By: Sarah Khan
A study titled ‘Indian
Unsafeguarded Nuclear Program’, published by the Institute of Strategic
Studies, Islamabad (ISSI) and co-authored by four nuclear scholars, Adeela
Azam, Ahmad Khan, Muhammad Ali and Sameer Khan unveils a new and comprehensive
assessment of the Indian nuclear weapon capacity. The study was launched at the
ISSI, which was attended by foreign diplomats, scholars, journalists and
students.
The book is comprised of
four chapters. The first chapter gives detailed account of India’s domestically
sufficient uranium available to meet its long term needs. Introduction of new
technologies for uranium exploration and installation of new milling facilities
will further enhance country’s ability to efficiently mine locally available
uranium. Optimal utilization of domestic uranium reserves will allow India to
keep its existing and few upcoming reactors operational for more than a
century. In second chapter the writer has stated that India’s unsafeguarded
uranium enrichment capacity will grow significantly by 2017. The Highly
Enriched Uranium produced at Rattehali plant will be in excess to the projected
requirement of fuelling the entire fleet of Indian nuclear powered submarine.
The growth rate of the Indian enrichment capacity indicates that India has the
fastest growing unsafeguarded uranium enrichment program in the developing
world has surpassed Pakistan. The book reveals that India already has
sufficient material and technical capacity to make 356 to 492 nuclear bombs.
Chapter three explores
the historical role of key individuals, major powers and technology as the main
internal and external drivers which helped India develop its unsafeguarded
nuclear reactor program. The research also explains how and what has driven the
unsafeguarded Indian nuclear reactor program while also offering a new, original
and comprehensive assessment of the Indian nuclear bomb making capacity. Fourth
chapter has evaluated the Indian reprocessing program. The military aspect of
Indian reprocessing program is often ignored. Despite the fact that several
states continue to reprocess spent nuclear fuel for civilian purposes not only
its economic feasibility is questionable but its ability to significantly
reduce environmental hazards is also uncertain. Almost all Indian reprocessing
facilities remain outside the IAEA safeguards and are ostensibly a potential
source of vertical proliferation and military use. This work is in contrast to
several earlier studies which took a much modest view of the Indian nuclear
bomb making potential.
The book gives a fresh
perspective on India’s unsafeguarded nuclear and makes a significant addition
to the existing knowledge about the size, history and capacity of the Indian
unsafeguarded nuclear program. This book has used government documents,
speeches, and parliamentary debates, research of leading Indian and
international nuclear experts and international assessments related to the
Indian nuclear program, dating back to the several past decades.
The book recommended
that the member States of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) should consider the
large and swiftly expanding Indian nuclear bomb making capacity while dealing
with New Delhi’s NSG membership case and ensure that the Indian membership of
this export control arrangement does not, in any way, help India further expand
and accelerate its nuclear weapons program.
The study provides deep
insight into the true history, size, extent and capabilities of the different
aspects of the complex Indian nuclear program, which New Delhi has kept outside
the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) safeguards. It includes
compelling evidence that India has the largest and oldest unsafeguarded nuclear
program in the entire developing world and amongst States not party to the
Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty (NPT).
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