Posts by PakistanResearchSecurityUnit:

    The Security of Nuclear Weapons in Pakistan

    March 1st, 2013

    By Shaun Gregory.

     

    Introduction

    Pakistan is once again in crisis following the declaration of a state of emergency on

    the night of 3rd November 2007, as political unrest spreads, tensions within the armed

    forces and security services grow, and terrorist/extremist groups increase their violent

    opposition to the state. In this turbulent context the situation of Pakistan’s nuclear

    weapons, numbered as many as 120 by some sources, is of the utmost concern given

    the incalculable consequences if nuclear weapons or nuclear weapons components

    came into the hands of extremists/terrorists or, just possibly, of renegade Pakistani

    military personnel motivated by antipathy to the West. This briefing paper assesses

    the measures Pakistan has in place to ensure the security of its nuclear weapons and

    the threat posed to that security by the deteriorating situation in Pakistan.

    To ensure the physical security of its nuclear weapons Pakistan has relied heavily on

    copying United States’ technologies, practices and procedures. In doing so it has put

    together a system for security assurance based around four types of measures: (a)

    technical safeguards; (b) personnel reliability; (c) physical and procedural

    arrangements; and (d) deception and secrecy. These arrangements give the Pakistan

    Army’s Strategic Plans Division [SPD], the body which oversees Pakistan’s nuclear

    weapons operations, a high degree of confidence in the security of their nuclear weapons2.

     

    Technical Safeguards

    Pakistan is unique in having nuclear weapons decision-making wholly in the hands of

    the military despite constitutional provision for the inclusion of civilians in nuclear

    command authority decision-making and despite periods of ostensible civilian rule.

    Pakistan’s last two civilian leaders – Benazir Bhutto [Prime Minister 1988-90 and

    1993-96] and Nawaz Sharif [Prime Minister 1990-93 and 1996-99] – are both on

    record as stating that they were excluded from the decision-making loop in relation to

    nuclear weapons, even during crises when operational nuclear issues arose3

     

    Pakistan imposes military executive authority over its nuclear forces through the use

    of an authenticating code system, passed down a dedicated chain of military

    command, which is intended to assure that only duly authorised nuclear operations

    take place and that no unauthorised military personnel can order nuclear operations or

    use. Under this arrangement nuclear operational orders are accompanied by numerical

    codes that must be validated to confirm the authenticity of the order. These

    arrangements are supplemented by a tightly controlled ID system to assure the

    identity of those involved in the chain of command.

     

    There is some ambiguity about whether or not Pakistan has also developed enabling

    code technology, similar to the US Permissive Action Link [PAL] system, which

    allows nuclear weapons to be electronically locked against unauthorised use using

    technology similar to cash machine “chip and pin”. In 2002 the widely cited Landau

    report stated that Pakistan did not have PAL-type technology4. However in a more 

    recent interview with the author, General Kidwai, head of the SPD, indicated that 

    Pakistan had both “enabling and authenticating codes”5 to protect its nuclear 

    weapons. This may mean the development of rudimentary PAL-type capability for 

    nuclear warheads, or it may relate to a system for locking delivery systems6, as a 

    means to further hedge against unauthorised 7 access.

     

    It is unclear where and how authenticating and possibly enabling codes are generated

    in Pakistan but in mirroring much of the USA’s system throughout its nuclear

    command and control system Pakistan is likely to have given this role to a dedicated

    branch of the Army’s Military Intelligence8. No information is in the public domain 

    about how frequently the codes are changed and how exactly they are distributed 

    through Pakistan’s command chain. The operational demands of such a system are

    significant and, given Pakistan’s fragile technical base, open up, particularly in

    periods of crisis, risks of system breakdown or the erosion of high level control.

    Personnel Reliability.

     

    In relation to the personnel involved in nuclear weapons activities and operations

    Pakistan conducts a tight selection process for those involved in nuclear weapons

    duties (including the vetting of families), select staff almost exclusively from the

    Punjab who are thought to be less sympathetic to Islamist ideas, employs staff rotation

    to reduce the risks of conspiracy, and across those selected for nuclear related duties

    operates an equivalent of the US’s Personnel Reliability Program [PRP] within which

    individuals are screened for personality problems, inappropriate external affiliations,

    drug-use, and sexual deviancy. In all some 8,000 personnel – drawn from the SPD’s

    Security Division, and the Military Intelligence [MI], Intelligence Bureau [IB] and

    Inter-Service Intelligence [ISI] agencies – are involved in the security clearance and

    monitoring of those with nuclear weapons duties9 . While it has been suggested that

    staff are re-vetted every two years10, what is not in the public domain is how well

    these practices and procedures are implemented and how many problem personnel

    these methods identify and remove annually. In the US, where historically

    comparable data for US staff with nuclear weapons duties has been available,

    decertification rates have remained more or less constant at around 4-5%11. It is not

    unreasonable to suggest therefore that similar figures are likely to obtain within

    Pakistan and that consequently 1 in 20-25 individuals with nuclear weapons duties in

    Pakistan may be unreliable in some way. This unreliability will take many forms and

    by no means all of these individuals will pose a security threat to the nuclear weapons,

    but some will.

