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My Word
Santhanam, Sethna
and Silly Scientists
by Rajinder Puri
The debate among
nuclear scientists on the success or failure of the Pokhran-2 Test
continues to be fierce. Nuclear scientist K Santhanam who ignited the
debate said that India will need to “carry out two to three tests” to
ensure its hydrogen bomb is working and “not rush to sign” the
Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT). In a TV interview Mr. Santhanam
did concede however that India has an “atomic bomb deterrent”. His
objection is that India lacks a credible hydrogen bomb. He wants more
tests in order to ensure such a bomb and to prevent India from signing
the CTBT.
India’s eminent scientists are divided over the efficacy of the
Pokhran-2 Test. The late doyen among nuclear scientists, Raja Ramanna,
had endorsed the success of Pokhran-2. Others have rubbished the test.
We laymen need not enter into that controversy. We lack the expertise to
judge. However even laymen have the common sense and expertise to judge
politics. The decision to sign or not sign the CTBT is a political
decision. The need for a fusion bomb instead of a fission bomb as a
nuclear deterrent is a political decision. Nuclear scientist Homi Sethna
who supports Santhanam’s view said that politicians should not meddle in
scientific matters. He is right. But he should be equally advised that
scientists should not meddle in political affairs.
What is a credible nuclear deterrent? It is not one that can match the
nuclear force of a big power. It is one that can deter a nuclear power
from bullying India. Hypothetically, if the US threatens to destroy
India with its thermonuclear power, it could. But if it knows that in
doing so India will destroy New York or Washington it would know the
price and it would, unless its leaders have gone insane, be deterred.
Nuclear scientists, like judges, may have great expertise in their
chosen vocation. That does not qualify them to butt into political
debate. They are capable of displaying considerable stupidity. India
needs fastest progress in missile and radar technologies in order to
perfect a pre-emptive delivery system. It does not, whether Pokhran-2
succeeded or failed, need a hydrogen bomb. And starry-eyed intellectuals
who look up to the scientists and to sections of international opinion
need to acquire self-confidence. They should learn to think for
themselves. Former nuclear hawk Dr Henry Kissinger along with
Congressman Sam Nunn is currently busying himself with ways and means to
achieve total nuclear disarmament. This wisdom has dawned on him two
decades after Rajiv Gandhi had proposed this goal. The greatest threat
to mankind, and especially to India, is that nuclear weapons may fall
into the hands of terrorists. That must be prevented.
Mr. Santhanam still has not answered the question posed by this scribe
when he first raised doubts about the success of Pokhran-2. Why did he
not speak up when the test occurred? Why did he not speak up during all
the intervening eleven years? The possibility of India signing the CTBT
is no credible explanation. After Pokhran-2 Prime Minister Vajpayee
seriously toyed with the idea of signing the CTBT. Why did not our
patriotic scientists speak up then? By raising doubts about Pokhran-2
eleven years after the event whose political agenda are they serving
now?
Do tell us Mr. Santhanam; do tell us Mr. Sethna, why are you dabbling in
politics now?
September 19, 2009
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