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Showing posts with label Nuclear armed Pakistan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nuclear armed Pakistan. Show all posts

Monday, February 11, 2013

Pakistan Successfully Test Fires Hatf IX Missile

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RAWALPINDI - Pakistan on Monday conducted a successful test fire of Short Range Surface to Surface Missile Hatf IX (NASR).

According to ISPR, the test fire was conducted with successive launches of two missiles from a state of the art multi tube launcher. NASR, with a range of 60 km, and inflight maneuver capability can carry nuclear warheads of appropriate yield, with high accuracy.

This quick response system, which can fire a four Missile Salvo ensures deterrence against threats in view of evolving scenarios. Additionally NASR has been specially designed to defeat all known Anti Tactical Missile Defence Systems.

The test was witnessed by Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee General Khalid Shameem Wynne, Director General Strategic Plans Division Lieutenant General (Retired) Khalid Ahmed Kidwai, Chairman NESCOM Mr Muhammad Irfan Burney, the Commander Army Strategic Forces Command Lieutenant General Triq Nadeem Gilani, senior officers from the armed forces, scientists and engineers of strategic organizations and others.

Addressing the scientists, engineers and military officers of Strategic Organizations, Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee congratulated them on displaying a high standard of proficiency in handling and operating the state of the art weapon system.

He said that Pakistan’s Armed Forces were fully capable of safeguarding Pakistan’s security against all kinds of aggression. The successful test has also been appreciated by the President and Prime Minister of Pakistan who have congratulated the scientists and engineers on their outstanding success.

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Secret UK Uranium Plant Shutdown over Safety Fears

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A top-secret plant at Aldermaston that makes enriched uranium components for Britain's nuclear warheads and fuel for the Royal Navy's submarines has been shut down because corrosion has been discovered in its "structural steelwork", the Guardian can reveal.

The closure has been endorsed by safety regulators who feared the building did not conform to the appropriate standards. The nuclear safety watchdog demands that such critical buildings are capable of withstanding "extreme weather and seismic events", and the plant at Aldermaston failed this test.

It has set a deadline of the end of the year for the problems to be fixed.

Although the closed plant has not been officially named for national security reasons, the Guardian understands it is known as A45. It makes enriched uranium components for Trident nuclear warheads and has recently been helping to make the uranium fuel for the Astute generation of nuclear-powered submarines.

The Ministry of Defence insisted it had contingency plans to cover the loss of the plant, but prolonged closure could force the government to buy materials from the US to ensure there is no disruption to Britain's nuclear weapons programme.

The government's safety watchdog, the Office for Nuclear Regulation has taken legal enforcement action against AWE, the private consortium that runs the nuclear weapons complex at Aldermaston, Berkshire, ordering that the corroded steel be repaired.

Though the corrosion was first found last May and the enforcement notice served in November, the information only emerged via an ONR newsletter published online in the past few days. This has prompted critics to accuse AWE of not being forthcoming about a problem it detected eight months ago.

The ONR confirmed that inspections by AWE "discovered an unexpected area of corrosion on structural steelwork in one of their manufacturing facilities at Aldermaston".

The ONR launched an investigation that concluded AWE had breached a condition of its operating licence meant to ensure safe operation. "AWE had not fully complied with licence condition 28(1) in so far as its arrangements to examine, maintain and inspect the structure were not adequate to prevent the degradation of the structure, and the resulting challenge to its nuclear safety functions," said an ONR spokesman.

AWE is run for the Ministry of Defence by a group of three private companies: Lockheed Martin and Jacobs Engineering Group from the US and the British company Serco. It provides and maintains the nuclear warheads for Trident missiles carried by four Vanguard-class submarines based on the Clyde near Glasgow.

