Your first paragraph indicates that you may not fully understand the sorts of weapons systems that are available. I don’t have up to date information, and if I did I probably wouldn’t be allowed to share it, but there is a class of weapons called “theater ballistic missiles” that includes a sub-category of “Short range ballistic missiles”.
Then I suggest you read further. The Wikipedia link I gave specifically referenced ‘short range ballistic missiles’ as part of the Indian arsenal. SRBM is not ICBM. And even if it were; the targets a Pakistani/Indian war would engage in would still not be long-enough range for it to matter.
This is a serious concern because that’s a lot of extra radiation floating around,
Given the kiloton yield of the weapons involved, and the persistence of radiation—not really. You’re looking at well under a million statistical deaths globally.
Unless it’s another Franz Ferdinand moment.
One might as well hypothesize that an Indian/Pakistani war cause the aliens on the dark side of the Moon to destroy us out of a fit of pique. It’s equally as likely.
Any nuclear interchange between Pakistan and India will almost certainly be isolated to those two nations. There simply aren’t any strategic mutual defense treaties that would extend to such an interchange. The history of warfare, furthermore, since the advent of nuclear weapons has been one of de-escalation of the scope of conflicts, not of broadening of them.
Given those positions, my thinking is that it would be Pakistan to initiate the first strike, and even if they did not, they would not present the conflict as a battle between two nation states, but as a religious battle between the West and Islam—at least publicly. This seems to be their (Islam’s) standard response to anything that happened after the Reconquista.
I discounted the possibility of this concern from the outset. I can see no rational basis for the assertion that Muslims of sufficient organization as to be in control of a military and nation would willingly engage in behaviors they knew would result in the destruction of their organization. Even al-Qaeda still exists, “ten years after”.
A historical footnote: black-market nuclear weapons have been available to whatever degree for almost fifty years now. There is simply no valid count of how many nuclear weapons the Russians ever actually made; and it is known that several of their weapons are ‘simply missing’. Furthermore, Russian scientists have actually been convicted of selling weapons-grade radioactive isotopes to criminal elements.
And yet, there has never once been a nuclear terrorist attack; there hasn’t even been a radiological one. Given the fact that multiple generations of such opportunity have existed, there has to be a reason why this is so.
I apologize for misinterpreting your first paragraph, however the wiki links you refer to were posted after I responded.
I may be over-worried about the actual fallout from an exchange in the range we’re talking here. Most of my understanding comes from military training in the context of a US/USSR exchange in the late 80s, and doctrine that weren’t re-written after that stopped being a concern.
However, I do think that political ramifications and third and forth order effects will be MUCH worse than you write about. Yes, in a certain sense nuclear weapons have saved millions of lives by lowering the intensity of conflicts, by making massing of troops dangerous, forcing people to the table rather than continuing to press the fight etc.
But all that happened after a VERY limited and one way nuclear exchange.
I think that the possibilities of a nuclear exchange between Pakistan and India are vanishingly small, but if the world winds up structured more than that becomes likely, then there have been significant changes in the geopolitical arena. We have no precedent for what happens when you get bombs going in both directions, and especially when you get a large quantity of bombs in both directions.
You have to be completely delusional or under immense pressure to order a launch of nuclear weapons. This means once it happens history is pretty much not a good guide to what comes next.
The Middle East is going to bear the brunt of the fallout, if not radiological then politically and economically. If the factories of India go offline, then they neither have the need for, nor the revenue to pay for the oil they buy from Iran, Saudi Arabia and other middle eastern countries. Those countries no longer get the revenue they need to buy food, mostly from India, Pakistan and China. India will have a HECK of a time producing enough food to feed itself, Pakistan might simply cease to exist as a nation (depending on how good our intel is about India’s nukes. Even 60 or 80 KT of nukes spread out properly in a country the size of Pakistan, and with it’s concentration of industry and agriculture might simple render it like Somalia was for much of hte last 2 decades—or worse. China, being an immediate neighbor, will wind up with the worst of the shadow effect trashing their agriculture (this could be good for the US, but only if we do the right thing and fast).
These are destabilizing forces, and they will happen at a time when the world will have more on it’s plate than it can really deal with.
I hope I’m wrong, and that you are right in that players in that region are more rational and thoughtful, but I don’t think our leaders are sufficiently rational and we at least make a passing attempt at vetting them for psychological problems other than narcissism (which seems to be a requirement of the job). Heck in the last decade we had a member of the House of Representatives that denied the existence of compound interest, a minor party candidate (libertarian) who was blue from drinking colloidal silver (no, really http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/11/AR2006111101004.html). Given the rather common beliefs in that area of the world, I don’t think it’s safe to assume de-escalation.
I screwed that up. Apparently retracted doesn’t delete, and if you keep typing it retracts all of it.
