Windjammer
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Pak hand emerges in North Korea's nuclear threat to US. Should India be worried?
North Korea on Friday shocked the world by announcing that the country's rocket forces are ready "to settle accounts with the U.S.," an escalation of the country's bellicose rhetoric and a direct response to U.S. nuclear-capable B-2 bombers joining military drills with South Korea a day earlier.
North Korea has been given the power of nuclear blackmail by systematic nuclear proliferation from Pakistan.
On Sunday at a busy press conference marking his return, former president Pervez Musharraf accepted Pakistan's role in encouraging nuclear rogue countries.
U.S. analysts are now concerned that the exit of A Q Khan has not ended Pakistan's proliferation.
US intelligence analysis reported in the U.S. media reveal that North Korea was and is still being given active assistance in its nuclear programme by Pakistan.
It is Pakistan sourced plans for uranium enrichment centrifuges that have allowed North Korea to shift from a plutonium-based nuclear programme to a uranium-based one. Pakistan is suspected to have provided not only the designs, but also the aluminium to build the centrifuges and pre-fabricated parts.
The Pakistan link to the North Korean nuclear weapons programme is not unheard of. In July 2011, the father of Pakistan's Nuclear Programme A Q Khan released a secret letter claiming that the North Koreans had offered 3 million dollars in bribes to military officials to secure nuclear plans and material.
Pakistan's links to North Korea Nuclear weapons programme go back to 1994 when Benazir Bhutto was accused of personally delivering nuclear plans - a claim which she denied.
It is now suspected that North Korea banked heavily on Pakistan to continue its nuclear programme.
Read more at: Pak hand emerges in North Korea's nuclear threat to US. Should India be worried? : Asia, News - India Today
Once an Indian villager lost his Donkey, while out searching in desperation, he stumbles upon an Indian film set.....a romantic scene is being filmed, the hero is delivering dialogue while holding his leading lady in his arms...."Janam, mujey teri inn dou ankhoun mein sari dunya nazar atti hey".....the villager listening in shouts....."Yaar Dekhna meri Gadhi {Donkey) bi kahi'n nazar atti hey".
Moral of the story.....no matter what happens around the globe, the Indians have to stick their nose in it.
North Korea on Friday shocked the world by announcing that the country's rocket forces are ready "to settle accounts with the U.S.," an escalation of the country's bellicose rhetoric and a direct response to U.S. nuclear-capable B-2 bombers joining military drills with South Korea a day earlier.
North Korea has been given the power of nuclear blackmail by systematic nuclear proliferation from Pakistan.
On Sunday at a busy press conference marking his return, former president Pervez Musharraf accepted Pakistan's role in encouraging nuclear rogue countries.
U.S. analysts are now concerned that the exit of A Q Khan has not ended Pakistan's proliferation.
US intelligence analysis reported in the U.S. media reveal that North Korea was and is still being given active assistance in its nuclear programme by Pakistan.
It is Pakistan sourced plans for uranium enrichment centrifuges that have allowed North Korea to shift from a plutonium-based nuclear programme to a uranium-based one. Pakistan is suspected to have provided not only the designs, but also the aluminium to build the centrifuges and pre-fabricated parts.
The Pakistan link to the North Korean nuclear weapons programme is not unheard of. In July 2011, the father of Pakistan's Nuclear Programme A Q Khan released a secret letter claiming that the North Koreans had offered 3 million dollars in bribes to military officials to secure nuclear plans and material.
Pakistan's links to North Korea Nuclear weapons programme go back to 1994 when Benazir Bhutto was accused of personally delivering nuclear plans - a claim which she denied.
It is now suspected that North Korea banked heavily on Pakistan to continue its nuclear programme.
Read more at: Pak hand emerges in North Korea's nuclear threat to US. Should India be worried? : Asia, News - India Today
Once an Indian villager lost his Donkey, while out searching in desperation, he stumbles upon an Indian film set.....a romantic scene is being filmed, the hero is delivering dialogue while holding his leading lady in his arms...."Janam, mujey teri inn dou ankhoun mein sari dunya nazar atti hey".....the villager listening in shouts....."Yaar Dekhna meri Gadhi {Donkey) bi kahi'n nazar atti hey".
Moral of the story.....no matter what happens around the globe, the Indians have to stick their nose in it.