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Pakistan successfully test-fires MRBM Hatf V (Ghauri)

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RAWALPINDI: Pakistan today successfully conducted the training launch of Medium Range Ballistic Missile (MRBM) Hatf V (Ghauri).The launch was conducted by a Strategic Missile Group of the Army Strategic Force Command on the culmination of a field training exercise that was aimed at testing the operational readiness of the Army Strategic Force Command. Ghauri ballistic missile is a liquid fuel missile which can carry both conventional and nuclear warheads over a distance of 1300 kms.The test monitoring of the launch was conducted at the National Command Centre through the medium of National Command Authority s fully automated Strategic Command and Control Support System (SCCSS). 


It may be recalled that the SCCSS enables robust Command and Control capability of all strategic assets with round the clock situational awareness in a digitized network centric environment to decision makers at the National Command Centre (NCC). The test consolidates and strengthens Pakistan s deterrence capability, and national security.The President and Prime Minister congratulated all ranks of the Army Strategic Force Command on the excellent standard achieved during training which was reflected in the proficient handling of the weapon system in the field and the accuracy of the training launch

Pakistan Cyber Force

Saturday, July 14, 2012

The US veiled designs against Pakistan No more a Secret

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Obama worries about Pakistan’s disintegration and safety of its nuclear warheads. In reality he and his team are least concerned about Pakistan’s fragmentation since this has been among the many goals Washington had perceived at the time of invading Afghanistan. Real concern is the nuke sand not the fate of Pakistan. The US has already started seeing Pakistan as a failing state at the brink of collapse. Its think tanks and media have been projecting different scenarios of a balkanized Pakistan since 2004/05.
The six strategic partners grouped together in Kabul had chalked out a comprehensive covert plan in late 2001 how to destabilize, de-Islamize, denuclearize and balkanize Pakistan. The agencies with the support of ISAF, Karzai regime and experts of India proficient in Chankyan tactics have been working zealously since 2002 to achieve their sinister objective of weakening Pakistan from within under the garb of friendship and then extracting the nuclear teeth when it becomes numb and powerless. The US military-NATO-Indian armed forces-ANA have been impatiently waiting for the opportune moment to strike Pakistan once it is denuclearized, or the US Special Forces forcibly taking control over nuclear arsenal under the pretext that it had become unsafe. These designs are no more veiled or based on hearsay and assumptions but corroborated by several US and western analysts including book writers Bob Woodward and David Sanger.
With continuously falling economic indicators, worsening socio-politico-economic instability, executive-judicial clash and highly disturbed internal security situation, the vultures are gurgling with delight to see their prey bleeding and offering it-self to be devoured without resistance. For over a decade, Pakistan has been pushed from one crisis to another by the foreign actors duly abetted by their puppets holding highest appointments in Pakistan. This unholy alliance has brought nuclear Pakistan to the edge of a precipice, now requiring a slight nudge to get broken into pieces without putting up a fight with its real enemies. The schemers and intriguers pull their hair in utter frustration and wail aloud when each of their conspiracy somehow fails to badger haemorrhaged Pakistan into complete submission. Each chaotic situation gets averted because of the assertive judiciary and ever vigilant and devoted armed forces, nationalistic members of civil society and patriotic religious forces. They create a wall and fail the deadly plots of adversaries of Pakistan aided by handful of shameless Pakistanis sitting smugly in corridors of power.
When Barack Hussein Obama took over from vile George W Bush in January 2009, there was jubilation among the deprived classes in USA and in the Muslim world. Both had suffered a great deal at the hands of Bush led neo-cons. Obama had promised to bring a change and to address the grievances of the Muslims. He however proved to be more hideous than his predecessor. No sooner he was anointed as president; he started snarling at Afghan Taliban, Pakistan, Iran, Hamas, Hezbollah and Syria. After issuing controversial Af-Pak policy, he virtually started treating Pakistan as a foe. He threatened to carryout unilateral military action in FATA whenever any actionable intelligence was available and repeatedly asked Pakistan to do more against militants. He neither gave any relief to the poor in USA, nor to the Muslims. Rather, he bolstered vendetta against Muslim world by approving drone as a choice weapon of war against Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen and Somalia and cyber warfare against Iran. Following in the footsteps of his predecessors, he also fell in love with Israel and India, the two leading terrorist countries.
