Pakistan expanding Nuclear arsenal

p2prada

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They have the bombs, but not the delivery systems.

Actually, the bomb has been more detrimental to Pakistan as a whole than serve a purpose in protecting the country from foreign aggression. The 2002 failure at attacking Pakistan has less to do with fear of a Nuclear response and more to do with foreign diplomacy. Building the bomb has not increased their security and has instead led to economic ruin. You could say their policy of building Nukes was their worst economic policy disaster.
 

smartindian

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sir can you explain me , they have many missile which they call highly accurate , more modern than our agni series missiles, is it true . if there is an war tomo, what delivery system they use and what strategy we use to counter it
 

Virendra

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I believe their wish to have huge arsenal is because they want to use it as:
a) A blackmailing tool for the international community.
b) A deterrance to perceived enemies such as India, Israel etc.

But yes the bluff is as open as it could be - lagging at delivery systems.
Regards,
Virendra
 

Yusuf

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I believe their wish to have huge arsenal is because they want to use it as:
a) A blackmailing tool for the international community.
b) A deterrance to perceived enemies such as India, Israel etc.

But yes the bluff is as open as it could be - lagging at delivery systems.
Regards,
Virendra
You don't need 100 nukes to blackmail the world. just one is enough.
China deterred the soviets with 12 bombs. So the number of nukes is not going to increase deterrence value.

Pak still relies more on fighters to deliver its nukes, missiles are there and all based on old chinese and NoKo missiles. Their accuracy is highly questionable. Ever heard of a failed pakistani missile test? Never know what's going on in pakistan.
 

Virendra

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You're right Yusuf. Then I don't know what reason lies of having such a huge arsenal and lets even say if you wish have it .. why lagging at the delivery systems. Things don't add up well here.
Are they planning (long term) to sell those nukes to military rulers and other rogue states - their brotherhood ? ;)
 

Yusuf

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You're right Yusuf. Then I don't know what reason lies of having such a huge arsenal and lets even say if you wish have it .. why lagging at the delivery systems. Things don't add up well here.
Are they planning (long term) to sell those nukes to military rulers and other rogue states - their brotherhood ? ;)
You can't sell nukes and get away unless the US blinks. US is in full know of everything about pak nukes. Any buyer of pak nukes is going to be middle eastern country which means potential use against israel. No way the US will wink at that. But before that, how will they slip the nukes away from US eyes?
 

amitkriit

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You can't sell nukes and get away unless the US blinks. US is in full know of everything about pak nukes. Any buyer of pak nukes is going to be middle eastern country which means potential use against israel. No way the US will wink at that. But before that, how will they slip the nukes away from US eyes?
USA is deliberately tolerating a nuclear Pakistan. USA is using Pakistan as counterweight against India in the same way it is trying to use India against China. Nuclear explosion by Pakistan surely had tactical support from USA. USA knows that India will become a formidable force in Indian Ocean region if India somehow manages to buy peace on her Western border.
 

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USA is deliberately tolerating a nuclear Pakistan. USA is using Pakistan as counterweight against India in the same way it is trying to use India against China. Nuclear explosion by Pakistan surely had tactical support from USA. USA knows that India will become a formidable force in Indian Ocean region if India somehow manages to buy peace on her Western border.
Proliferation was winked at by the US when the afghan war was on. Once it got over, US sanctioned pak including blocking F-16 sales. So no, US didn't approve pak going openly nuclear.
 

Virendra

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Amit their tolerance is waning thin. And once they're out of Af-Pak, I don't know how much dependence or reasoning would be left to keep tolerating. Americans allowing Pak to try cut & bruise India everywhere is a double standard our leaders need to wake up to.
 

Tshering22

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Amit their tolerance is waning thin. And once they're out of Af-Pak, I don't know how much dependence or reasoning would be left to keep tolerating. Americans allowing Pak to try cut & bruise India everywhere is a double standard our leaders need to wake up to.
The Americans won't do anything to Pakistan at least in the coming 2 years. There is this fine article published by some analyst about this. There is little US can do to strike Pakistan in a decisive and punitive manner without accepting Russian offer. Pakistan literally holds them by their nuts because of the supply lanes which remains Pakistan's last card unless and until Obama accepts Medvedev's offer. And the US could care less what terrorists do to India in the long term because their priority is to ensure Taliban don't rise; regardless of what other terror outfits are doing or going to do. It is true that Taliban is a common enemy.