     

    As an additional hedge against this possibility of individual irrationality or mal-intent

    Pakistan operates a “two-person” rule to assure that each action involving nuclear

    weapons requires the decision and co-operation of at least two individuals12. While

    this is an important – and near universal – safeguard amongst nuclear weapons

    nations, it is no bar to the collusion of two or more individuals nor to the possibility

    that a determined individual could circumvent two-person arrangements.

     

    Physical Security

    Beyond these measures to guard against threats to nuclear weapons from unauthorised

    or irrational activity of military and security staff, the most widely acknowledged

    threat arises from the attempts by external parties, above all extremists and terrorists,

    to gain access to nuclear weapons or nuclear-weapons components. Pakistan has

    responded to these threats by operating concentric physical security measures around

    nuclear weapons sites, one downside of which has been to make these sites the more

    visible to those with a motive to build knowledge of them. The three main elements of

    physical security are: (a) physical barriers and intrusion detectors, (b) the use of tiers

    of armed force personnel to provide layered defence of nuclear sites and (c) the

    physical separation of warhead core from weapon detonation components, and the

    storage of these nuclear weapons components in protected underground sites.

    In relation the latter the technical demands of maintaining nuclear elements in a state

    of safety and readiness and Pakistan’s claim that its weapons can be assembled very

    quickly strongly suggests that warhead core and detonation components may be

    separate but nonetheless collocated at a small number of sites – the Washington Post

    suggested Pakistan may have just six such sites13 though others suspect there are

    likely to be more. A further weakness is that physical security provisions erode

    significantly once nuclear weapons and/or nuclear weapons components are moved

    from their primary storage locations as, for example, is required for periodic testing

    and refurbishment and for operational movements between storage and other

    facilities, including civil nuclear facilities.

     

    Secrecy and Deception

    Though extensive information is in the public domain about Pakistan’s main nuclear

    facilities and nuclear weapons security arrangements, and presumably rather more

    information is available to US and other intelligence agencies, there are still

    significant elements of Pakistan’s nuclear infrastructure which are kept a closely 

    guarded secret. This may extend to the exact location of some of the storage facilities

    for nuclear core and detonation components, pre-configured nuclear weapons

    deployment sites, many aspects of Pakistan’s command and control arrangements

    [such as the issue of pre-delegation of nuclear use down the command chain], and

    doubtless some aspects of the arrangements for nuclear weapons security. Moreover

    Pakistan has used deception – such as dummy missiles – to complicate the calculus of

    adversaries and is likely to have extended this practice to its nuclear weapons security.

    The use of secrecy and deception are however not foolproof. While they may shield

    part of the nuclear weapons infrastructure they do not shield it all and, as noted above,

    the technical demands of maintaining nuclear weapons at high levels of readiness

    mean that even nuclear weapons components held in secrecy will become visible or

    vulnerable during various stages of their recycling, while others – in better known

    sites – will remain vulnerable. A further weakness arises from the environmental

    arrangements for nuclear weapons which may disclose unintentionally information of

    use to adversaries. The widening of roads and roundabouts to allow the movement of

    Pakistan’s large ground mobile nuclear missile launchers is a case in point allowing

    the informed observer to predict with some confidence the deployment routes of these

    missiles14. In all probability many such unintended self-betrayals have been made.

    Notwithstanding all these weaknesses the foregoing measures collectively offer a very

    high degree of physical security assurance in normal circumstances and may have

    been behind both Secretary Rice’s early confidence post 9/11 that Pakistan’s nuclear

    weapons were “in safe hands” and General Musharraf’s subsequent assurances that

    Pakistan’s nuclear weapons were both safe from terrorist and extremist groups15, and

    proof against the possibility that they could be targeted, or perhaps even physically

    removed, by the US [or even India or Israel] to prevent them falling into the hands of

    terrorist/extremists. Six years on, and in the context of the present turbulence in

    Pakistan, do these assurances still hold good?