Here’s what I wrote, it should be easier to read:
I apologize for misinterpreting your first paragraph, however the wiki links you refer to were posted after I responded.
I may be over-worried about the actual fallout from an exchange in the range we’re talking here. Most of my understanding comes from military training in the context of a US/USSR exchange in the late 80s, and doctrine that weren’t re-written after that stopped being a concern.
However, I do think that political ramifications and third and forth order effects will be MUCH worse than you write about. Yes, in a certain sense nuclear weapons have saved millions of lives by lowering the intensity of conflicts, by making massing of troops dangerous, forcing people to the table rather than continuing to press the fight etc.
But all that happened after a VERY limited and one way nuclear exchange.
I think that the possibilities of a nuclear exchange between Pakistan and India are vanishingly small, but if the world winds up structured more than that becomes likely, then there have been significant changes in the geopolitical arena. We have no precedent for what happens when you get bombs going in both directions, and especially when you get a large quantity of bombs in both directions.
You have to be completely delusional or under immense pressure to order a launch of nuclear weapons. This means once it happens history is pretty much not a good guide to what comes next.
The Middle East is going to bear the brunt of the fallout, if not radiological then politically and economically. If the factories of India go offline, then they neither have the need for, nor the revenue to pay for the oil they buy from Iran, Saudi Arabia and other middle eastern countries. Those countries no longer get the revenue they need to buy food, mostly from India, Pakistan and China. India will have a HECK of a time producing enough food to feed itself, Pakistan might simply cease to exist as a nation (depending on how good our intel is about India’s nukes. Even 60 or 80 KT of nukes spread out properly in a country the size of Pakistan, and with it’s concentration of industry and agriculture might simple render it like Somalia was for much of hte last 2 decades—or worse. China, being an immediate neighbor, will wind up with the worst of the shadow effect trashing their agriculture (this could be good for the US, but only if we do the right thing and fast).
These are destabilizing forces, and they will happen at a time when the world will have more on it’s plate than it can really deal with.
I hope I’m wrong, and that you are right in that players in that region are more rational and thoughtful, but I don’t think our leaders are sufficiently rational and we at least make a passing attempt at vetting them for psychological problems other than narcissism (which seems to be a requirement of the job). Heck in the last decade we had a member of the House of Representatives that denied the existence of compound interest, a minor party candidate (libertarian) who was blue from drinking colloidal silver (no, really http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/11/AR2006111101004.html). Given the rather common beliefs in that area of the world, I don’t think it’s safe to assume de-escalation.
I screwed that up. Apparently retracted doesn’t delete, and if you keep typing it retracts all of it.
Have you tried retracting then following a link to your ‘retracted’ comment then clicking delete? Kind of annoying but it seems to work. I’m not sure if there are any limitations on it.
Then I suggest you read further. The Wikipedia link I gave specifically referenced ‘short range ballistic missiles’ as part of the Indian arsenal. SRBM is not ICBM. And even if it were; the targets a Pakistani/Indian war would engage in would still not be long-enough range for it to matter.
Given the kiloton yield of the weapons involved, and the persistence of radiation—not really. You’re looking at well under a million statistical deaths globally.
One might as well hypothesize that an Indian/Pakistani war cause the aliens on the dark side of the Moon to destroy us out of a fit of pique. It’s equally as likely.
Any nuclear interchange between Pakistan and India will almost certainly be isolated to those two nations. There simply aren’t any strategic mutual defense treaties that would extend to such an interchange. The history of warfare, furthermore, since the advent of nuclear weapons has been one of de-escalation of the scope of conflicts, not of broadening of them.
I discounted the possibility of this concern from the outset. I can see no rational basis for the assertion that Muslims of sufficient organization as to be in control of a military and nation would willingly engage in behaviors they knew would result in the destruction of their organization. Even al-Qaeda still exists, “ten years after”.
A historical footnote: black-market nuclear weapons have been available to whatever degree for almost fifty years now. There is simply no valid count of how many nuclear weapons the Russians ever actually made; and it is known that several of their weapons are ‘simply missing’. Furthermore, Russian scientists have actually been convicted of selling weapons-grade radioactive isotopes to criminal elements.
And yet, there has never once been a nuclear terrorist attack; there hasn’t even been a radiological one. Given the fact that multiple generations of such opportunity have existed, there has to be a reason why this is so.
I apologize for misinterpreting your first paragraph, however the wiki links you refer to were posted after I responded.
I may be over-worried about the actual fallout from an exchange in the range we’re talking here. Most of my understanding comes from military training in the context of a US/USSR exchange in the late 80s, and doctrine that weren’t re-written after that stopped being a concern.
However, I do think that political ramifications and third and forth order effects will be MUCH worse than you write about. Yes, in a certain sense nuclear weapons have saved millions of lives by lowering the intensity of conflicts, by making massing of troops dangerous, forcing people to the table rather than continuing to press the fight etc.
