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Will Pakistan Soon Have the World’s Third-Largest Nuclear Arsenal?

Should We Pakistani Support This ?

  • Yes

    Votes: 54 83.1%
  • No

    Votes: 11 16.9%

  • Total voters
    65
Comparing Soviet Union to Pakistan is like comparing apples to oranges
Wheras USSR never had the fear of a US invasion looming over it, a nuclear Pakistan ensures no major invasion by India thereby justifying its cost and superseding any internal weaknesses Pakistan possesses. Any internal problems are solvable providing a Pakistan exists
 
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A new paper by two American think tanks titled “A Normal Nuclear Pakistan” argues that Pakistan could have the third-biggest nuclear stockpile within a decade and could end up producing 20 nuclear warheads annually.

Furthermore, the report, co-written by two scholars of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and the Stimson Center, notes that Islamabad is successfully competing with – and likely outperforming – New Delhi in the build-up of its nuclear arsenal.

“Pakistan operates four plutonium production reactors; India operates one. Pakistan has the capability to produce perhaps 20 nuclear warheads annually; India appears to be producing about five warheads annually,” the report states.

Pakistan is estimated to possess around 120 nuclear weapons against India’s 100. However, “Whether New Delhi chooses to compete more intensely or not, it is a losing proposition for Pakistan to sustain, let alone expand, its current infrastructure to produce greater numbers of nuclear weapons and their means of delivery,” the study finds.

The authors use the U.S.-Soviet nuclear arms race, which was partially responsible for bankrupting the Soviet Union, as a historical analogy. “Just as the Soviet Union’s large nuclear arsenal was of no help whatsoever for its manifold economic and societal weaknesses, Pakistan’s nuclear weapons do not address its internal challenges,” the study emphasizes.

The study also finds that while India enjoys an advantage in the production of fissile material due to its large power and prototype fast-breeder reactors, Pakistan dedicates more fissile material to the production of nuclear weapons:

In terms of total stockpiles of plutonium and HEU [highly enriched uranium] for nuclear weapons, India has about 600 kilograms of plutonium, while Pakistan has about 170 kilograms of plutonium and 3.1 metric tons of HEU. Assuming that each nuclear weapon would require five kilograms of plutonium or 15 kilograms of HEU, with existing stockpiles of fissile material India could theoretically construct up to 120 weapons, while Pakistan could construct up to 240.

Overall, however, India has a larger stockpile of plutonium than Pakistan, which will be an advantage for New Delhi in the long-run:

Plutonium is in most respects more desirable than HEU as a material for nuclear weapons, given that less of it is required for an equivalently powerful fission bomb, which makes plutonium warheads lighter and more suitable for delivery by ballistic missile.

Due to the larger amount of fissile material dedicated to the production of nuclear weapons, Islamabad could “have a nuclear arsenal not only twice the size of India’s but also larger than those of the United Kingdom, China, and France, giving it the third-largest arsenal behind the United States and Russia,” the authors argue. “Many observers have concluded that Pakistan’s rate of fissile material production (and assumed construction of nuclear weapons) gives it the fastest-growing nuclear weapons stockpile.”

Within ten years Pakistan could field 350 nuclear weapons, the report notes. According to Mansoor Ahmed, a nuclear expert at Quaid-i-Azam University in Islamabad, quoted in the Washington Post, that figure is inflated. He argues that the more likely number is between 40 to 50.

“This report is overblown. However… what the world must understand is that nuclear weapons are part of Pakistan’s belief system. It’s a culture that has been built up over the years because [nuclear weapons] have provided a credible deterrence against external aggression,” he says.

A Figure......
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Will Pakistan Soon Have the World’s Third-Largest Nuclear Arsenal? | The Diplomat
This means Biger than China, France and UK. Awesome. congratulation to Pakistan.
 
We don't need to worry about this development, as their nuclear warhead yield and ballistic missiles accuracy is questionable (Especially the longer ranged ones).
Their cruise missiles Babur and Ra'ad can be dangerous, but it is highly doubtful whether India and Pakistan were able to miniaturize the warhead to that extent. And even if successful, the yields would be low.

If you didn't know, that's a German World war 2 era V2 rocket.
 
hahahaha... mujhay to lagta hai... Pakistan ki thori si progress daikh ker ..jalan say in kay haan maslay bhar gaye hain...
kuch hazam nahi ho raha.
loose motion ho gye hai :crazy_pilot:.. stomach ne jawab de dya hai k bhai me itni jallan bardasht nahy ker sakta..
 
First to archive total protection from outside that is done by Pakistan by making nuke now once there is no direct threats they are entering on second stage i.e. To secure from inside that also almost done and the third and final stage prosperity for all Pakistani is coming have patience
 
Wow! What an achievement!

The Pakistanis should instead be proud if and when their nation is shown to be having the best health care facilities, education system and the best poverty reduction programs in the world!

This one is is being proud for all the wrong reasons! WMDs kill, not improve the quality of life!


Yeah, like India's being proud of the worst country for journalists, the country with one of the highest rape cases, the country where women feel the most uncomfortable, the country with the largest number of people without proper toilet system, the country pretending to be the largest democracy but ends up killing Muslims because they were accused of eating cow meat which proved to be of a goat, in the end?? HUH? Seriously!

