North Korea’s Bomb Made in Pakistan
By MADHAV NALAPAT | LONDON | 25 September, 2016
Both
the nuclear explosions that took place in North Korea this year are
“made in Pakistan”, according to those silently, and in total secrecy,
tracking the nuclear trajectory of the East Asian country.
“Silently” because most governments are chary of publicly naming and
presumably shaming the military establishment in Pakistan for its drive
to weaponise the country’s nuclear deterrent. Cooperation in the
development of nuclear weapons between Pakistan and the Democratic
People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) has been ongoing since the 1970s,
but accelerated some years after the 1998 Chagai tests by Pakistan. “By
end-2005, it was clear that testing of nuclear devices through computer
modelling was not yielding operationally significant results”, a key
analyst based mainly in Hong Kong claimed, adding that from then
onwards, a hyper secretive programme of cooperation between the DPRK
military and the Pakistan army was begun. In both countries, the men in
uniform control the development and production of nuclear devices. The
October 2006 and May 2009 North Korean tests took place with regular
participation of scientists from a secret nuclear weapons development
facility near Hyderabad (Sindh) in Pakistan, the sources asserted. They
said that “the Pakistan army has so far done brilliantly what they are
expert at, which is bluff”, in that they hyped the degree to which
Pakistan had proceeded on the road towards a weaponised nuclear
deterrent and attack system. “When A.Q. Khan gave his 1987 interview to
Kuldip Nayar about Pakistan having the bomb, they had nothing to show
for their pains except a few lumps of radioactive material.”
However,
“subsequently they received assistance from a member of the United
Nations P-5 to launch them on the path towards developing nuclear
weapons. However, such assistance was almost totally cut off after the
1998 tests,” thereby forcing Pakistan to conduct further tests in the
laboratory rather than underground. After six years, the results of such
tests were meagre, although externally, the spin given was that the
military establishment in Pakistan had perfected a nuclear weapon and
indeed had more such items in stock than India.
The non-proliferation ayatollahs in the
US have, from the 1974 Pokhran tests, concentrated on rolling back the
Indian nuclear programme, and “although the primitive nature of the
Pakistan programme was known to the intelligence services, with which
non-proliferation websites and groups in the US closely (albeit
covertly) worked, it suited this lobby to broadcast that Pakistan had a
robust programme”. The aim was to persuade India that there was an
equivalence of nuclear terror between Delhi and Islamabad, thereby (it
was calculated) making it more likely that India would undertake
reciprocal actions in downsizing its nuclear weapons programme.
According to a source based in a European capital, “The A.B. Vajpayee
government, through National Security Advisor Brajesh Mishra, gave
specific promises to its US counterparts that key elements of the Indian
programme would be slowed down in the field”, the fig leaf being that
laboratory testing would intensify. A source claimed that “thus far, the
results of such cold tests have been insufficient to generate designs
for a tactical nuclear weapon or weapons that could reliably be loaded
onto missile systems already available in the armoury of India”. He
added that “unless India conducts at least a half-dozen more tests, it
will be extremely difficult to perfect the trigger mechanism for
separate devices or to ensure devices that could be safely married on to
delivery platforms”.
However, this has been contested by
scientists in India, who claim that laboratory testing in the country is
sophisticated enough to generate data that would be of use in
battlefield situations.
The
Pakistan army has, on the contrary, opted to take the field testing
route for its nuclear weapons programme, except that “such tests are
being conducted by North Korea, with the results being made available to
the Pakistan side almost instantaneously”. A source in Hong Kong
said that “the results of the February 2013 test by North Korea were the
most valuable, and enabled a refinement of the device that became
apparent in the two tests conducted this year” by the Kim Jong Un regime
in Pyongyang. The sources said that “designs are ferried through North
Korean diplomats as well as by individuals acting under commercial
cover, and while direct air and sea flights and sailings have taken
place, much of the to and fro of date and materiel takes place via
China”, which according to these sources “has looked the other way for
more than two decades at nuclear cooperation between North Korea and
Pakistan”, as, in effect, has the United States. These sources claim
that key scientific and technical staff from Pakistan visit the DPRK on a
regular basis since 2005 “under assumed identities”.
The sources warn that the covert
collaboration between North Korea and Pakistan is geared on the Pakistan
side towards developing a tactical nuclear weapon, and on the North
Korean side towards producing a nuclear device that could be married to a
North Korean missile capable of entering the airspace of the
continental United States. They claim that “the Pakistan military has
made available extensive information to Pyongyang about how accuracy and
reliability can be improved on their missile systems”. Because of
external assistance as well as domestic expertise, the missile programme
in Pakistan, which is centred in a secret facility near Bahawalpur, has
developed a level of sophistication that has yet to be matched by the
nuclear weapons programme. These sources expect that North Korea will
conduct “at least a half dozen more tests” as “the calculation by both
sides is that these will be required to ensure a reliable nuclear
weapons system that could, with small modifications, be entered into the
armoury of both states.
“The
Pakistan army sees the development and deployment of tactical nuclear
weapons as being sufficient to permanently deter India from launching a
conventional war on its territory”, a source based in a European
capital revealed, adding that “at present Pakistan is years away from
actually inducting such weapons, which is why they are going the North
Korea route towards developing them”. Another source added that “there
is no substitute for field data, and unless India manages to persuade
the US to share some of its field data on nuclear tests, the (Indian)
deterrent will continue to be less than fully reliable in battlefield
conditions”. These sources claimed that although India is significantly
more advanced than Pakistan in the nuclear weapons trajectory, “as yet
tactical nuclear devices have not been perfected” by this country, a
lack the cause for which they assign to the unpublicised limitations
placed on the nuclear weapons programme by the Vajpayee
government—“constraints that were added on to by Manmohan Singh,
especially after his 2005 agreement with George W. Bush on nuclear
matters”. It would appear that it was the Bush-Singh understanding which
helped to motivate the Pakistan army to launch a programme of
conducting nuclear tests through North Korea.
A
high-placed source warned that by 2023 at the latest and 2021 more
likely, the DPRK and Pakistan would each have a “fully functional
nuclear weapons stockpile together with reliable means of delivery”. They
were pessimistic about the international community having the will to
ensure that effective steps be taken (such as through blockade and
inspection of both countries including overland routes through China) to
freeze and afterwards roll back the joint programme of the North Korean
and Pakistan militaries to develop and deploy nuclear weapons that
would include battlefield variants.
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