As I said earlier, it is upto us to keep this balance in our favour. We need to make sure that we sever all diplomatic, economic and trade ties with our neighbour unless they start dismantling and show tangible signs of terrorism and separatism waning in J&K. But the government that cares little for domestic affairs like inflation and black money, there is little scope that they will allow such broad and far-sighted policies vis-a-vis Pakistan.
 
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http://www.sify.com/news/having-mor...ani-daily-news-international-lcfsoqihcjj.html

Having more n-bombs than India won't help, says Pakistani daily

Islamabad, Feb 5 (IANS) Possessing more nuclear weapons than India will not make Pakistan more secure, said a commentary in a Pakistan daily, pointing out that 'the Bomb' had not helped to achieve Kashmiri liberation, and instead India's grip on Kashmir was tighter.

The commentary in the Express Tribune also said that Pakistan has 'deep and serious problems that cannot be solved by more or better weapons'.

Pervez Hoodbhoy, who teaches nuclear and particle physics, in a comment piece 'Pakistan's nukes: How many are enough?', wrote that news from the US that Pakistan probably has more nuclear weapons than India must have thrilled many.

If for argument's sake, we suppose that Pakistan surpasses India in umbers - say by 50 percent or even 100 percent, 'Will that really make Pakistan more secure? Make it more capable of facing current existential challenges?,' he asked.

'The answer is, no.'

'Pakistan's basic security problems lie within its borders: growing internal discord and militancy, a collapsing economy, and a belief among most citizens that the state cannot govern effectively. These are deep and serious problems that cannot be solved by more or better weapons.

'Therefore the way forward lies in building a sustainable and active democracy, an economy for peace rather than war, a federation in which provincial grievances can be effectively resolved, elimination of the feudal order and creating a tolerant society that respects the rule of law.'

The article pointed out that Pakistanis have long imagined the 'Bomb as a panacea for all ills'.

'The Bomb did nothing to bring Kashmiri liberation closer. India's grip on Kashmir is tighter today than it has been for a long time...

'Pakistan's strategy for confronting India - secret jihad by Islamic fighters protected by Pakistan's nuclear umbrella - backfired terribly after Kargil and nearly turned Pakistan into an international pariah.

'More importantly, today's hydra-headed militancy owes to the Kashmiri and Afghan mujahideen who avenged their betrayal by Pakistan's army and politicians by turning their guns against their former sponsors and trainers.'

While saying that some might ask, 'didn't the Bomb stop India from swallowing up Pakistan?'

'The answer is, no. First, an upward-mobile India has no reason to want an additional 180 million Muslims. Second, even if India wanted to, territorial conquest is impossible.'

The article went on to say that conventional weapons in Pakistan are sufficient protection.

'If the mighty American python could not digest Iraq or Afghanistan, there is zero chance for middling India to occupy Pakistan, a country four times larger than Iraq.'

'It is, of course, true that Pakistan's nuclear weapons deterred India from launching punitive attacks at least thrice since the 1998 tests. India could do nothing after Pakistan's secret incursion in Kargil during 1999, the Dec 13 attack on the Indian parliament the same year (initially claimed by Jaish-i-Muhammad), or the Mumbai attack in 2008 by Lashkar-i-Taiba,' it said.

'So should we keep the Bomb to protect militant groups? Surely it is time to realise that conducting foreign policy in this manner will buy us nothing but disaster after disaster.'

It ended by saying: 'We need fewer bombs on both sides, not more.'
 

Parthy

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Pak builds new reactor to add more bombs to N-kitty

Despite being in the throes of a crippling political and economic crisis and almost entirely dependent on handouts from the US and multilateral aid, Pakistan is poking a finger in the international community's eye.

Days after it was revealed that Islamabad has doubled its nuclear weapons' inventory in the past decade, American experts have discovered that it has begun building a fourth plutonium-producing reactor to produce even more nuclear bombs to add to the 100-plus it already has.

The Washington-based Institute for Science and International Security announced on Wednesday that it has obtained commercial satellite imagery from January 15, 2011 that shows what appears to be a fourth reactor under construction at Khushab nuclear site. The reactor construction was not visible during a previous satellite pictures last November.

"Pakistan is determined to produce considerably more plutonium for nuclear weapons," ISIS said in an outline of the progression of the country's plutonium reactors. While Pakistan's initial nuclear weapons were enriched uranium-based , it expanded to plutonium-based weapons (which are more compact) with the commissioning in 1998 of the first reactor at the Khushab site. Sometime between 2000 and 2002, Pakistan began constructing a second reactor at the site, and in 2006, it began building a third reactor , adjacent to the second Khushab reactor.

