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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Saturday, July 14, 2001 |
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The Pakistani defence cut
By P. R. Chari
WHY SHOULD the slight reduction in Pakistan's defence budget, no
surprise given the parlous state of its economy, have any
implications for India? First, the facts. Pakistan's recent
budget froze defence expenditure at Rs. 13,164 crores, some Rs.
200 crores less than last year's budget. Accounting for the
annual rate of inflation would reduce its defence outlay by
another Rs. 350 crores. This is the second consecutive year
Pakistan had to cut its defence budget, despite its stated desire
not to compromise on national defence and security, and to
maintain a credible deterrent posture. Significantly, India's
defence allocations rose by 27 per cent in 2000-01, and would
increase by around 14 per cent in the current fiscal year 2001-
02.
Pakistan's macro-economic indicators are dismal: debt servicing
and defence outlays, totalling Rs. 4,690 crores, exceed its
revenue receipts of Rs. 4,530 crores, indicating that the
remaining Government expenditure must be financed from
borrowings. The external debt is around $38 billion, amounting to
about 70 per cent of its GDP, whilst foreign exchange reserves
are hovering around $1 billion, raising the spectre of a default
occurring.
Ironically, Pakistan has reduced its defence expenditure with a
military regime being in power. Indubitably, the cuts in the
defence budget have been necessitated on the directions of the
international financial institutions that have been pointing out
that Pakistan cannot sustain its high defence outlays by seeking
external sources of funding from every possible source. Pakistan
needs to present its case to the IMF for a three- year loan
programme very soon; it could be expected that the IMF would
impose more conditions for granting the loan, including further
reductions in its defence expenditure.
New Delhi's strategic community has greeted the news of Pakistan
reducing its defence budget with a certain satisfaction but also
with considerable scepticism. There are several aspects to its
thinking. First, the belief is widespread that no reduction has
been effected, since Pakistan has traditionally concealed its
defence spending within outlays of the civilian departments. This
is true to a limited extent - thus, naval expenditure has been
disguised under shipping and ports, air force expenditure has
gone under civil aviation and so on. There are practical
difficulties, however, in separating civil and defence
expenditure. India, for instance, accounts for strategic roads
under the budget of the Surface Transport Ministry. Second,
defence pensions amounting to some 20 per cent of the defence
budget are now being debited to civil estimates. This argument is
quite egregious since it ignores the fact that India transferred
defence pensions to its civil estimates almost two decades back.
Third, it is argued that yearly reductions in the defence budget
are not significant; that expenditure trends over some 4-5 years
are important. This is correct. But India's strategists gloss
over the fact that Pakistan's defence budget has steadily
declined over the last decade from 6.33 per cent of its GDP in
1990 to around 4.5 per cent now. Similarly, its defence
expenditure, as a percentage of its federal Government spending,
has dropped from 26.43 per cent in 1990 to around 21 per cent at
present.
Fourth, Pakistan's importations from China, largely manufactured
by processes of reverse engineering, are cheap but reliable,
which provides it with `more bang for the buck'. This is a matter
of some controversy. Serious doubts obtain regarding the
operational worth of Chinese equipment. For instance, Chinese
aircraft delivered to Pakistan are believed to be quite inferior
in performance and a source of some concern to the Pakistani air
force. Fifth, Pakistan is believed to finance its defence
expenditure from out-of-budget sources obtained through secret
allocations by the Gulf countries or Army-controlled private
organisations such as the Fauji Foundation or ISI-procured drug
money. These are allegations that are difficult to prove or
disprove, but revenues from these clandestine sources can hardly
be assumed to be a regular or major source of funding for
Pakistan's defence budget.
The short point to be emphasised here is that Pakistan's economic
difficulties have led to a steady reduction in its defence
budget. Attention should also be drawn here to a thesis voiced by
some members of New Delhi's strategic community that India should
radically increase its own defence budget, forcing Pakistan to
compete and beggar itself in the process. The `smash them' school
has further argued that India should use the economic weapon to
cripple Pakistan. Regrettably, the implications of Pakistan
reducing its defence expenditure and of exacerbating its economic
difficulties have escaped the attention of the `smash them'
school. What could they be?
The answer to this question can be found in the Pakistani Foreign
Minister, Mr. Abdul Sattar's address to the annual non-
proliferation conference of the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace last month. Emphasising that Pakistan's
pursuit of nuclear capability was driven by security compulsions,
Mr. Sattar pointed out that the denial of military equipment and
spare parts due to U.S. sanctions was degrading Pakistan's
conventional military capabilities and this ``has been exploited
in South Asia (translate ``by India'') on more than one occasion
in the past''. What Mr. Sattar said thereafter is of the essence;
``It is not necessary in this forum to mention the risks inherent
in erosion of conventional capability and consequently increase
in reliance on strategic deterrence''. This veiled threat was
further elaborated to justify Pakistan's adherence to its concept
of ``first use'' of nuclear weapons and denigrate India's
promotion of its ``no first use'' doctrine as being a ploy to
exploit its superiority in conventional arms.
In truth, the role of nuclear weapons in the international
security system has changed in the post-Cold War era. The low
levels of technology involved in the manufacture of nuclear
weapons has made them the preferred strategic instruments of
weak, insecure and paranoid states. Their primary dependence on
nuclear weapons to ensure national security requires, as a
corollary, adherence to a ``first use'' doctrine to compensate
for their inferior conventional military capabilities to deter a
stronger adversary. Otherwise, ``asymmetrical warfare'',
comprising proxy wars, encouragement of cross border insurgency
and terrorism and, possibly, in future, the use of chemical and
biological weapons would become the retaliatory means employed by
the weak to confront the strong states. The basic implication,
therefore, of Pakistan's continuing economic decline, which has
placed its defence budget under continuing strain, is that it
would increasingly rely on nuclear weapons and on ``asymmetrical
warfare'' to deter India. For this purpose, it may feel it
necessary to adopt brinkmanship as state policy, and construct
nuclear postures based on keeping its nuclear forces on a high
state of alert; this would be designed to suggest its willingness
to use nuclear weapons at the first available opportunity rather
than as a last resort.
It cannot be anybody's case that India should reduce its defence
expenditure to reassure Pakistan or that the international
financial institutions should assist Pakistan to acquire larger
conventional military capabilities. But, what seems unavoidable
is that both countries discuss the implications of Pakistan's
falling defence budget, growing dependence on its nuclear
capabilities, and the doctrinal beliefs underpinning its nuclear
posture. An opportunity would be available during the Agra Summit
to address these esoteric but vital questions; it would only be
wise to establish a permanent mechanism for discussing such
issues further at technical levels to reach some understanding.
In fact, establishing a nuclear-safe regime in South Asia, as a
first step to peace, is as significant for the stability of
bilateral relations between India and Pakistan as addressing the
impasse on Kashmir.
(The writer is Director, Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies,
New Delhi).
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