     

    The Threats to Nuclear Weapons Security

    An important framing point about Pakistan’s nuclear infrastructure is that much of it

    has from the outset been deployed to the West of Pakistan to extend warning times of

    possible Indian attack against the infrastructure and to delay over-run from the

    ground16. The unanticipated consequence of this positioning has been to locate much

    of Pakistan’s nuclear infrastructure either within or close to the more volatile tribal

    regions of Pakistan to the west and north-west of Islamabad.

     

    Notwithstanding the physical security measures outlined above to protect Pakistan’s

    nuclear weapons and related components, the infrastructure remains vulnerable. This

    vulnerability takes two forms. One is the direct threat from extremist/terrorist groups

    who to date have not organised a sustained effort either to take possession of a nuclear

    weapon or weapons components or to create a radiological hazard by seeking to

    engulf nuclear weapons components in a fire or an explosion [a point made more

    serious by prevailing westerly winds which could take radiological plumes across

    population centres], but may yet try to do so as their numbers increase and as their

    confidence grows. Until such an event occurs the elements of the defences will remain

    untested. Equally serious is the vulnerability to threats from individuals and groups within the

    Pakistan military and intelligence services either working for their own ends or in

    cooperation with terrorist or extremist groups17. While the Pakistan military is usually

    portrayed as the least corrupt of Pakistan’s institutions and its senior ranks are

    populated by ostensibly urbane and westernised individuals, the threat from within the

    military and intelligence services is real. Younger generations of officers, particularly

    those rising through the ranks in the post-Zia era have been markedly “Islamised” in

    comparison to those trained from an earlier time. The “beard count” within the armed

     

    forces in that sense has risen18. Reflecting this the military and intelligence services

    have for several decades had strong links with extremist/terrorist groups in particular

    the groups fighting in Kashmir such as Lashkar-e-Toiba, and the Taleban.

    Today a significant proportion of Pakistan’s military are members of the main

    Islamist political party Jamaat-I-Islami19, and many in the ranks are linked through

    ties of family and biradari20 to extremist groups21. Military and intelligence officers

    have been involved in assassination attempts against Musharraf22, and military

    officers have also been discovered to be colluding with al-Qaeda operatives. The most

    notable example of the latter perhaps being the case of Khaled Sheikh Mohammed,

    the suspected mastermind of the 9/11 attacks. Sheikh Mohammed narrowly escaped

    arrest in Karachi in September 2002, after being tipped off, and was finally arrested in

    Rawalpindi in February 2003. Sheikh Mohammed was captured in the “safe house”

    of a serving military officer with close family links to Jamaat-i-Islami having passed

    through the hands of a succession of military officers with nothing more in common

    that their JI membership23. What these examples illustrate are the deeply rooted

    and widespread links between some in Pakistan’s military and intelligence communities

    and extremist/terrorist groups. Allied to the proven intent of groups like al-Qaeda

    to gain access to nuclear weapons technology24, these relations are a cause for concern.

     

    Indeed for many analysts Pakistan’s role in nuclear weapons proliferation, which may 

    be continuing even after the rolling up of the AQ Khan network25, and links between

    some in Pakistan’s nuclear weapons industry and extremists/terrorists poses the

    greatest threat to nuclear weapons security, particularly during a period of political

    volatility such as Pakistan is presently experiencing. David Albright, President of the

    Institute for Science and International Security in Washington, argued recently that

    the leakage of nuclear technology from Pakistan was his fundamental concern. He

    added:

    “If there is [further] instability Musharraf is going to have less ability to
    exercise tight control. Pakistan tends to leak vital nuclear information. It’s the
    nature of the system”.26

     

    As discussed above Pakistan has taken steps through staff rotation, security clearance,

    PRP programmes, intelligence oversight, and procedural and technical arrangements

    to secure its nuclear infrastructure but these cannot provide certainty against

    collusion. At any one moment there are likely to be a significant number of military,

    intelligence and civil nuclear sector personnel [the latter are less well vetted than

    those with direct operation roles over nuclear weapons] in place with access to

    nuclear weapons or weapons components who have antipathy to the west, sympathy

    for Islamist ideology, and/or links to extremist/terrorist groups. Further there is

    growing evidence of demoralisation and radicalisation within the Pakistan military

    and intelligence communities and of strengthening links with extremists and terrorists

    groups because of the presence of US and NATO forces in the region. Some in

    Pakistan’s military and intelligence communities are rebelling against being required

    to turn their guns on their own kinsmen and countrymen at the behest of the United

    States27.


