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Pakistan Expanding Nuclear Sites: India Tests Nuke Missile

US confident Pakistan nukes secure: CIA chief
CIA director Leon Panetta said Monday US intelligence officials did not know the exact whereabouts of all Pakistan's nuclear weapons but believed they were safe from the Taliban. Speaking in Los Angeles, the Central Intelligence Agency chief said Pakistan's nuclear arsenal was "pretty secure" amid concerns that the weapons could possibly fall into the hands of Taliban insurgents. "We don't have frankly the intelligence to know where they are all located but we do track the Pakistanis," Panetta said when asked if the US knew where Pakistan's nuclear weapons were located. "Right now we are confident that the Pakistanis do have a pretty secure approach to trying to protect these weapons. But it is something that we continue to watch because obviously the last thing we want is for the Taliban to have access to nuclear weapons in Pakistan." Pakistan forces have been locked in an offensive with Taliban fighters in the country for several weeks. The fighting comes amid intense US pressure to crack down on militants in the northwest of the country which Washington says pose the most serious terrorist threat to the West. Panetta was speaking at a luncheon hosted by the non-partisan Pacific Council on International Policy think tank in Los Angeles.

India tests nuclear-capable missile: defence sources
India successfully tested a nuclear-capable missile off its eastern coast on Tuesday, defence sources said, as part of the nation's efforts to build a credible minimum nuclear deterrent. The medium-range surface-to-surface Agni-II, which can hit targets at a distance of 2,500 kilometres (1,560 miles), was fired from a mobile launcher on Wheeler Island off the coast of Orissa state, the source said. "A trial of Agni-II was conducted Tuesday," the source told AFP, adding the test was successful. "It was a trainer use trial" intended to help the army learn how to use the weapon, the source added. There was no immediate comment available from the defence ministry. The Indian-developed 20-metre-long missile weighs 16 tonnes and is capable of carrying one tonne of conventional or nuclear warheads. It was the third successful trial of the Agni-II, the Press Trust of India news agency reported, saying the missile was now ready for production. India already has the 3,000-kilometre range Agni-III missile -- the longest in the Agni series -- which can carry conventional or nuclear payloads. The missile is one of a series being developed by India's Defence Research Development Organisation as part of the country's deterrent strategy against neighbouring China and Pakistan which also have nuclear weapons. The Agni-I missile has a strike range of 1,500 kilometres.
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) May 19, 2009
Satellite photos released on Tuesday show Pakistan has expanded two sites crucial to its nuclear program as part of an effort to bolster the destructive power of its atomic arsenal, a US arms control institute said.

The commercial images reveal a major expansion of a chemical plant complex near Dera Ghazi Kahn that produces uranium hexalfuoride and uranium metal, materials used to produce nuclear weapons, said analysts at the Institute for Science and International Security.

At a site near Rawalpindi, photos suggest the Pakistanis "have added a second plutonium separation plant adjacent to the old one," the ISIS report said.

Pakistan in recent years also has been building two new plutonium production reactors, it said.

"All together, these recent expansion activities indicate that Pakistan is indeed progressing in a strategic plan to improve the destructiveness and deliverability of its nuclear arsenal," the report said.

The expansion would enable Pakistan to build smaller, lighter plutonium-fission weapons and thermonuclear weapons that employ "plutonium as the nuclear trigger and enriched and natural enriched uranium in the secondary," it said.

The commercial photos of the chemical plant in Dera Ghazi Kahn, taken on August 25 of last year, show new industrial buildings, new anti-aircraft installations and several new settling ponds as part of the expansion, ISIS said.

The satellite images follow confirmation from the top US military officer, Admiral Mike Mullen, on Friday that Pakistan was expanding its nuclear arsenal.

Mullen on Monday said US military assistance to Pakistan was not being used by Islamabad to bolster its nuclear weapons program.

Given turmoil in Pakistan with the army waging war against Taliban militants in the northwest, the ISIS said the "security of its nuclear assets remains in question."

"An expansion in nuclear weapons production capabilities needlessly complicates efforts to improve the security of Pakistan's nuclear assets," it said.

The Dera Ghazi Khan nuclear site in the past several years has been the target of at least one attack by more than a dozen gunmen, ISIS said, citing media reports. Nearby railway tracks have also been bombed.

The attacks have been blamed on separatists from the nearby Baloch region of Pakistan and not the Taliban, the report said.

"The brazen ground assault and nearby bombings are nevertheless troubling considering the role that the Dera Ghazi Khan plant plays in Pakistan's nuclear weapons program," it said.

CIA director Leon Panetta said Monday that Pakistan's nuclear arsenal was "pretty secure" amid concerns the weapons could fall into the hands of Taliban militants.

"Right now we are confident that the Pakistanis do have a pretty secure approach to trying to protect these weapons. But it is something that we continue to watch because obviously the last thing we want is for the Taliban to have access to nuclear weapons in Pakistan," Panetta said in Los Angeles.

The ISIS report urged the US government to persuade Pakistan to halt production of fissile material and join talks for a treaty that would ban the production of plutonium and highly enriched uranium.

"As an interim step, the United States should press both India and Pakistan to suspend any production of fissile material for nuclear weapons," it said.

Pakistan has roughly 60 to 100 nuclear weapons that can be delivered by attack aircraft and ballistic missiles, the report added.

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Pakistan not using US funds to buy nuclear arms: US
Washington (AFP) May 18, 2009
Pakistan is not using US military assistance to expand its nuclear arsenal, the chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, said on Monday. "I am not aware of any US aid that's gone towards nuclear weapons," Mullen told a gathering at the Brookings Institution, a Washington think-tank. He said that the one exception was a portion of US funds in the past few years focus ... read more







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