Estimated to have more nuclear weapons than India,
Pakistan is rapidly developing and expanding its atomic arsenal,
spending about $ 2.5 billion a year to develop such weapons, a report
has said.
“Pakistan has been rapidly developing and
expanding its nuclear arsenal, increasing its capacity to produce
plutonium, and testing and deploying a diverse array of nuclear-capable
ballistic and cruise missiles,” said the report ‘Assuring Destruction
Forever: Nuclear Modernisation Around the World’
“Pakistan is moving from an arsenal based wholly on HEU to greater
reliance on lighter and more compact plutonium-based weapons, which is
made possible by a rapid expansion in plutonium production capacity,”
said the 150-page report by Reaching Critical Will of the Women’s
International League for Peace and Freedom.
“Pakistan is also moving from aircraft-delivered nuclear bombs to
nuclear-armed ballistic and cruise missiles and from liquid-fuelled to
solid-fuelled medium-range missile. Pakistan also has a growing nuclear
weapons research, development, and production infrastructure,” it said.
According to the report Pakistan is estimated to have 90-110 nuclear weapons.
“A long-term concern now driving Pakistan’s nuclear programme is the US
policy of countering the rise of China by cultivating a stronger
strategic relationship with India. This may tie the future of Pakistan
and India’s nuclear weapons to the emerging contest between the United
States and China,” said the report.
Pakistan has a
number of short—range, medium, and longer—range road—mobile ballistic
surface—to—surface missiles in various stages of development.
“It has developed a second generation of ballistic missile systems over
the past five years. It is estimated that Pakistan could have a
stockpile of 2750 kg of weapon—grade HEU and may be producing about 150
kg of HEU per year,” it said.
Estimates suggest Pakistan has produced a total of about 140 kg of plutonium, the report said.
While not much information is available on the funding of Pakistan’s
nuclear weapons project, the report said estimates indicate that
Pakistan spends about $ 2.5 billion a year on nuclear weapons.
Despite extensive foreign military assistance, Pakistan’s effort to
sustain its conventional and nuclear military programmes has come at
increasingly great cost to the effort to meet basic human needs and
improve living standards, the report said.
India, the report says, is estimated to have 80-100 nuclear warheads.
“It is also developing a range of delivery vehicles, including land— and sea—based missiles, bombers, and submarines,” it said.
“While nuclear weapons used to be seen as a ‘necessary evil’, there is
no more enthusiasm for India to become a bonafide nuclear weapon power
that can exercise its military might in the region,” it said.
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