I just studies Pakistani missiles. They have only inertial guidance, no GPS guidance. It is very likely that Pakistani missiles fired towards India may end in Pakistan or some other country or sea.


I am pretty damn sure, your study will be the same as your English, RIP! :angel:
 
Yeah, like India's being proud of the worst country for journalists, the country with one of the highest rape cases, the country where women feel the most uncomfortable, the country with the largest number of people without proper toilet system, the country pretending to be the largest democracy but ends up killing Muslims because they were accused of eating cow meat which proved to be of a goat, in the end?? HUH? Seriously!
Silly man. Dude, don't troll like a kid gone berserk. We never brag about our nukes like you guys do. We talk of development but your motor-mouths talk of nukes! Nothing else matters in life!
 
All we need is minimal credible deterrent.

What we really need to develop is our ECONOMY.

Everything else can follow that.
 
Silly man. Dude, don't troll like a kid gone berserk. We never brag about our nukes like you guys do. We talk of development but your motor-mouths talk of nukes! Nothing else matters in life!


Look out for your comment first mate, you just got your answer. Plus, what development does India has gone through? Come on, all the things I have mentioned above, does it seem that India is a developed country? Come on.
 
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A new paper by two American think tanks titled “A Normal Nuclear Pakistan” argues that Pakistan could have the third-biggest nuclear stockpile within a decade and could end up producing 20 nuclear warheads annually.

Furthermore, the report, co-written by two scholars of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and the Stimson Center, notes that Islamabad is successfully competing with – and likely outperforming – New Delhi in the build-up of its nuclear arsenal.

“Pakistan operates four plutonium production reactors; India operates one. Pakistan has the capability to produce perhaps 20 nuclear warheads annually; India appears to be producing about five warheads annually,” the report states.

Pakistan is estimated to possess around 120 nuclear weapons against India’s 100. However, “Whether New Delhi chooses to compete more intensely or not, it is a losing proposition for Pakistan to sustain, let alone expand, its current infrastructure to produce greater numbers of nuclear weapons and their means of delivery,” the study finds.

The authors use the U.S.-Soviet nuclear arms race, which was partially responsible for bankrupting the Soviet Union, as a historical analogy. “Just as the Soviet Union’s large nuclear arsenal was of no help whatsoever for its manifold economic and societal weaknesses, Pakistan’s nuclear weapons do not address its internal challenges,” the study emphasizes.

The study also finds that while India enjoys an advantage in the production of fissile material due to its large power and prototype fast-breeder reactors, Pakistan dedicates more fissile material to the production of nuclear weapons:

In terms of total stockpiles of plutonium and HEU [highly enriched uranium] for nuclear weapons, India has about 600 kilograms of plutonium, while Pakistan has about 170 kilograms of plutonium and 3.1 metric tons of HEU. Assuming that each nuclear weapon would require five kilograms of plutonium or 15 kilograms of HEU, with existing stockpiles of fissile material India could theoretically construct up to 120 weapons, while Pakistan could construct up to 240.

Overall, however, India has a larger stockpile of plutonium than Pakistan, which will be an advantage for New Delhi in the long-run:

Plutonium is in most respects more desirable than HEU as a material for nuclear weapons, given that less of it is required for an equivalently powerful fission bomb, which makes plutonium warheads lighter and more suitable for delivery by ballistic missile.

Due to the larger amount of fissile material dedicated to the production of nuclear weapons, Islamabad could “have a nuclear arsenal not only twice the size of India’s but also larger than those of the United Kingdom, China, and France, giving it the third-largest arsenal behind the United States and Russia,” the authors argue. “Many observers have concluded that Pakistan’s rate of fissile material production (and assumed construction of nuclear weapons) gives it the fastest-growing nuclear weapons stockpile.”

Within ten years Pakistan could field 350 nuclear weapons, the report notes. According to Mansoor Ahmed, a nuclear expert at Quaid-i-Azam University in Islamabad, quoted in the Washington Post, that figure is inflated. He argues that the more likely number is between 40 to 50.

“This report is overblown. However… what the world must understand is that nuclear weapons are part of Pakistan’s belief system. It’s a culture that has been built up over the years because [nuclear weapons] have provided a credible deterrence against external aggression,” he says.

A Figure......
file.jpeg


Will Pakistan Soon Have the World’s Third-Largest Nuclear Arsenal? | The Diplomat


Guys, these articles are highly inaccurate and something to be wary about. Take them with a pinch of salt. These are the same type of people who were saying that Iraq was a superpower that could destroy Europe in 30 minutes, back in 2002.

Reality is that at present, Pakistan DOES NOT have enough nukes. We need a minimum of 1000 nukes, including thermonuclear weapons and an assortment of hydrogen bombs.

The article in the OP is disinformation.
 
Look out for your comment first mate, you just got your answer. Plus, what development does India has gone through? Come on, all the things I have mentioned above, does it seem that India is a developed country? Come on.
Arre bhai, you seem to be burning with envy at India's pace of development and now the fastest growing economy in the world! :-)
 

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