How India's Nuclear Doctrine Works
India is an acknowledged nuclear weapons state outside the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) framework, possessing approximately 160–170 nuclear warheads as of 2024 (Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists estimate) delivered by a nuclear triad — land (Agni ballistic missiles), sea (K-15 submarine-launched, Arihant SSBN), and air (Mirage 2000H and Jaguar aircraft with nuclear gravity bombs). India's nuclear doctrine is articulated in the "Draft Nuclear Doctrine" (1999) and the "Nuclear Doctrine of India" (2003) issued after the 2003 National Security Advisory Board review. The doctrine's two foundational elements are: (1) No First Use (NFU) — India will not use nuclear weapons first against a nuclear-armed state, only in response to nuclear, chemical, or biological weapons attack; and (2) massive retaliation — India's response to a nuclear attack will be massive and designed to inflict unacceptable damage on the attacker. Representational Visualisation: ...