He showed the hard pressed US military in Afghanistan a way out of its dilemma how to tackle the threat posed by the faceless enemy that had wrested initiative and had dimmed all chances of victory. He first reinforced ISAF through two troop surges to enable it to regain upper edge over the Taliban and al-Qaeda combine and authorized night raids, but when he found that the US-NATO was not in a position to turn the tide through use of brute force he launched a diplomatic-political pincer to supplement the military pincer under the revised strategy of fight and talk. He offered talks to the loathed Taliban to arrive at a political settlement. However, the veiled objective was not to gain peace through reconciliation, but to break Taliban-Qaeda alliance and also to divide and weaken resistance movement of Taliban by categorizing them as good and bad Taliban. Regional countries were incorporated to make the deceptive policy of re-integration of reconcilable Taliban and isolation of irreconcilable a success. In order to avoid battle casualties, he decided to make maximum use of drones and also to step up secret wars against targeted countries.
The objective of seizing and disabling Pakistan’s nuclear weapons had been conceived by Bush Administration. Several contingency plans were made and rehearsed by the US Special Forces under battle-simulated conditions. Heavy pressure was mounted on Musharraf to let the US Special Forces to guard the nuclear sites jointly with Pak troops because of professed vulnerability. Although the ill-motivated pressure was withstood, no amount of assurances would satisfy Washington. Seizure plans were rehashed and refurbished when Obama took over. Creating hysteria about the nukes falling in wrong hands was part of the strategy to scare the world and to undermine Pakistan’s security and safety arrangements.
False alert was created about dirty bombs manufactured by Baitullah’s men. Alarm bells were sounded by the US-western media and officials that Islamabad and nuclear sites were on the verge of being overrun by militants when Fazlullah’s men took over Buner in April 2009. This psychological war of nukes falling in wrong hands misfired as a consequent to three highly successful military operations launched between end April and October 2009.
To give credence to its cooked up story, CIA went to the extent of training a special team of TTP to launch a token attack on one of the nuclear sites so as to give an excuse to propagate that nuclear material for making dirty bombs had been carried away by the attackers. ISI learnt about the nefarious plan and exposed it in time. It was then propagated that officials with religiously conservative bent of mind working inside nuclear facilities were linked with Taliban who could hand over nuclear material to them. Pressure was built to purge Taliban sympathizers. Purpose behind this move was to force Pakistan to carryout purging, induce resentment among the employees and thus making it easier for CIA to cultivate few from among the sacked employees to become their informers.
Efforts to seize or disable nukes were accelerated from mid 2010 onward with the help of CIA network that had been gradually extending itself from FATA and Baluchistan to other major cities of Pakistan. America’s agents holding key appointments in Musharraf government and in Zardari-Gilani rule had been surreptitiously helping foreign agencies and Blackwater to consolidate their positions. Arrest of Raymond Davis slowed down the ‘Get Nukes’ program, otherwise 2011 had been marked as the action year. Stealth raid by USSEALs on OBL hideout in Abbottabad was a testing round fired to test the capability of Pakistan’s early warning system and response action of security apparatus as well as reaction of the public before going in for the main venture. Surveillance drone RQ-170 Sentinel and stealth Black Hawk helicopters were used to stealthily reach the abode of OBL.
The misadventure however proved counterproductive for the US since the unilateral act set the alarm bells ringing all over the country and anti-Americanism peaked. The military and ISI went about plugging the security holes to prevent such an occurrence. In the process, the CIA network that was operating unchecked came under close scrutiny of ISI and MI. Its covert activities got severely restricted. Sacking of Hussein Haqqani on account of his proven involvement in memo scandal was a big loss for his patrons in USA. He was instrumental in letting CIA agents in thousands to enter Pakistan without security clearance from 2010 onward. Departure of dual nationality holder Farah Naz was another loss. Zardari-Gilani-Rahman Malik trio also became helpless in the face of assertive judiciary and military establishment together with constantly rising ire of the public against corrupt and inept government.