    One further set of, albeit less likely, possibilities is pertinent: Pakistan has been

    subject to four successful military coups [1958, 1969, 1977 and 1999], in the second

    of which one military leadership replaced another. Each of these coups was enacted

    swiftly in a matter of hours with the coup plotters moving against the incumbent

    national leadership from the military’s garrison of Rawalpindi less than half an hour’s

    drive along the N5 from Islamabad. President Musharraf cannot rule out countercoup plots against him28.

    Two dangers consequently arise: one is that in the context of a deteriorating situation

    in Pakistan a counter-coup could be staged by military officers antipathetic to the West;

    the other is that a smaller group of such anti-Western officers might stage an assault

    on nuclear weapons sites and take possession of nuclear weapons or weapons components

    with a view to exploiting that possession for political, financial or ideological advantage. 

     

    In response to these kinds of threats US Secretary Rice has stated that the US has

    “contingency plans” in place to deal with the possibility of Pakistani nuclear weapons

    falling into unauthorised hands29, but the specifics of what she meant has never been

    made clear. Some have speculated that the US may have plans either to destroy in situ

    or to take physical possession of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons, but this seems highly

    improbable and has been strongly rejected as infeasible by Pakistan.

     

    In relation to military strikes on Pakistan’s nuclear weapons assets several issues need

    to be borne in mind. The first is that although US human intelligence inside the

    Pakistan armed forces is considerably better than, for example, inside the Iranian

    armed forces, it is far from perfect and, as noted above, aspects of Pakistan’s nuclear

    weapons security planning elude even the US. Furthermore if Pakistan thought an

    attack was imminent it would be able to disperse and hide any assets it thought were

    imperilled.

     

    The second obstacle is that attacks on nuclear weapons components with high

    explosive ordinance would run the risk of creating extensive radiological hazards

    qbal, “US Contingency plans for Pakistani nukes”, The Washington Times/UPI, 19 January 

    2005. 90 which could threat the safety of many Pakistanis, particularly in cities such as 

    Rawalpindi and Islamabad which are close to some nuclear weapons sites. The

    national, regional and international consequences for any US administration of this

    kind of action would be enormous and the chances of complete success minimal.

    This has persuaded some that the US [or others such as India or Israel] may be

    planning insertion assaults to take physical possession of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons

    and components and remove them to safety. As a hypothetical scenario this has the

    virtue of avoiding radiological hazard but it is impractical to the point of absurdity

    except in a situation in which the US has the agreement of the Pakistan army – or a

    pro-Western part of it – to assist the United States in the task in the context, for

    example, of a deteriorating situation or perhaps even civil war in Pakistan.

     

    To suggest that the US – or anyone else – could seize all these weapons and

    components in the face of opposition from the Pakistan army is ludicrous. It is

    important to remind oneself of the robustness of the defence Pakistan’s formidable

    army could mount to such attacks and to recall the previous failures of similar US

    assaults such as Operation Eagle Claw to rescue US Embassy hostages in Iran in 1979

    which ended with US helicopters crashing into the desert because their air intakes

    were not fitted with sand filters30, or the failed attempts to arrest Somali warlords in

    Mogadishu in 1993 which became the subject of many books and the film “Black

    Hawk Down”31. By comparison with trying to secure Pakistan’s entire nuclear

    weapons stockpile in a crisis these were very modest endeavours yet they ended in

    failure and ignominy.

     

    This has persuaded wiser heads that Secretary Rice’s remarks about “contingency

    plans” to secure Pakistan nuclear weapons were really only a rhetorical exercise 

    aimed at reassuring the American public, and that if the situation really did

    disintegrate in Pakistan to the point where Pakistan military control of the weapons

    eroded there would be very little the US, or anyone else, could do about safeguarding 

    Pakistan’s nuclear weapons.

     

    Conclusion

    This briefing has detailed the arrangements Pakistan has in place for the security of its

    nuclear weapons. These arrangements, encompassing technical, personnel reliability,

    physical security, and secrecy and deception measures, provide a high degree of

    assurance against the weapons falling into the hands of terrorists or renegade military

    personnel. Nevertheless there are weaknesses in each of these areas that add up to a

    significant set of vulnerabilities in Pakistan’s nuclear security arrangements. In the

    context of the present political turbulence in Pakistan in which Musharraf’s control

    may be weakening, in which the power of extremists and terrorists are growing, and

    in which anti-western sympathies within the Pakistan military and intelligence

    services are on the rise, some of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons may be vulnerable to

    assault from terrorist groups or from some within the Pakistan military or intelligence

    services, perhaps working in collusion with terrorists. If the situation in Pakistan

    deteriorates further the security of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons may be compromised.

     

    Original Link: http://spaces.brad.ac.uk:8080/download/attachments/748/Brief_22finalised.pdf

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