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BBC News, Delhi
27 Aug 09
A retired atomic scientist who was closely
associated with India's 1998 nuclear tests has said they were not as
successful as was claimed. Dr K Santhanam said one of the tests - on a
hydrogen bomb - had not worked, and that India would have to carry out
more tests for a credible nuclear deterrent. K Santhanam is a respected
Indian atomic scientist who was project director of the 1998 nuclear
tests. He now says that one of the five tests that were carried out,
in which a thermonuclear device or hydrogen bomb was detonated, did not
perform as well as expected. He also said that everyone associated with
the tests immediately recognised that something had gone wrong.
His statement points to a massive cover-up by India and also confirms
what many in the West suspected at the time - that the nuclear devices
India tested were not as powerful as had been thought.
**** Later developments
More
scientists back Santhanam on Pokhran II
Express News Service
20 Sep 2009
09
Disquiet is
simmering within the country’s group of top nuclear scientists that there is
an apparent bid to “hush up facts” following the
sensational disclosure by fellow professional K Santhanam that the
thermonuclear weapon tested in Pokhran 2 was a failure.
A
Gopalakrishnan, 72, a former chairman of the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board,
told Express that BARC ex-director R Chidambaram, now Principal
Scientific Adviser to the Government of India, was totally
misrepresenting the facts” in 1998 when he “encouraged” the then NDA
government to claim that the blasts in the Rajasthan desert were a success.
Chidambaram went on to receive the Padma Vibhushan
after the May 11 tests.
He added:
“All this shows the DAE has been misleading the
public and lying on issues. Not only in this instance, but in matters of
nuclear safety and independence of safety regulations;
there are many other instances where an
organisation like the AERB has been under pressure from both the PMO and the
DAE to distort safety-related investigations.”
He said A P J Abdul Kalam, operativel in-charge of the blasts
possessed “very little knowledge” of nuclear weapons “He had only a
peripheral role in the tests. But the public has since been led to believe
Kalam is an expert.” The basic question in any scientist’s mind,
Gopalakrishnan says, was “how one can extrapolate or modify a weapon design
from the data on one single test — even if it were successful, which in this
case was not”.
Dr
Gopalakrishnan said that Dr Chidambaram and S K Sikka — both weapon
designers for the thermonuclear device — should “present their
methodology to a technical committee involving international experts too.
After that you should have a national peer review”.
Another former
BARC scientist, with intimate knowledge of weapons designing, expressed
doubts whether anybody in BARC had a full scale understanding of a
thermonuclear device.
Another former
BARC scientist declared that everybody involved in Pokhran 2 “ought to be
cross-examined under oath by a retired Supreme Court judge to get to the
bottom of the matter”.
Earlier, Dr Santhanam had
pointed out that shaft in which the device was detonated in Pokhran remained
undisturbed and “totally intact” after the explosion. And the A Frame, which
had a winch to lower personnel and equipment into the shaft for the
experiment also left the allegedly 45 kilotonne explosion completely
unscathed. Whereas in the case of the smaller fission device, which was
tested the same day, the shaft was destroyed and the explosion left a crater
25 metres in diameter. Santhanam argues that if the TN weapon functioned,
the crater would have been about 70 meters in diameter
Dr Santhanam speaks to Re-Diff News
Re-Diff News 28 Aug 09
Your statement has created a furore in the nation.
I have just stated that facts. I did what I
thought was necessary and I don't see why there needs to be an embarrassment
due to this.
But you could have said this at that time itself, immediately
after the tests were conducted.
I don't agree with you. I thought that the timing
was right and hence decided on making this statement now.
There has been a hue and cry since your statement. Is there
any chance you want to change your stand?
No. Why should I change my stand? I will always
stand by what I have said and there is no question of changing my stand or
my statement. Even the expert opinion from across the world makes it clear
that the yield in the thermonuclear device test was much lower than what was
claimed.
I have maintained and will always maintain that the test was not more
than 60 per cent successful in terms of the yield it generated. I have
made this assessment based on the report of the instrumentation data that is
available and also the programme coordinator.
Former President A P J Abdul Kalam, who was also involved
with the tests, has said that Pokhran II was entirely successful.
I would like to react to that. First of all, Dr
Kalam is not a nuclear scientist. He is a missile scientist and he was
not present there at that time. He is blissfully ignorant of the facts. Do I
need to say more? All I want to say is that I stand my ground on this issue.
Home Minister P Chidambaram [
Images ] too has
shared Kalam's view.
Chidambaram, being part of the establishment, is
just repeating what the others are saying, like a parrot.
You have been accused of making this statement after over a
decade at the insistence of people against the Bharatiya Janata Party [
Images ].
Let people say what they want. As I maintained I
thought that the timing was right and hence this statement was made. I was
not provoked or coaxed by anyone to issue such a statement and let me assure
you that there is no malice involved in this.
You speak so much about the timing of making your statement.
What is this timing exactly?
There is a change in the administration in the
United States of America. They are bound to further pressurise India to sign
the CTBT. In such an event it was necessary to make such a statement or
speak the truth on the issue so that India does not rush into signing the
CTBT. Therefore, I say the timing of my statement was perfectly right.