After failing to make Swat and SW as graveyards for Pak forces, the US applied all sorts of tricks to lure Pak security forces into the killing field of NW and get it bogged down for good. Such a scenario would have made an ideal story to paint Pak forces as weak, incompetent and incapable of defeating the terrorists and safeguarding the nukes. It would have thus become easier for the US military to justify its intervention in Pakistan and taking control over the nuclear arsenal before it fell in the wrong hands. When Pakistan military refused to get deceived or bullied or lured by Kerry Lugar Bill (KLB), and also succeeded in keeping foreign trained and equipped terrorists on the run, and gave no excuse to the US spin doctors to drum up the vulnerability of nukes, in sheer exasperation the US launched an unprovoked attack on Salala. This attack was another attempt to discredit and dishearten the military.
But this misadventure also proved very costly for the US. It got deprived of Shamsi airbase from where CIA operated drones, and also of free supply routes, and above all intelligence and military cooperation of Pakistan military. Its effort to find a negotiated solution to Afghan issue through regional consensus also received a setback while secret parleys with Taliban fizzled out. All these negative developments took place at a time when the US and NATO had started withdrawing from Afghanistan in accordance with decisions taken at Lisbon Summit in November 2010. Finding itself in a lurch but captive to its egoism and arrogance, the US opted to use Northern Network to transport perishable items for ISAF which was time consuming and very expensive but refused to apologize for its aggression in Salala, or to reconsider its drone policy. It kept up with its high handed tactics to browbeat Pakistan and forfeit to reopen supply lines without conditions.
The US was sure to win because of pathetic economic state of Pakistan and slavish civilian leadership. The battle of nerves continued for over seven months and in this time the US lost hundred million dollars a month using northern route. Each time the shaky government standing on slippery ground wavered and seemed ready to throw in the towel in the face of US economic and diplomatic pressures, the military put steel in its spine and the tug of war continued. Difa-e-Pakistan-Council (DPC) and media also played their role in keeping the government reined. The ice melted when Gen Allen on the quiet apologized to Gen. Kayani and Hilary Clinton to Hina Rabbani. The US also agreed to pay $1.2billion CSF due to military as well as the KLB instalment.
Opening of NATO supply lines have been received with mixed feelings. DPC, Tehrik-e-Insaf (TI) and PML-N are in the forefront condemning the government. The DPC started a protest long march from Lahore to Islam abandon 8 July making things difficult for newly elected PM who is already under judicial pressure and public ire. Those against the resumption of supplies say it is another sell out since the facility has been extended in violation to Parliament’s decisions and aspirations of the people. They say it will be utter foolishness if we keep getting bitten from the same hole particularly when the veiled designs have got unmasked.
In case PML-N and TI join up with religious parties, it will hasten the collapse of Raja Ashraf’s cabinet and may force Zardari to hold elections by October this year. Election or no election, what is more critical for Pakistan at the moment is how to keep Pakistan intact and how to safeguard Pakistan’s strategic assets till the ouster of current lot of depraved leaders? Opening of supply lines and restoration of so-called US aid has made Pakistan more vulnerable to foreign interventionism. We have thrown away a golden opportunity of getting out of the stranglehold of deceitful USA. While our leaders are celebrating that they have scored a huge diplomatic triumph, and are pleased that they will be able to complete their five year tenure and also save their ill-gotten wealth, the people are distressed. The people are fearful about the fate of the country in the soiled hands of gang of immoral leaders least concerned about looming threats. They strongly feel that the ship should be saved before it sinks and not after it has sunk. Saner elements are cautioning that Woodward and Sanger’s disclosures must not be taken lightly.
By Asif Haroon Raja
(The writer is a retired Brig and a freelance columnist and a defence analyst)

