Gwynne Dyer: An Indo-Pak Nuclear War Would Hit the Whole World

By Gwynne Dyer

India and Pakistan have had several shooting matches since they carried out a total of nine underground nuclear weapons tests in 1998. However, they don’t make public threats to use their nukes (around 170 nuclear warheads each), and they do understand that escalation from smaller, ‘conventional’ wars is the real danger.

Nevertheless, the relationship between the two countries is fundamentally unstable, because Pakistan has only one-sixth of India’s population and one-tenth of its wealth.

‘Conventional’ wars in this era are basically wars of attrition, which means that Pakistan would almost certainly lose a major non-nuclear conflict.  By contrast both countries would be destroyed in a nuclear war, so threatening to escalate a war to the nuclear level would give Pakistan a weird kind of leverage.

Yet the rest of the world just ignores these ‘local’ calculations, because other countries don’t feel threatened by a nuclear war between India and Pakistan. They believe it would largely stay within South Asia.

They are wrong. The present confrontation between the two is far more dangerous for the world than the Ukraine war or any other current conflict.

The trigger for the India-Pakistan crisis this time was a machine-gun attack in the Indian-controlled part of Kashmir on 22 April that killed 26 Indian tourists.

All the dead but one were Indian Hindus. The four terrorists have been identified as Kashmiri Muslims or Pakistanis of Kashmiri origin, and India has declared that they were supported by the Pakistani government. However, India has offered no evidence and a home-grown Kashmiri group is an equally plausible culprit.

Kashmir was India’s only Muslim-majority state, and since Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s sectarian Hindu and ultra-nationalist regime ended its special status in 2019 it has been boiling with resentment and is effectively occupied by the Indian army.

Matters have now got worse, with Modi suspending the Indus Waters Treaty of 1960 that regulates the sharing of the six rivers’ water between India and Pakistan. That water is utterly existential for Pakistan, where it irrigates 80% of the land on which the country grows the food for its quarter-billion people.

Many other countries have leaders just as reckless, but few of them have nuclear weapons. And Modi is playing with far more lives than the others: not just the 20 million ‘prompt’ dead expected from blast, fires and fall-out in a full-scale Indo-Pak nuclear war, but the 200 million to two billion dead who would die there and elsewhere in a ten-year ‘nuclear winter’.

A nuclear winter is a long period with conditions cold enough to cut global food production. It would start with hundreds of firestorms that boost enormous amounts of soot into the stratosphere from cities hit by nuclear explosions. The soot blocks much of the incoming sunlight – and it stays there for years because there is no rain in the stratosphere to remove it.

The original calculations were done in the 1980s for an all-out nuclear war between the US and the Soviet Union, but a decade ago a team led by Professors Alan Robock and Brian Toon of Rutgers and Colorado Universities redid the calculations for an Indo-Pak nuclear war on fast modern computers with a huge data-processing capacity. The results were horrifying.

As before, several hundred burning cities in India and Pakistan would provide the initial boost of soot into the stratosphere over South Asia, but we now know that prevailing upper-altitude winds would carry most of it east and north until it blankets most of the northern temperate zone as well.

Countries south of the equator would fare somewhat better, but countries in North America, Europe, the Middle East and East Asia would not be spared. Famine conditions would prevail worldwide for about ten years.

Go on worrying about Ukraine, Gaza, Iran, Taiwan and so on, but the big threat is a nuclear war between India and Pakistan.

Gwynne Dyer is a Canadian-born independent journalist whose column is published in more than 175 papers in 45 countries.