lionheart1
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i am from Karnataka, atleast 2 day a week i will be hosur in Tamil-Nadu
i never seen separatist movement there
i never seen separatist movement there
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oH yeah india is a ***** in the middle of roaring tigers rite??water comes from china they donot favor us have no treaty on it for sharing but when the same water flows from india we will have to have treaties with hostile nations or else the tigers will kill this little ***** cat..
Do you have the official policy issued by the NCA of Pakistan which states first use policy ?? And just like why India got WMDs to counter someone else with WMDs, Pakistan had to have them after its arch rival got the tech. So, we both have the same reason, India got it due to China as they say, we got them due to India, had India not gone for WMDs, we wouldn't have, so its pretty obvious why we had them.
And as said, plzzz do provide the link to Pakistan officially stating that it has the first strike policy.
And also answer me, lets suppose, saying it again, just assume, India has no first strike policy, and God forbid somehow during war, its defences are broken and the enemy is on the move inside Indian territory and about to capture a large chunk of it, or wishes to dismember India by capturing some specific area, what are Indians gonna do, sing the no first strike policy or say to hell with it, India is at stake so lets use it on the incoming forces to halt their advance and regain what we have lost. Don't say it will never gonna happen or we India are very superior to have something like that happen to us, i just said, just assume the situation, would you keep the nukes stored at their silos or use them against the enemy who is about to capture good part of India.
So as per above scenario, implement it on this Indo-Pak region, we all know Pakistan can never overrun Indian defences or capture a big part of India, while on the contrary, India has the capability, the will, the ambition and the resources to overrun large part of Pakistan and capture large part of Pakistan and do whatever it wants to do with it, that being the reason India as no-first strike policy with respect to Pakistan as it knows Pakistan poses no threat, while Pakistan can not gamble with no first strike policy as it knows India has the wish and resources to overrun large part of it, thus it will have to use the nukes God forbid something like that happens and this is very logical, which i am regretted to state the Indian members don't understand. The superior one can say the no-first strike policy, while the inferior one can't as it knows it has the nukes for a specific reason.
USA, UK, NATO all have first strike policy, but as defensive measure, Pakistan's is no different then theirs. Simple reason as they know if someone superior invaded, they can't hold them off for long, one of the reasons why USSR used to think twice before thinking about any invasion of the Europe knowing they have overwhelming superiority over NATO.
Yes, Taimi my point was not about WHY nuclear weapons were needed, but that Pakistan is more desperate for it. As you said yourself, Pakistan needs them more. Let me ask you this: do you think Pakistan will think of giving up its nuclear program if India does? I dont think so. But India, with her no first use policy, can give it up if other nations do.
Ok, here are a few links that establish Pakistan nuclear policy revolves around first strike.
Pakistan does not abide by a no-first-use doctrine, as evidenced by President Pervez Musharraf's statements in May, 2002. Musharraf said that Pakistan did not want a conflict with India but that if it came to war between the nuclear-armed rivals, he would "respond with full might." These statements were interpreted to mean that if pressed by an overwhelming conventional attack from India, which has superior conventional forces, Pakistan might use its nuclear weapons.
Pakistan Nuclear Weapons
This one is by a defence.pk Think tank. Worth a read.
http://www.defence.pk/forums/wmd-missiles/27733-pakistans-nuclear-doctrine.html
I honestly don't know. I am serious here. Because nuclear attack on forces in Indian soil will definitely kill millions of Indians and leave those areas unihabitable. Plus, if the enemy has nukes, we will be finished for good. So i really don't know, but i do feel that India will react by nuclear arms rattling, and possibly a banning of the first use policy, as a 'warning shot'.
Again, I have to disagree. India has neither the will nor the ambition to overrun Pakistan. The main concern for India is terrorism emanating from Pakistan. So any Indian attack will always focus on taking out terrorist centers, not Pakistani cities. Even a very ambitious Indian General might only go so far as to try capture Azad Kashmir (even then, unlikely) not overrun Pakistan. Even in 1971, Indian army did not try pushing into West Pakistan, despite the capability and lack of a nuclear threat.