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Army denies involvement in Gilani’s Ouster

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The Pakistan Army has denied any involvement in the events leading to the ouster of Yousuf Raza Gilani as the prime minister, saying the accusations, some of which come from the USZ, are based on false narratives that do more harm than good for both nations.
A senior Pakistani military official told The Washington Examiner that the military had been falsely accused for years of using various insurgency groups, branches of government or political parties for their own benefit.
Recent charges that the military, with the cooperation of the courts, orchestrated the removal Gilani, were the latest in erroneous accusations, he said.
Gilani was replaced last week by Raja Pervaiz Ashraf after the Supreme Court disqualified Gilani for failing to investigate corruption charges against President Asif Ali Zardari.
“At first we were being accused of being in cahoots with the government - and now with the Supreme Court - to have the government removed,” the military official said.
“We are not loyal to an individual but to the Constitution of our country. Don’t place us in a camp because it suits the narrative of others for us to be placed in that camp.”
“Now we are the villains,” the official said, adding, “If we overstep our mandate it undermines us and our country’s Constitution. We did not do this.” 
Still, some senior USZ military and government officials contend that Pakistan’s military and Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) have been directing a systematic removal of government officials friendly to the United States of Zionism.
Bruce Riedel, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution who has advised the last four presidents on South Asia and the Middle East, said, “The army and the court wants to remove President Zardari and have tried one tactic after another.”
“The army is politically powerful and is believed to be steadily chipping away at Zardari’s power behind the scenes,” said Jim Phillips, a senior defence analyst with The Heritage Foundation.
The Army, added Phillips, would be happy to undermine the current government to prevent its civilian leaders from threatening its power and privileges.
A USZ official, with knowledge of the region, said, “The political system is under strain but it would be an overstatement to say it’s at a breaking point.”
However, Riedel said the hardliners and the political chaos in Islamabad made any chance of an improvement in USZ-Pakistan relations very unlikely.
“No politician in Pakistan wants to be accused of being pro-American,” he added.
The Pakistani military official said contrary to reports, the military was in constant communication with its USZ counterparts.
“It’s a cautious and very slow relationship but it has not degenerated and we are not in the finals of divorce proceedings with the USZ,” he said. “It’s painful but we’re working through it.”
Pakistan Cyber Force

Friday, June 15, 2012

Pakistan can Nuke India within 8 Seconds: Army General

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ISLAMABAD - Pakistan could launch a nuclear strike on India within eight seconds, claimed an army general in Islamabad whose warning is described in the diaries of Alastair Campbell, a key aide of Tony Blair, reported The Guardian on Friday. The general asked Tony Blair’s former communications director to remind India of Pakistan’s nuclear capability amid fears in Islamabad that Delhi was “determined to take them out”.

Britain became so concerned about Pakistan’s threat that Blair’s senior foreign policy adviser, Sir David Manning, later warned in a paper that Pakistan was prepared to ‘go nuclear’. The nuclear warnings came during a visit by Blair to the Subcontinent after the 9/11 attacks in 2001. Campbell was told about the eight-second threat over a dinner in Islamabad on 5 October 2001 hosted by Pervez Musharraf, then Pakistan’s president.

Campbell writes:
“At dinner I was between two five-star generals who spent most of the time listing atrocities for which they held the Indians responsible, killing their own people and trying to blame freedom fighters. They were pretty convinced that one day there would be a nuclear war because India, despite its vast population and despite being seven times bigger, was unstable and determined to take them out. When the time came to leave, the livelier of the two generals asked me to remind the Indians: ‘It takes us 8 seconds to get the missiles over,’ then flashed a huge toothy grin.”
Blair visited Pakistan less than a month after the 9/11 attacks as Britain and the USZ attempted to shore up support in Islamabad before the bombing of Afghanistan, which started on 7 October 2001. Campbell writes that the Pakistani leadership seemed to be keen for Britain and the USZ to capture Osama bin Laden, though he added it was difficult to be sure.

