Pakistan has enough uranium to build 15 nuclear bombs
Pakistan possesses enough highly- enriched
uranium to manufacture ten to 15 nuclear bombs, according to a
report, New US policy towards India and Pakistan.
Pakistan, the report says, claims to have frozen its production of
weapons-grade uranium since 1991 and the US government does not
claim to have evidence to the contrary.
The report has been drafted by a special task force sponsored by the
New York-based Council on Foreign Relations.
Islamabad, the reports says, has worked with foreign assistance on its
missile technology programme. It has already tested two surface to
surface missiles -- the HATF-1 with a range of 80 km and the HAFT-2
with a range of 300 km. It has only deployed the HAFT-1.
Though the entire M-11 missile system, comparable to India's
Prithvi missile, was shipped to Pakistan from China by 1992, it has
not been deployed or assembled so far. These missiles, the report
notes, can become operational with little delay.
In addition, Pakistan appears to be building a capacity to
manufacture missiles indigenously with Chinese assistance.
The report says India and Pakistan have either built or acquired
ballistic missiles to augment their ability to deliver nuclear
weapons using advanced aircraft.
The nuclearisation of the subcontinent is unlikely to be
reversed in the near future, observes the report.
India and Pakistan, who have not signed the Non Proliferation Treaty,
the report notes, will not roll
back their nuclear capabilities. For the present, it says non proliferation
efforts concerning the two countries should concentrate on
preventing further destabilising developments.
Referring to Washington's ties with India and Pakistan, the
report observes that the United States with other interested
governments and organisations should encourage regular, sustained
and multi-faceted contact between the two nations in a wide variety
of areas such as trade, energy resource development, environment
and commercial projects, and telecomunications.
The US, it says, should also offer both countries new
verification technologies that could help them avoid 'false
alarms and give confidence to reduce or redeploy their forces.'
It also believes the US could provide intelligence support
to these two countries in dispelling exaggerated fears that lead
to unneccessarily destabilising developments.
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