But all that happened after a VERY limited and one way nuclear exchange.
I think that the possibilities of a nuclear exchange between Pakistan and India are vanishingly small, but if the world winds up structured more than that becomes likely, then there have been significant changes in the geopolitical arena. We have no precedent for what happens when you get bombs going in both directions, and especially when you get a large quantity of bombs in both directions.
You have to be completely delusional or under immense pressure to order a launch of nuclear weapons. This means once it happens history is pretty much not a good guide to what comes next.
The Middle East is going to bear the brunt of the fallout, if not radiological then politically and economically. If the factories of India go offline, then they neither have the need for, nor the revenue to pay for the oil they buy from Iran, Saudi Arabia and other middle eastern countries. Those countries no longer get the revenue they need to buy food, mostly from India, Pakistan and China. India will have a HECK of a time producing enough food to feed itself, Pakistan might simply cease to exist as a nation (depending on how good our intel is about India’s nukes. Even 60 or 80 KT of nukes spread out properly in a country the size of Pakistan, and with it’s concentration of industry and agriculture might simple render it like Somalia was for much of hte last 2 decades—or worse. China, being an immediate neighbor, will wind up with the worst of the shadow effect trashing their agriculture (this could be good for the US, but only if we do the right thing and fast).
These are destabilizing forces, and they will happen at a time when the world will have more on it’s plate than it can really deal with.
I hope I’m wrong, and that you are right in that players in that region are more rational and thoughtful, but I don’t think our leaders are sufficiently rational and we at least make a passing attempt at vetting them for psychological problems other than narcissism (which seems to be a requirement of the job). Heck in the last decade we had a member of the House of Representatives that denied the existence of compound interest, a minor party candidate (libertarian) who was blue from drinking colloidal silver (no, really http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/11/AR2006111101004.html). Given the rather common beliefs in that area of the world, I don’t think it’s safe to assume de-escalation.
I screwed that up. Apparently retracted doesn’t delete, and if you keep typing it retracts all of it.
Here’s what I wrote, it should be easier to read:
I apologize for misinterpreting your first paragraph, however the wiki links you refer to were posted after I responded.
I may be over-worried about the actual fallout from an exchange in the range we’re talking here. Most of my understanding comes from military training in the context of a US/USSR exchange in the late 80s, and doctrine that weren’t re-written after that stopped being a concern.
However, I do think that political ramifications and third and forth order effects will be MUCH worse than you write about. Yes, in a certain sense nuclear weapons have saved millions of lives by lowering the intensity of conflicts, by making massing of troops dangerous, forcing people to the table rather than continuing to press the fight etc.
But all that happened after a VERY limited and one way nuclear exchange.
I think that the possibilities of a nuclear exchange between Pakistan and India are vanishingly small, but if the world winds up structured more than that becomes likely, then there have been significant changes in the geopolitical arena. We have no precedent for what happens when you get bombs going in both directions, and especially when you get a large quantity of bombs in both directions.
You have to be completely delusional or under immense pressure to order a launch of nuclear weapons. This means once it happens history is pretty much not a good guide to what comes next.
The Middle East is going to bear the brunt of the fallout, if not radiological then politically and economically. If the factories of India go offline, then they neither have the need for, nor the revenue to pay for the oil they buy from Iran, Saudi Arabia and other middle eastern countries. Those countries no longer get the revenue they need to buy food, mostly from India, Pakistan and China. India will have a HECK of a time producing enough food to feed itself, Pakistan might simply cease to exist as a nation (depending on how good our intel is about India’s nukes. Even 60 or 80 KT of nukes spread out properly in a country the size of Pakistan, and with it’s concentration of industry and agriculture might simple render it like Somalia was for much of hte last 2 decades—or worse. China, being an immediate neighbor, will wind up with the worst of the shadow effect trashing their agriculture (this could be good for the US, but only if we do the right thing and fast).
These are destabilizing forces, and they will happen at a time when the world will have more on it’s plate than it can really deal with.
I hope I’m wrong, and that you are right in that players in that region are more rational and thoughtful, but I don’t think our leaders are sufficiently rational and we at least make a passing attempt at vetting them for psychological problems other than narcissism (which seems to be a requirement of the job). Heck in the last decade we had a member of the House of Representatives that denied the existence of compound interest, a minor party candidate (libertarian) who was blue from drinking colloidal silver (no, really http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/11/11/AR2006111101004.html). Given the rather common beliefs in that area of the world, I don’t think it’s safe to assume de-escalation.
Have you tried retracting then following a link to your ‘retracted’ comment then clicking delete? Kind of annoying but it seems to work. I’m not sure if there are any limitations on it.
No, but I will keep that in mind.
Thanks.