ISIS, a think-tank with expertise in nuclear proliferation , said that in commercial satellite imagery from December 2009, vapor could be seen rising from some of the second reactor's cooling tower fan blades, indicating that the second reactor was at least at some stage of initial operation.

Vapor can again be seen rising from some of the second reactor's cooling towers in the January 15, 2011 imagery , though none can be seen yet over the third reactor's cooling towers, while construction of the fourth has just begun.



http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...more-bombs-to-N-kitty/articleshow/7472901.cms
 

Parthy

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It is all possible for them to build more no. of nuclear reactors provided liberal aids from US!!! Once US turns against Pakistan threaten back saying that some fission material were taken by Alqeida and other terrorist group...

US digging their own pit!!
 
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Pakistan's Nuclear Surge

Fourth Nuclear Reactor at Pakistan's Khushab Site - Newsweek



Even in the best of times, Pakistan's nuclear-weapons program warrants alarm. But these are perilous days. At a moment of unprecedented misgiving between Washington and Islamabad, new evidence suggests that Pakistan's nuclear program is barreling ahead at a furious clip.

According to new commercial-satellite imagery obtained exclusively by NEWSWEEK, Pakistan is aggressively accelerating construction at the Khushab nuclear site, about 140 miles south of Islamabad. The images, analysts say, prove Pakistan will soon have a fourth operational reactor, greatly expanding plutonium production for its nuclear-weapons program.

"The buildup is remarkable," says Paul Brannan of the Institute for Science and International Security. "And that nobody in the U.S. or in the Pakistani government says anything about this—especially in this day and age—is perplexing."

Unlike Iran, which has yet to produce highly enriched uranium, or North Korea, which has produced plutonium but still lacks any real weapons capability, Pakistan is significantly ramping up its nuclear-weapons program. Eric Edelman, undersecretary of defense in the George W. Bush administration, puts it bluntly: "You're talking about Pakistan even potentially passing France at some point. That's extraordinary."

Pakistani officials say the buildup is a response to the threat from India, which is spending $50 billion over the next five years on its military. "But to say it's just an issue between just India and Pakistan is divorced from reality," says former senator Sam Nunn, who co-chairs the Nuclear Threat Initiative. "The U.S. and Soviet Union went through 40 years of the Cold War and came out every time from dangerous situations with lessons learned. Pakistan and India have gone through some dangerous times, and they have learned some lessons. But not all of them. Today, deterrence has fundamentally changed. The whole globe has a stake in this. It's extremely dangerous."

It's dangerous because Pakistan is also stockpiling fissile material, or bomb fuel. Since Islamabad can mine uranium on its own territory and has decades of enrichment know-how—beginning with the work of nuclear scientist A. Q. Khan—the potential for production is significant.

Although the White House declined to comment, a senior U.S. congressional official who works on nuclear issues told NEWSWEEK that intelligence estimates suggest Pakistan has already developed enough fissile material to produce more than 100 warheads and manufacture between eight and 20 weapons a year. "There's no question," the official says, "it's the fastest-growing program in the world."

What has leaders around the world especially worried is what's popularly known as "loose nukes"—nuclear weapons or fissile material falling into the wrong hands. "There's no transparency in how the fissile material is handled or transported," says Mansoor Ijaz, who has played an active role in back-channel diplomacy between Islamabad and New Delhi. "And the amount—they have significant quantities—is what's so alarming."

That Osama bin Laden was found in a Pakistani military community, and that the country is home to such jihadi groups as Lashkar-e-Taiba, only heightens concerns. "We've looked the other way from Pakistan's growing program for 30 years," says Sharon Squassoni, a director at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. What we're facing, she says, is "a disaster waiting to happen."
A Defense Department official told NEWSWEEK that the U.S. government is "confident that Pakistan has taken appropriate steps toward securing its nuclear arsenal." But beyond palliatives, few in Washington want to openly discuss the nightmare scenario of terrorists getting hold of nuclear material or weapons. "The less that is said publicly, the better," says Stephen Hadley, national-security adviser to President George W. Bush. "But don't confuse the lack of public discussion for a lack of concern."