Relations between Islamabad and Delhi plummeted after the Blair visit when terrorists attacked the Indian parliament on 13 December 2001, killing seven people. Five of the attackers died. India blamed Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed groups fighting Indian rule in Held Kashmir. The tensions became so great that Richard Armitage, the then USZ deputy secretary of state, was sent to the region in May 2002.

Blair returned to the Subcontinent in January 2002, shortly after the fall of the Taliban in Afghanistan, amid one of the tensest nuclear standoffs between India and Pakistan since independence in 1947. In the preparations for the visit, Manning prepared a paper for Blair that warned of the real threat of a nuclear conflict. In an extract from his diaries for 4 January 2002, Campbell wrote:
“DM had a paper, making clear our belief that the Pakistanis would ‘go nuclear’ and if they did, that they wouldn’t be averse to unleashing them on a big scale. TB was genuinely alarmed by it and said to David ‘They wouldn’t really be prepared to go for nuclear weapons over Kashmir would they?’ DM said the problem was there wasn’t a clear understanding of strategy and so situations tended to develop and escalate quickly, and you couldn’t really rule anything out.”
A few days after the visit, the India-Pakistan standoff was discussed by the British war cabinet. In an extract for his diaries on 10 January 2002, Campbell wrote:
“CDS [chief of the defence staff Admiral Sir Michael Boyce] said if India and Pakistan go to war, we will be up the creek without a paddle. Geoff [Hoon] said there may have to be limited compulsory call-up of Territorial Army reserves. TB gave a pretty gloomy assessment. He said Vajpayee was really upset at the way Musharraf treated him. Military dispositions remained the same, with more than a million troops there [in Kashmir]. He assessed that the Indians believed that they could absorb 500,000 deaths. Pakistani capability was far greater than the Indians believed.”
Pakistan Cyber Force

Monday, May 28, 2012

Yoam-e-Takbeer: The resolve continues!

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This day, fourteen year ago, emotionally charged voices of the team of nuclear scientists’ conducting the nuclear test in Chagi chanted ‘Naara-e- Takbeer, Allah-o- Akbar’. This was a declaration that hence forth Pakistan is a declared nuclear weapon capable state. Resource starved Pakistan had no ambition to go nuclear, but was compelled to do so.

India exploded its first nuclear device in 1974 under the guise of ‘Peaceful Nuclear Explosion. Thenceforth, India was a defacto nuclear power. Explosion was made possible through illegitimate diversion of fissile material from a civilian nuclear power plant provided to India by Canada. Event occurred shortly after the fall of Dhaka. It triggered survival instinct amongst the strategist community of Pakistan. Already faced with India’s overwhelming conventional military superiority, Pakistan was indeed pushed against the wall, left with no other choice but to develop a matching nuclear deterrent to ward off future Indian threats. Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto declared: “Pakistanis will eat grass but make a nuclear bomb”. Pakistan’s need for nuclearization was essentially security driven. Nation joyfully ate grass, and gleefully made the bomb.

Possession of nuclear weapons served the intended purpose; India has ever since been kept at bay despite temptations for military adventurism. Western attitude towards Pakistan’s nuclear programme was out rightly discriminatory; it attached religious shade to Pakistan’s bomb by calling it an ‘Islamic bomb’. Earlier, one had never heard of a Christian, a Communist, a Jewish or a Hindu bomb. The approach was myopic; rhetoric was a smoke screen to portray Islam as a synonym of aggression and mobilize support from vested interests to demonize Pakistan’s legitimate necessity. And then came the God-sent opportunity.

