Concepts

Second-Strike Capability

CAPF wiki1 min read7 sections
At a glance
SubjectDefence

Definition

The ability of a State to absorb an enemy's first nuclear strike and still retain enough surviving nuclear forces to launch a devastating retaliatory strike, which is what makes a No First Use posture credible.

Key points

  • Second-strike capability requires survivable, dispersed and concealed forces so that an adversary cannot disarm the State in a single first strike.
  • The most survivable leg is the sea-based one: nuclear-powered submarines armed with ballistic missiles (SSBNs) can hide at sea, making them hard to find and destroy.
  • India is building this through the nuclear triad: land-based Agni missiles, aircraft, and the Arihant-class ballistic-missile submarines; INS Arihant gave India its first credible sea-based deterrent.
  • Second-strike credibility is essential to India's doctrine because No First Use means India will only ever use nuclear weapons in retaliation, so it must guarantee that retaliation is assured.
  • Command and control survivability (protected leadership and communication links under the Nuclear Command Authority) is as important as the weapons themselves.

Why it matters for CAPF

Second-strike capability explains why India pursues a triad and submarines despite No First Use; the SSBN concept, the Arihant class, and the triad are commonly tested.

Common confusion

A first strike aims to disarm the enemy; a second strike is the assured retaliation after absorbing an attack. A submarine-based deterrent (the sea leg) is prized precisely because it is the hardest to destroy, making the second strike credible.

One-line recall

The assured retaliatory force that survives a first strike (especially submarine-launched missiles), making No First Use credible.

concept no first use policy, concept credible minimum deterrence, concept strategic forces command, concept blue water navy

Parent note

indias space and missile programme

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