http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2010\02\09\story_9-2-2010_pg3_2

Tuesday, February 09, 2010

view: The realism fallacy -Ishtiaq Ahmed 

 India finds China a bigger threat than Pakistan and insists that it needs to 
arm itself to thwart perceived Chinese aggression, but Pakistan perceives a 
militarily stronger India a greater threat to its security than before



The Realism School of International Relations is premised on the assumption 
that states do not trust each other. They seek power and domination over others 
because they fear that if they are weak and vulnerable, other states will 
attack them. Consequently, the art of survival is to be always vigilant and on 
the lookout for striking first. War can, however, be kept at bay or postponed 
through the maintenance of a "balance of power", or from the advent of nuclear 
weapons, "balance of terror" between the most powerful states. Such peace is 
temporary. Therefore, states must always be preparing for war. 

Such jargon is part of the everyday parlance that security analysts and experts 
employ to urge greater spending on defence to ward off attack. Not 
surprisingly, an arms race follows. As one side acquires better weapons, the 
other side must try to offset that advantage by aiming for better killing 
capacity and capability. As both or many states engage in such a competition, 
forming alliances amongst themselves against common enemies, the objective and 
subjective levels of insecurity go up, because the new weapons, the training 
and preparation that is invested in learning to use them incrementally provides 
a higher level of destructive power than before. In other words, more and 
better weapons do not lower the fear and anxiety of the enemy; they heighten 
it. 

The India-Pakistan arms race represents such an equation; only it is not 
determined entirely by their notorious rivalry. India finds China a bigger 
threat than Pakistan and insists that it needs to arm itself to thwart 
perceived Chinese aggression, but Pakistan perceives a militarily stronger 
India a greater threat to its security than before. Since at least the 1990s 
Pakistan has sought its weapons from China. Previously it was the US from which 
Pakistan acquired its weapons by playing upon the former's fear of Soviet 
military might. 

In any case the existing chain of reactions dates from 1962 when the 
Sino-Indian border war took place. It is also true that even when Pakistan 
began to receive in the mid-1950s military aid from the US, it was not until 
the 1965 war between India and Pakistan that they seriously began to try and 
outdo each other in terms of a serious arms race between them. 

One would have imagined that when both sides demonstrated their ability to 
explode nuclear devices in May 1998, a "rational level of mutually assured 
destruction" had been reached. Both were in a position to inflict massive 
injury and therefore did not need to keep on spending on arms and armaments. 
However, the Chinese factor complicated that situation. The recent Indian hike 
on defence spending has made Pakistan nervous and it will seek to balance that 
by cultivating Chinese military hardware.

In the past, realism-driven arms races have usually ended up in war - World War 
I and II are cases in point. Millions of human beings were slaughtered by vain 
politicians and even vainer military generals. Then, of course, the Cold War 
between the US and the Soviet Union started as hardcore realists began to 
define the relationship between the two superpowers. A direct nuclear war never 
broke out between them although the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1961 nearly drove 
them over the precipice. It ended rather unexpectedly as the Soviet Union 
disintegrated in 1991 under the deadweight of its sluggish command economy and 
a failed policy on consumer goods, coupled with the lack of political freedom. 

Returning to the India-Pakistan standoff, it can be argued that it cannot go on 
interminably without dragging them into a war that neither will win but in 
which both will suffer unimaginable harm and damage, or, one of them will 
disintegrate because of overspending on weapons while unemployment and poverty 
aggravate. Even the latter outcome will gravely undermine the stability of the 
South Asian region. I would not venture speculating which of the two 
possibilities is more likely. Both need to be prevented from transpiring. 

The rival liberal-internationalist school of international politics asserts 
that although states are the normal units of the international system, they 
stand to gain more from collective security. Professor Aswini K Ray (2004, 
Western Realism and International Relations: a Non-Western View, New Delhi: 
Foundation Books), formerly of the Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, has 
very forcefully argued that the Cold War could have been averted had the 
liberal-internationalists been able to define US foreign policy after the death 
of President Franklin D Roosevelt in April 1945. He argues that the system of 
collective security that the UN had heralded in should have been followed to 
solve the conflicts between the US and the Soviet Union 

In the context of South Asia the notion of collective security can be advanced 
in the form of regional security. It would mean strengthening the South Asian 
Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC). India and Pakistan could become 
the paramount powers sharing responsibility for peace and prosperity in this 
region. Very often such reflections are dismissed as idealism: who can think of 
regional security when terrorists go around blowing up people for as irrational 
reasons as the accident of wrong religious faith or sectarian affiliation? Who 
can negotiate with non-state entities that live in secrecy and that only seek 
to inflict pain and injury? 

Indeed these are very legitimate concerns and neither India nor Pakistan is 
likely to lower its traditional security. However, the problems of water 
scarcity, global warming and overall environmental degradation pose such 
serious problems that no war can ever solve them. Only cooperation and 
solidarity among the nations of South Asia can help them find solutions to 
these problems. Unfortunately, Europe learnt the lessons of peace and 
solidarity only after millions of its people were consumed by wars. 

Given the fact of nuclear weapons it may even be impossible for India and 
Pakistan to survive such a war and make a fresh new start based on peace and 
solidarity. A recent estimate suggests that India will wipe out Pakistan (120 
million Pakistanis out of 170 million) in a nuclear war but only after it loses 
500 million of its own people. Does that make any sense?

Ishtiaq Ahmed is a Visiting Research Professor at the Institute of South Asian 
Studies (ISAS) and the South Asian Studies Programme at the National University 
of Singapore. He is also a Professor of Political Science at Stockholm 
University. He has published extensively on South Asian politics. At ISAS, he 
is currently working on a book, Is Pakistan a Garrison State? He can be reached 
at isa...@nus.edu.sg


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