Compiled with Hans Kristensen of the Federation of American Scientists
The bomb lends the Pakistanis a certain diplomatic insouciance. Nukes, after all, are a valuable political tool, ensuring continued economic aid from the United States and Europe. "Pakistan knows it can outstare" the West, says Pakistani nuclear physicist Pervez Hoodbhoy. "It's confident the West knows that Pakistan's collapse is too big a price to pay, so the bailout is there in perpetuity. It's the one thing we've been successful at."

Pakistani leaders defend their weapons program as a strategic necessity: since they can't match India's military spending, they have to bridge the gap with nukes. "Regretfully, there are several destabilizing developments that have taken place in recent years," Khalid Banuri of Pakistan's Strategic Plans Division, the nuclear arsenal's guardian, wrote in response to NEWSWEEK questions. Among his country's concerns, Banuri pointed to India's military buildup and the U.S.'s -civilian nuclear deal with India.

"Most Pakistanis believe the jihadist scenario is something that the West has created as a bogey," says Hoodbhoy, "an excuse, so they can screw us, defang, and denuclearize us."

"Our program is an issue of extreme sensitivity for every man, woman, and child in Pakistan," says former Pakistani president Pervez Musharraf, adding that the nukes are "well dispersed and protected in secure locations." When asked whether the U.S. has a role to play in securing the arsenal, Musharraf said: "A U.S. role to play? A U.S. role in helping? Zero role. No, sir. It is our own production?.?.?.?We have not and cannot now have any intrusion by any element in the U.S." To guard its "strategic assets," Pakistan employs two Army divisions—about 18,000 troops—and, as Musharraf drily puts it, "If you want to get into a firefight with the forces guarding our strategic assets, it will be a very sad day."

For now, the White House appears to have made a tacit tradeoff with Islamabad: for your cooperation in Afghanistan, we'll leave you to your own nuclear devices. "People bristle at the suggestion, but it follows, doesn't it?" says Rolf Mowatt-Larssen, formerly the CIA's chief officer handling terrorism and weapons of mass destruction. "The irony is that the U.S. presence in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and the money we're giving them to fight terrorism, could inadvertently aggravate the very problem we're trying to stop. After all, terrorism and nukes is the worst-case scenario."

With this fourth nuclear facility at Khushab coming online as early as 2013, and the prospect of an accelerated nuclear-weapons program, the U.S. is facing a diplomatic dilemma. "The Pakistanis have gone through a humiliation with the killing of Osama bin Laden," says Nunn. "That's never a time to corner somebody. But with both recent and preexisting problems, we are in a race between cooperation and catastrophe. Both sides need to take a deep breath, count to 10, and find a way to cooperate."
 
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Why does Pakistan have world's fastest-growing nuclear program? - CSMonitor.com

Why does Pakistan have world's fastest-growing nuclear program?

Even in the best of times, Pakistan's nuclear-weapons program warrants alarm. But these are perilous days. At a moment of unprecedented misgiving between Washington and Islamabad, new evidence suggests that Pakistan's nuclear program is barreling ahead at a furious clip.

According to new commercial-satellite imagery obtained exclusively by Newsweek, Pakistan is aggressively accelerating construction at the Khushab nuclear site, about 140 miles south of Islamabad. The images, analysts say, prove Pakistan will soon have a fourth operational reactor, greatly expanding plutonium production for its nuclear-weapons program.

"The buildup is remarkable," says Paul Brannan of the Institute for Science and International Security. "And that nobody in the U.S. or in the Pakistani government says anything about this—especially in this day and age—is perplexing."

Unlike Iran, which has yet to produce highly enriched uranium, or North Korea, which has produced plutonium but still lacks any real weapons capability, Pakistan is significantly ramping up its nuclear-weapons program. Eric Edelman, undersecretary of defense in the George W. Bush administration, puts it bluntly: "You're talking about Pakistan even potentially passing France at some point. That's extraordinary."

RELATED: The top 5 Al Qaeda leaders still hiding in Pakistan

Pakistani officials say the buildup is a response to the threat from India, which is spending $50 billion over the next five years on its military. "But to say it's just an issue between just India and Pakistan is divorced from reality," says former senator Sam Nunn, who co-chairs the Nuclear Threat Initiative. "The U.S. and Soviet Union went through 40 years of the Cold War and came out every time from dangerous situations with lessons learned. Pakistan and India have gone through some dangerous times, and they have learned some lessons. But not all of them. Today, deterrence has fundamentally changed. The whole globe has a stake in this. It's extremely dangerous."