Taimi, Inida (and increasingly, the rest of the world) are concerned about Pakistan's (and North Korea's) nuclear weapons for one main reason: likelihood of usage. Its simply higher than that of other nations. And you have to admit, the pakistani public does have a much more trigger happy attitude towards nukes than the other nations. Its frankly quite alarming to see some idiots rant off about, "They have more to lose, so nuclear war is an option to us." Its this almost suicidal hatred that causes the world to be concerned. You will be hard pressed to find Indians talking like that. Even when we discuss a possible Sino-Indian war, we dont usually bring up the topic of nukes, though they have conventional superiority over us. I hope you get my point.
well u see its this happy trigger attitude what kept us safe in mumbai scene the parliament scenario
Treaty banning only future production of fissile material 'unacceptable': Pakistan
UNITED NATIONS, Oct. 13, 2010
Pakistan told the world community Tuesday that its opposition to the start of talks on a treaty to ban production of fissile material used as fuel for nuclear weapons stemmed from the actions of "some powerful states" that have changed the strategic environment of South Asian region.
"Over the past few years, some powerful countries, in pursuit of their commercial interests as well as dubious notions of balance of power, have embarked upon an unfettered and discriminatory nuclear cooperation arrangement in gross violation of their international commitments," Ambassador Zamir Akram told the General Assembly's Disarmament and International Security Committee.
"This has accentuated our security concerns as such nuclear cooperation shall further widen the asymmetry in stockpiles in our region," he added.
Ambassador Akram, who is Pakistan's permanent representative to the UN's European offices in Geneva, did not name any country in his speech, but he obviously had in mind mainly the U.S.-India nuclear deals.
Also, it is well known that India has a larger stock of fissile material than Pakistan does, and a greater capacity to build warheads.
"Thus, an FMCT (Fissile Material Cut-off Treaty) that purports only to ban future production of fissile material, will permanently freeze a strategic disadvantage for Pakistan, and is therefore unacceptable to us," the senior Pakistani diplomat said.
"Clearly it is not through choice but necessity that Pakistan is opposed to negotiations on an FMCT," he added.
Since January, Pakistan's has been blocking the launching of negotiations on the proposed treaty at the Conference on Disarmament in Geneva on the ground that it prejudicial to its national security interests.
With the introduction of the treaty into the agenda of the Conference in 1994, Ambassador Akram said Pakistan had called attention to the fact that a treaty to cut off future production of fissile material would freeze the existing asymmetries in fissile material stockpiles, which would be detrimental for its national security.
Accordingly, Pakistan had been advocating a treaty that not only banned future production, but also aimed at reducing existing stockpiles of fissile material.
A growing asymmetry in military capabilities between major Powers and medium and small States had further increased insecurity among States, and in crucial regions, the pursuit of great power politics had destabilized tenuous regional balance, Zamir Akram told delegates from around the world.
The Pakistani delegate asserted, as the committees general debate came to a close, that some States had been denied the right to peaceful nuclear cooperation, while others were helped in promoting unsafeguarded nuclear programmes and building and upgrading strategic weapon systems, including anti-ballistic ones, thereby accelerating vertical nuclear proliferation.
He pointed out that the current hiatus in the Conference on Disarmament was not unprecedented. That body had not undertaken negotiations for any multilateral instrument since it last concluded the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty (CTBT) in 1995.
Yet, Akram pointed out it was only now, after more than a decade, that certain countries had questioned its relevance, seeking ways to revitalize its functioning and even proposing to seek alternative venues. By undermining it in that way, those countries would open the Conference up to the possibilities of negotiating other of its agenda items in alternative venues as well.
That grim situation undermined the efforts to achieve nuclear disarmament, arms control and non-proliferation, he said. Instead of nuclear disarmament, the non-proliferation of nuclear weapons had become the only goal, and even that goal was pursued selectively.
Attempts to forge a new consensus on arms control and disarmament required the convening of a fourth special session of the General Assembly devoted to disarmament. That alone could ensure genuine and complete ownership of the outcome by all States.
In discussing that issue, Pakistan had been puzzled when some powerful nations argued that such a session had been overtaken by events, yet they opposed its convening.
Pakistan, he added, was also dismayed by arguments from some States that the United Nations disarmament machinery, in particular the Conference on Disarmament, had become dysfunctional, owing to its rule of procedure, he said.
In reality, the decade-old stalemate in that Conference and the overall international disarmament machinery had nothing to do with rules of procedure; it was the lack of political will on the part of some major Powers to pursue disarmament negotiations on the basis of equal security of all States, as accepted in the first special session devoted to disarmament.
The United Nations disarmament machinery and the Conference on Disarmament, in particular were not handmaiden to the whims of the major Powers or a device to confer legitimacy on their pursuit of discriminatory policies, the Pakistan delegate said.
Why should Pakistan stop producing nukes, while other countries will not start reducing their own stockpiles.