitment to the NFU after it became the fifth nuclear weapons state.

This chapter proposes to discuss Indian commitment to NFU as a first step on the long path toward global nuclear disarmament—or No Use (NU) of nuclear weapons. India saw Partial Test Ban treaty of 1963 as a step toward NU and also saw the discussions on NPT as another step toward nuclear disarmament as much as it wanted the big powers to see the CTBT too as a device aimed at putting world into NU bind. West, led by the U.S., was however only interested in using the CTBT to deny nuclear weapons status to threshold states, particularly India.

As a self-declared nuclear weapons state, India has, in nuclear doctrine, committed itself to nuclear disarmament. Can there be an international treaty between the declared nuclear weapons states? Can India and Russia come together on the issue? Can they convince China to join? With three Asian nuclear weapons states committing themselves to NFU, U.S. can see economic sense in an international treaty on NFU. Is it possible to create a global public opinion in favor of NU of nuclear weapons? The questions will be answered based on research conduct on the subject.

Acknowledgements

Acknowledgment

The author wishes to acknowledge his grateful thanks to Ms. Anita, Academic Assistant, for her research assistance.

Citation

Kamath, P.M. (2013), "Indian commitment to no first use of nuclear weapons: First step toward global nuclear disarmament

Formerly Professor of Politics, Mumbai University and currently Hon. Director, VPM’s Centre for International Studies, Mumbai. His latest book is India’s Policy of No First Use of Nuclear Weapons: Relevance to Peace and Security in South Asia (Anamika Publishers, New Delhi, 2009).

", Cooperation for a Peaceful and Sustainable World Part 2 (Contributions to Conflict Management, Peace Economics and Development, Vol. 20 Part 2), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 157-173. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1572-8323(2013)00020.2013

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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