It's dangerous because Pakistan is also stockpiling fissile material, or bomb fuel. Since Islamabad can mine uranium on its own territory and has decades of enrichment know-how—beginning with the work of nuclear scientist A. Q. Khan—the potential for production is significant

Although the White House declined to comment, a senior U.S. congressional official who works on nuclear issues told Newsweek that intelligence estimates suggest Pakistan has already developed enough fissile material to produce more than 100 warheads and manufacture between eight and 20 weapons a year. "There's no question," the official says, "it's the fastest-growing program in the world."

The White House appears to have made a tacit tradeoff with Islamabad: for your cooperation in Afghanistan, we'll leave you to your own nuclear devices.

What has leaders around the world especially worried is what's popularly known as "loose nukes"—nuclear weapons or fissile material falling into the wrong hands. "There's no transparency in how the fissile material is handled or transported," says Mansoor Ijaz, who has played an active role in back-channel diplomacy between Islamabad and New Delhi. "And the amount—they have significant quantities—is what's so alarming."

RELATED: Top 10 most nuclear dependent nations

That Osama bin Laden was found in a Pakistani military community, and that the country is home to such jihadi groups as Lashkar-e-Taiba, only heightens concerns. "We've looked the other way from Pakistan's growing program for 30 years," says Sharon Squassoni, a director at the Center for Strategic and International Studies. What we're facing, she says, is "a disaster waiting to happen."

A Defense Department official told Newsweek that the U.S. government is "confident that Pakistan has taken appropriate steps toward securing its nuclear arsenal." But beyond palliatives, few in Washington want to openly discuss the nightmare scenario of terrorists getting hold of nuclear material or weapons. "The less that is said publicly, the better," says Stephen Hadley, national-security adviser to President George W. Bush. "But don't confuse the lack of public discussion for a lack of concern."

The bomb lends the Pakistanis a certain diplomatic insouciance. Nukes, after all, are a valuable political tool, ensuring continued economic aid from the United States and Europe. "Pakistan knows it can outstare" the West, says Pakistani nuclear physicist Pervez Hoodbhoy. "It's confident the West knows that Pakistan's collapse is too big a price to pay, so the bailout is there in perpetuity. It's the one thing we've been successful at."

Pakistani leaders defend their weapons program as a strategic necessity: since they can't match India's military spending, they have to bridge the gap with nukes. "Regretfully, there are several destabilizing developments that have taken place in recent years," Khalid Banuri of Pakistan's Strategic Plans Division, the nuclear arsenal's guardian, wrote in response to Newsweek questions. Among his country's concerns, Banuri pointed to India's military buildup and the U.S.'s -civilian nuclear deal with India.

"Most Pakistanis believe the jihadist scenario is something that the West has created as a bogey," says Hoodbhoy, "an excuse, so they can screw us, defang, and denuclearize us."

"Our program is an issue of extreme sensitivity for every man, woman, and child in Pakistan," says former Pakistani president Pervez Musharraf, adding that the nukes are "well dispersed and protected in secure locations." When asked whether the U.S. has a role to play in securing the arsenal, Musharraf said: "A U.S. role to play? A U.S. role in helping? Zero role. No, sir. It is our own production "¦ We have not and cannot now have any intrusion by any element in the U.S." To guard its "strategic assets," Pakistan employs two Army divisions—about 18,000 troops—and, as Musharraf drily puts it, "If you want to get into a firefight with the forces guarding our strategic assets, it will be a very sad day."

For now, the White House appears to have made a tacit tradeoff with Islamabad: for your cooperation in Afghanistan, we'll leave you to your own nuclear devices. "People bristle at the suggestion, but it follows, doesn't it?" says Rolf Mowatt-Larssen, formerly the CIA's chief officer handling terrorism and weapons of mass destruction. "The irony is that the U.S. presence in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and the money we're giving them to fight terrorism, could inadvertently aggravate the very problem we're trying to stop. After all, terrorism and nukes is the worst-case scenario."

With this fourth nuclear facility at Khushab coming online as early as 2013, and the prospect of an accelerated nuclear-weapons program, the U.S. is facing a diplomatic dilemma. "The Pakistanis have gone through a humiliation with the killing of Osama bin Laden," says Nunn. "That's never a time to corner somebody. But with both recent and preexisting problems, we are in a race between cooperation and catastrophe. Both sides need to take a deep breath, count to 10, and find a way to cooperate."