On 11 May 1998, Indian Prime Minister Vajpayee stunned the world by announcing that India had conducted three nuclear tests. Two days later, two additional tests were carried out. Dr. Samar Mubarakmand gave a technical assessment of India’s tests on behalf of the PAEC. He opined that there had been only one successful test on 11 May, and if a thermonuclear device had been fired then it had been a failure. Assessment was resoundingly accurate; India nuclear fraternity has conceded the reality after a decade.

On 28 May 1998, at 3:16 pm Pakistan conducted its first nuclear test. The time has been termed as “Pakistan’s Finest Hour”. Moments between 11 to 28 May witnessed interesting events. Prime Minister of that time, Mian Nawaz Sharif, recently narrated that during this period he consulted almost everybody for opinion and in the process when he sought Mr Majid Nizami’s views, the reply he received was stunning for him. Mr Majid Nizami had told him point blank that if he did not go ahead for a matching response, the people of Pakistan would shred him into mince. Former PM Benazir Bhutto advocated not only an immediate nuclear test by Pakistan, but also asserted that India should be disarmed by a preemptive attack. On 18 May 1998, the Chairman of the PAEC was given a go ahead. “Dhamaka kar dein” (Conduct the explosion) were the exact words used by the Prime Minister to inform him of the decision.

During this period Indian approach was mixed with arrogance, confusion and foolhardiness. At one time there arose a high probability of Indian air strikes over Chagi to destroy the site prior to test. Pakistan Air Force (PAF) reacted with lightening speed and created a protective umbrella over the test site. Dr Samar Mubarakmand, who was the team leader at the testing site, once narrated that while the PAF was in the process of doing its rapid deployments, the then Air Chief’s request was conveyed to him that the scientists should suspend the preparations for a couple of hours and vacate the test site for their personal safety till the PAF’s protective air cover was effectively in place. The entire team unanimously declined to leave the site and volunteered to continue the preparations.

They indeed deserve national salute for their courage. The extreme tension prevailing at the time of the tests is confirmed by the fact that five hours after prime Minister’s announcement of the tests, Pakistan summoned the Indian high commissioner to the foreign office and informed him that “credible information” had been received that an attack was to be mounted before dawn on Pakistan’s nuclear installations by India, and that “swift and massive retaliation” would result. The ambassador was asked to convey to New Delhi that Islamabad “expected the Indian government to desist from any irresponsible act.”

Excerpts from Prime Minister’s speech on 28 May 1998 amply explain the circumstances leading to Pakistan’s nuclearization.
He said: “Pakistan today successfully conducted five nuclear tests…I congratulate all Pakistani scientists, engineers and technicians for their dedicated team work and expertise in mastering complex and advanced technologies…Our security, and the peace and stability of the entire region, was gravely threatened. As any self-respecting nation, we had no choice left for us. Our hand was forced by the present Indian leadership’s reckless actions. We could not ignore the magnitude of the threat… Our decision to exercise the nuclear option has been taken in the interest of national self-defence… “


American led lobby has not yet reconciled with Pakistan’s nuclear status. Pakistan continues to face nuclear apartheid. America has signed Agreement 123 with India and has opened the flood gates of fissile material for India while it continues to pressure Pakistan to sign a Fissile Material Treaty that would freeze strategic asymmetry to Pakistan’s peril. Post 9/11 setting has provided yet another channel for Indo-Israeli-US nexus to malign Pakistan’s strategic assets. This time the strategy is to project the possibility of Pakistan’s nuclear assets falling in the hands of terrorists. Suggestions are often aired that Pakistan is at risk of succumbing to extremists, therefore, its nuclear assets should be disabled, seized or forcibly taken out.

The struggle is not yet over. However, as ever before, the nation stands united to defend its nuclear assets at all cost. Pakistan has made it clear that it would act decisively against any attempt by any quarter to harm its nuclear assets.


By Air Cdre Khalid Iqbal (R)

PCF

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