India
and its nuclear explosion
By Ninan Koshy
TRIVANDRUM, India - The controversy ignited by a leading scientist who
participated in India's nuclear tests in 1998 has shaken political and
scientific circles in India.
By describing the tests as a "fizzle", K Santhanam has not only challenged
the official claims about the tests but also raised critical questions about
India's nuclear doctrine, its voluntary moratorium on tests, its adherence
to the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) [1] and the much-trumpeted
civilian nuclear deal with the United States.
Santhanam said on August 26 that "based on the seismic measurements and also
the opinion from experts there was a much lower yield in the thermonuclear
device test" conducted at
Pokhran in May 1998. In nuclear parlance, a test is described as a fizzle
when it fails to meet the desired yield. Affirming that India would need
more tests, Santhanam cautioned against India being pressurized into signing
the CTBT.
Santhanam's statement has divided the scientific community and made the
political establishment nervous. But it's not an entirely new development;
the division in the scientific community in India and abroad on the results
of the 1998 tests started within a week after they were conducted.
The official claim was that the thermonuclear or hydrogen bomb had achieved
a yield of 43 kilotons and that "it had been purposely kept at this
relatively low yield to prevent damage to neighboring villages and radiation
venting". At the first press conference after the tests, the leading
scientists of the team, including R Chidambaram, head of the Atomic Energy
Agency (AEA) and APJ Abdul Kalam, director general of the Defense Research
and Development Organization (DRDO), asserted that weaponization was
complete.
One of those present at that press meet was K Santhanam, then a senior
official of the DRDO who had played a leading role in coordinating the
tests.
These claims were challenged both in India and abroad. In India, though the
scientific community generally took the official line, serious doubts were
expressed by some leading scientists, including PK Iyengar, former director
of the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC). Those who followed the technical
debate in the international nuclear weapons community at that time will
recall that foreign analysts had challenged India's claims and agreed, based
on seismographic studies, that the yield of the thermonuclear device was in
the range of 12 to 25 kt.
Some suggested that Shakti I was a "boosted fission" weapon, not a
thermonuclear device. According to the website of the Federation of American
Scientists (FAS), "Based on seismic data, the US government and independent
experts estimated the yield of so-called thermonuclear test in the range of
12-25 kilotons, as opposed to the 43 kt claimed by India. The lower yield
raised skepticism about India's claim to have detonated a thermonuclear
device."
In November 1998, Nucleonics Week, the international nuclear industry's
trade journal, reported that scientists at the Z division of the Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory in California - an industry watchdog
responsible for making estimates of progress in foreign nuclear weapons
programs based on classified data - had concluded that the second stage of a
two-stage Indian hydrogen bomb device failed to ignite as planned.
Chidambaram and others repeated their claims and even expanded them. During
a two-hour briefing for the Indian Science Writers' Association in February
1999, Chidambaram made a series of claims about the "perfect" character of
India's tests and the country's "high technological threshold". He said that
the Indian scientists had achieved a "perfect three", with the tests:
mastering the optimum emplacement design for the nuclear device; getting
specific yield calculations and ensuring zero radioactive contamination.
It is this claim of perfection that is under serious challenge and generally
believed to be dubious, if not hollow. Prominent scientists such as A
Gopalkrishnan, former chairman of the Atomic Energy Regulatory Board and P K
Iyengar are in agreement with the criticism of Santhanam and point out that
the single thermonuclear device India tested in 1998 did not function at all
as per design and did not produce anything near the expected design yield.
There was something wrong with the
design or prediction method, they argue, and therefore a re-examination of
these aspects to decide whether further tests are necessary to obtain a
"perfect" design approach is called for.
For Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, the controversy should have ended
with what he believed to be the final verdict given by former president APJ
Abdul Kalam. Kalam refuted the claims of Santhanam, who was his junior in
the DRDO at the time of the tests.
The credentials of Kalam, then considered the highest authority on the
subject, are questioned by many scientists, including Homi Sethna, another
former chairman of the AEC, who was the guiding force behind India's first
nuclear test in 1974.
The most profound statement made by Kalam, who later became president of
India, immediately after the tests was not scientific - but political. He
said how a nuclear-armed India "will be free of foreign invasions which have
constantly remolded the ancient Hindu civilization". Those who believe that
this was the statement - more than the bomb itself - that endeared Kalam to
the leadership of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) ruling at that time, may
have a valid point. Sethna has suggested that Kalam's statement refuting
Santhanam was that of a politician.
The fact that the controversy disturbed the political establishment came
through in comments made by India's National Security Adviser M K Narayanan
in an interview to a national daily. While putting on a brave face,
Narayanan dismissed Santhanam as a "bit of a maverick" instead of facing the
many issues raised by the statement.
He said Western analysts had questioned the Pokhran II tests because "they
don't want to recognize that we are a nuclear weapon power, particularly
that we are capable of a fusion device". Narayanan should know. He knows how
much time and energy had to be spent to get India a certificate from
president George W Bush recognizing it as a de facto nuclear weapon state of
good conduct.
