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Pakistan, India exchange nuclear installations list in annual practice

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Pakistan, India exchange nuclear installations list in annual practice


Naveed Siddiqui
01 Jan 2021



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The Shaheen-III missile is displayed during the Pakistan Day parade in Islamabad, Pakistan, Mar 23, 2016. — Reuters/File



The Shaheen-III missile is displayed during the Pakistan Day parade in Islamabad, Pakistan, Mar 23, 2016. — Reuters/File


Pakistan and India on Friday exchanged lists of their nuclear installations and strategic facilities under the terms of an agreement which restricts the two countries from attacking each other's atomic facilities in case of war, a statement from the Foreign Office said.

The annual exchange, which has been conducted on the first day of every new year since 1992, began after a December 1988 pact between the two rival states termed the 'Agreement on Prohibition of Attacks against Nuclear Installations and Facilities between Pakistan and India'.

As part of the exchange, the Foreign Office handed over its list to the Indian High Commission while the Indian Ministry of External Affairs handed over a similar list to an officer of the Pakistan High Commission in New Delhi.

Pakistan and India first exchanged the lists on January 1, 1992. Under the agreement, both the parties are to “refrain from undertaking, encouraging or participating in, directly or indirectly, any action aimed at causing the destruction of, or damage to, any nuclear installation or facility in the other country”.

The two countries have been rivals for 70 years and have fought three wars in that period.

Present ties between the two remain particularly strained due to a string of recent developments beginning from the Feb 2019 Pulwama suicide attack, which India blamed on Pakistan, in which 44 of its soldiers were killed in occupied Kashmir.

Days after the Pulwama incident, the two nuclear states came on the brink of war after an aerial dogfight between the two air forces, resulting in the downing of two Indian fighter planes and Pakistan capturing one of the pilots.

In August 2019, India's revocation of occupied Kashmir's special status in violation of UNSC resolutions led to further deterioration of ties between the two.

Recently, Pakistan has warned that India is planning another "false-flag operation" similar to the one it conducted in the aftermath of the Pulwama incident, warning that any such act will be met with a strong response from Pakistan – as had happened in Feb 2019.



 
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Pakistan, India exchange nuclear installations list in annual practice


Naveed Siddiqui
01 Jan 2021



0
The Shaheen-III missile is displayed during the Pakistan Day parade in Islamabad, Pakistan, Mar 23, 2016. — Reuters/File



The Shaheen-III missile is displayed during the Pakistan Day parade in Islamabad, Pakistan, Mar 23, 2016. — Reuters/File


Pakistan and India on Friday exchanged lists of their nuclear installations and strategic facilities under the terms of an agreement which restricts the two countries from attacking each other's atomic facilities in case of war, a statement from the Foreign Office said.

The annual exchange, which has been conducted on the first day of every new year since 1992, began after a December 1988 pact between the two rival states termed the 'Agreement on Prohibition of Attacks against Nuclear Installations and Facilities between Pakistan and India'.

As part of the exchange, the Foreign Office handed over its list to the Indian High Commission while the Indian Ministry of External Affairs handed over a similar list to an officer of the Pakistan High Commission in New Delhi.

Pakistan and India first exchanged the lists on January 1, 1992. Under the agreement, both the parties are to “refrain from undertaking, encouraging or participating in, directly or indirectly, any action aimed at causing the destruction of, or damage to, any nuclear installation or facility in the other country”.

The two countries have been rivals for 70 years and have fought three wars in that period.

Present ties between the two remain particularly strained due to a string of recent developments beginning from the Feb 2019 Pulwama suicide attack, which India blamed on Pakistan, in which 44 of its soldiers were killed in occupied Kashmir.

Days after the Pulwama incident, the two nuclear states came on the brink of war after an aerial dogfight between the two air forces, resulting in the downing of two Indian fighter planes and Pakistan capturing one of the pilots.

In August 2019, India's revocation of occupied Kashmir's special status in violation of UNSC resolutions led to further deterioration of ties between the two.

Recently, Pakistan has warned that India is planning another "false-flag operation" similar to the one it conducted in the aftermath of the Pulwama incident, warning that any such act will be met with a strong response from Pakistan – as had happened in Feb 2019.



Do you think both countries gave away all locations ?
 
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Dear India, there's one more ultra secret nuke site for the list....just in case you need to accidentally aim a couple of missiles at it.

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Pakistan and India on Friday exchanged lists of their nuclear installations and strategic facilities under the terms of an agreement which restricts the two countries from attacking each other's atomic facilities in case of war, a statement from the Foreign Office said.

What's the reasoning behind this? Will an attack on an atomic facility be more catastrophic?
And doesn't this sort of risk the possibility of your opponent hitting your nuclear facilities to prevent your nuclear launches? Or are these facilities exclusive of launch sites? But then again, can't the other just track movement between facilities and launch sites?
 
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Only fools will not share full list...
India has over 5000 Brahmose enough to destroy even the dead in pakistan ...
 
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Criminals and traitors galore!!

All treaties and bilateral agreements with India have been nullified on Aug 05, 2019.

This government is looking at Article 6 once it goes.
 
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