Pakistan should have complained when India tested missiles with a capability of regional range. Pakistan is complaining when India tests long range missile. How is it a regional threat? IS A 5 going to target sub continent nations?
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This is what Zamir Akram has to say
http://www.dnaindia.com/india/repor...to-india-s-nsg-membership-zamir-akram-2226592
Seems to me Pakistan has already pre-determined that the only criteria that is 'fair' is one by which both countries can qualify. In other words it will oppose any criteria under which is will not qualify but India will.
What to call that - but to say it opposes India's application
lol , India never Cry like baby and do Rona dhona ....
Even a nursery fail UK /US kid understand Agni is all about China.... But it take more then PHD education level to understand the same in PAK.
PAK become laughing stock in World forum , when World diplomat get bored then do meeting with PAK.
Yes very True ... that why Lathe Machine, Steel for missile come from NK etc.......
out of 80+ tech which is used in missile , PAK only made less then 50% of it. rest everyone knows how hard work you do for remaining lefts ones.
Calm down and analyse this claim dispassionately.
What has worked 'perfectly'? The same people to whom these complaints are made - i.e. the western countries continue to name Pakistan adversely with regularity. Have they made any adverse statement about the Indian missile programme? If they have not on what basis can you say this silly approach works?
Till the perception of Pakistan changes complaints of this nature will simply not be taken seriously.
We will also oppose you on any international forum simply because we hate you
Ha! I knew you'd stress on 'India article'.
Guess what - It's not an India article - it's originally Dawn story - published by arrangement also by DNA.
http://www.dawn.com/news/1266477
Jokes aside, Pakistan is insisting on 'fair / reasonable / etc. criteria but opposes exclusive membership for India. Short story: either both get or nobody gets.
So the corollary is that the 'fair criteria' must be tailored to be such that either both qualify or both do not qualify.
That's why Pakistan opposed the Grossi formula.
http://www.dawn.com/news/1305297
So Pakistan foreign policy on one hand is a cry for a 'fair criteria' Yet when draft criteria is prepared it objects unless it also qualifies. With such a poor (and contradictory) approach no wonder it finds no takers to champion its cause.
Delusions intensify.
Pakistani Headline:
Dawn: ‘Pakistan only opposed to exclusive membership of NSG for India’ (True statement)
Indian Headline:
DNA India: Pakistan only nation opposed to India's NSG membership: Zamir Akram (Untrue statement)
In reality,
Tribune: Six nations oppose India’s NSG membership
The facts speak for themselves, i.e., Pakistan is not opposed to India's NSG bid. Pakistan seeks a fair criteria-based approach for *all* non-NPT states to join the NSG.
If you're trying to find contradictions, the biggest is India's entry into the NSG. India's misuse of nuclear technology triggered the creation of the NSG and now India seeks to join the NSG.
So Mr Delusion (I love the way you keep parroting that word - does it make you feel powerful?), why then did Pakistan object so intensely to the Grossi draft? Was it not 'fair'? Or must 'fair' be what 'Pakistan' thinks is fair?
My guess is that if a 'fair' formula proposed by Pakistan was adopted even North Korea would get NSG membership tomorrow.
I'm starting to find your ramblings amusing.
On one hand, you claim Pakistan's diplomatic outreach bears no fruit. If that was true, you wouldn't be crying here.
As for Grossi's suggestions, they have criticised by many responsible NSG states:
The formula outlined in Grossi’s draft note sets an extremely low bar on NSG membership and its wording is vague and open to wide interpretation.
Furthermore, this formula would not require India to take any additional nonproliferation commitments beyond the steps to which it committed in September 2008 ahead of the NSG’s country-specific exemption for India for civil nuclear trade.
For example, the proposed criteria for membership would simply require that India or Pakistan describe their plan for separating civilian and military nuclear facilities, which is a step that does not necessarily guarantee civil nuclear technology transfers will not benefit the military sector, and it is a step India has already taken.
It is no wonder that responsible NSG states have lodged comments and objections to both the substance of the proposed membership criteria and the process for trying to forge a meaningful consensus on the criteria for membership for non-NPT states.
Source: Arms Control
Ah yes, the - the fallback on 'responsible NSG states'. No doubt such words send many a cheer in Islamabad where the NSG crusade continues. [Off topic, is it even ok for an Islamic Republic to 'crusade'].
1. No conflict - my point re the Pakistani approach to the NSG question in fact demonstrates the poor strategy employed. India's is poor as well but a notch above Pakistan - insofar as no rants have been issued making it a all-or-none application.
2. Pakistan's problem, I conjecture, is that at this stage (meaning today - 2016/17) it will likely not qualify on any truly fair criteria. I say this not only because of some of Pakistan's problems - historical military rule, proliferation issues, no nuclear doctrine, explicit statements to use n-weapons - but also because a heavier price was extracted from India in 2008 for the waiver (more important than the membership) and the NSG states are unlikely to relax that for Pakistan.
India's membership is not really much of a issue for the same reasons - it has already legally agreed to several obligations at the time of the 2008 waiver, plus, of course, it has taken care not to up any nuclear ante explicitly.
So even if you ignore all the issues I mentioned - and let's say I agree that Pakistan is the posterchild of n-energy use, it cannot aspire to get any benefit from NSG membership till a similar (for non-NPT countries) waiver is made - which is unlikely to happen as that cannot happen by veto
3. Pakistan's foreign office has simply not applied their mind on the points I wrote at para (3). They are so obsessed with the membership that they object to any criteria that Pakistan cannot also meet.
This is like a candidate for admission to a college who says he wants a 'fair' Question Paper - but each time a Question paper is prepared it is objected on grounds that he will not pass. Only a Q paper that permits the candidate to pass is regarded as 'fair'
No wonder Pakistan objects to the Grossi formula.
4. Anyway, the 'responsible' NSG states are not interested in favouring a particular country. They will either come around to the Grossi draft (it's actually an excellent piece of legal analysis - go read it) or some other criteria which will not be too dissimilar. When that happens it will be interesting to see how 'unfair' Pakistan terms it.
Sigh. Your analysis skills are obviously no match for your gif-hunting skills. My fault for not recognising this sooner.
My wait for a Pakistani on PDF - my chief reason for joining actually - continues.