Yet another claim made by Chidambaram and others at the time of the tests
was that India could develop simulation technology. Their statement on May
16 referred to this and other sub-critical experiments. It was apparently
the confidence in developing simulation technology that also made them claim
that no further tests were necessary. This claim also was disputed at that
time. France, in spite of almost 200 tests in the Pacific, could not develop
simulation technology.
To ensure support for the CTBT, the US made secret arrangements with France
to provide it technical assistance as well as cooperation with US nuclear
weapon laboratories to enhance computer simulation to maintain the
reliability of nuclear weapons. There have been reports that soon after the
tests, India approached the US for similar assistance. This was a
non-starter in Washington as providing such assistance to a non-nuclear
weapon state would be a violation of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.
Scientists who now say that the 1998 tests failed are clearly stating that
the establishment of a validated computer simulation model cannot be done
without more weapons tests.
The nuclear tests were carried out in a doctrinal vacuum. There was neither
a doctrine that guided the tests nor a consensus after the tests as to what
India's nuclear doctrine should be. On August 4, 1998, prime minister Atal
Bihari Vajpayee stated in parliament, "We have now declared our nuclear
doctrine." He then said that India's nuclear doctrine would be "no first use
based on minimum deterrence".
One year later, on the eve of elections to parliament, the government
released the Draft Nuclear Doctrine proposed by the newly formed National
Security Advisory Board. Nothing much was heard of this precious document
for a long time, though it was known later that it was disowned by foreign
minister Jaswant Singh as "unofficial" in his negotiations with Strobe
Talbott, former US deputy secretary of state.
After virtual silence on the nuclear doctrine for a long time, a government
press release on January 4, 2003, "shared with the public" the Cabinet
Committee on Security's review of the operationalization of India's nuclear
doctrine.
It spoke of "building and maintaining a credible minimum deterrent", "a
position of no first use" and "a second-strike capability that will be
massive and designed to inflict unacceptable damage in the event of a
nuclear attack". The doctrine says, "The fundamental purpose of Indian
nuclear weapons is to deter the use and threat of use of nuclear weapons
by any state or entity against India and its forces anywhere."
(Emphasis added).
What will be the minimum deterrent required for credible second-strike
capability and for punitive retaliation against any state or entity which
could include the US and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization?
More importantly, the doctrine speaks about attacks "against India and its
forces anywhere". Those who advocate more nuclear tests see a mismatch
between the doctrine and weaponization. The question of whether India needs
an array of thermonuclear weapons for deterrence also is relevant. So far,
not even a limited discussion on requirements for deterrence has been
attempted in the public domain.
Santhanam has made it clear that the purpose of his statement was to prevent
the Indian government from being railroaded into signing the CTBT as the
Indian government will be under increasing pressure from the Barack Obama
administration. Until the time of the nuclear tests India had opposed the
CTBT.
In the statement on India's nuclear policy presented to parliament on May
27, 1998, it was said that the government had announced India's desire to
observe a voluntary moratorium and refrain from conducting underground
nuclear explosions.
It also signaled a willingness to "move towards a de jure
finalization of the declaration" thus meeting the basic obligations of the
CTBT. Within hours of the test, Brajesh Mishra, the prime minister's
principal secretary, said that India was ready to adhere to certain
provisions in the CTBT. Brajesh added, "This cannot be done in a vacuum."
What India wanted from the US were concessions, especially in the matter of
high technology and lifting of sanctions. Talbott wrote later in his book
Engaging India, "India was prepared to find a modus vivendi with
the US and with the global nuclear order through participation in a number
of arms control agreements. India reiterated its 'de facto adherence to the
spirit of the CTBT'. In exchange of lifting of sanctions, India might take
the next steps, de jure formalization of our position and acceptance
of the letter of the treaty."
India had come almost to the point of signing the CTBT when the US Senate
refused to ratify it. India had to wait until the George W Bush
administration left office to make a deal with the US. There is more than
implicit acceptance of the CTBT by India in the nuclear deal. The voluntary
moratorium of India has been turned into a virtual ban on future tests and
thus a condition of the civilian nuclear agreement with the US.
The Obama administration is keen to get the CTBT ratified by the senate.
Once it is done, there will be much pressure, not only from the US but also
from member states of the Nuclear Suppliers' Group, on India to sign the
treaty.
Although India's official position is that it can conduct tests, in practice
it is not allowed to do so. If India conducts tests, the nuclear agreement
will be terminated by the US; and if it does so after the deal is
implemented, there will be enormous loss for India. Therefore, those who ask
for more tests argue this is the best time to do it.
The debate now is between those who make a case for further tests to have a
"credible nuclear deterrent" and an officialdom hamstrung by the nuclear
deal with the US. The voice of those who are gravely concerned about the
nuclear arms race in the volatile sub-continent is yet to be heard.
Note
1. The Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) bans all nuclear
explosions in all environments, for military or civilian purposes. It was
adopted by the United Nations General Assembly on September 10, 1996, but it
has not yet entered into force.
Ninan Koshy, a political commentator based in Trivandrum,
Kerala, India, and formerly Visiting Fellow, Harvard Law School, is the
author of War on Terror: Reordering the World and Under the Empire:
India's New Foreign Policy.
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