With Ron Moreau in Islamabad and Fasih Ahmed in Lahore

Andrew Bast is a senior articles editor for the international edition of Newsweek. He has reported from four continents for several newspapers, including The New York Times, and now writes about global security. Follow him on Twitter: @andrewbast
 

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Pakistan rapidly developing its nuclear arsenal: Report

Estimated to have more nuclear weapons than India, Pakistan is rapidly developing and expanding its atomic arsenal, spending about $ 2.5 billion a year to develop such weapons, a report has said.

"Pakistan has been rapidly developing and expanding its nuclear arsenal, increasing its capacity to produce plutonium, and testing and deploying a diverse array of nuclear-capable ballistic and cruise missiles," said the report 'Assuring Destruction Forever: Nuclear Modernisation Around the World'

"Pakistan is moving from an arsenal based wholly on HEU to greater reliance on lighter and more compact plutonium-based weapons, which is made possible by a rapid expansion in plutonium production capacity," said the 150-page report by Reaching Critical Will of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom.

"Pakistan is also moving from aircraft-delivered nuclear bombs to nuclear-armed ballistic and cruise missiles and from liquid-fuelled to solid-fuelled medium-range missile. Pakistan also has a growing nuclear weapons research, development, and production infrastructure," it said.

According to the report Pakistan is estimated to have 90-110 nuclear weapons.

"A long-term concern now driving Pakistan's nuclear programme is the US policy of countering the rise of China by cultivating a stronger strategic relationship with India. This may tie the future of Pakistan and India's nuclear weapons to the emerging contest between the United States and China," said the report.

Pakistan has a number of short—range, medium, and longer—range road—mobile ballistic surface—to—surface missiles in various stages of development.

"It has developed a second generation of ballistic missile systems over the past five years. It is estimated that Pakistan could have a stockpile of 2750 kg of weapon—grade HEU and may be producing about 150 kg of HEU per year," it said.

Estimates suggest Pakistan has produced a total of about 140 kg of plutonium, the report said.

While not much information is available on the funding of Pakistan's nuclear weapons project, the report said estimates indicate that Pakistan spends about $ 2.5 billion a year on nuclear weapons.

Despite extensive foreign military assistance, Pakistan's effort to sustain its conventional and nuclear military programmes has come at increasingly great cost to the effort to meet basic human needs and improve living standards, the report said.

India, the report says, is estimated to have 80-100 nuclear warheads.

"It is also developing a range of delivery vehicles, including land— and sea—based missiles, bombers, and submarines," it said.

"While nuclear weapons used to be seen as a 'necessary evil', there is no more enthusiasm for India to become a bonafide nuclear weapon power that can exercise its military might in the region," it said.


The Hindu : News / International : Pakistan rapidly developing its nuclear arsenal: Report

Whole world wants an end to Iran Nuclear program, why is porkistan given a free hand in developing nuclear weapon. Again GOI should be blamed they did not get enough international attention about Pakis nuclear program. Whole world also knows that pakis nuclear is not safe & it may land in wrong hands. What is India & international community doing about this. Its high time that India should work towards dismantling pakis nuclear arsenal
 
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ajay_ijn

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Whole world wants an end to Iran Nuclear program
hello whole world wants to end Iran program because US wants to, (apparently India, China & Russia are not that part of world)
whole world doesn't care about Pakistan because US doesn't. world doesn't give a damn about what India thinks.
Its the same with Iraq, NKorea or any other country for that matter.

The only reason we didn't become another Iran, Iraq or Korea is because we succumb to US pressure quite easily, just don't balls to even talk against them.

Pakistan is not part of axis of evil. Pakistan-India equal equal onlee. The extremists in Pakistan are far better than those of evil iranian extremists, pak extremists can be tamed while Iran cannot be. Iran should die and there is no other option for them.



India, the report says, is estimated to have 80-100 nuclear warheads.
one can only estimate how much fissile material we have got. it will be never known how many warheads india actually has or have deployed.
 
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It's just their deterrence strategy. Whenever, they are weak, The talk of their nuclear arsenal. Their only hope is nuke as they can't even dream to face India with conventional war. Who knows, May be we are also increasing. By 2015-17, Our ABM will be completely deployed at least on western frontier. Pak knows very well, it's just their deterrence but they can never use it. It's matter of survival for them due to fixed geography and demography.
 

W.G.Ewald

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"Pakistan is moving from an arsenal based wholly on HEU to greater reliance on lighter and more compact plutonium-based weapons, which is made possible by a rapid expansion in plutonium production capacity," said the 150-page report by Reaching Critical Will of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom.
How credible is this source in the first place?

http://www.reachingcriticalwill.org/
 
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