Pakistan offers India moratorium on nuclear non-testing agreement

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Pakistan has offered India a bilateral arrangement for not conducting a nuclear test, saying it will send a positive signal to the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) countries which are discussing the non-proliferation commitments of non-NPT states in relation to the question of membership.

As a verbal duel between Pakistan and India heats up in the backdrop of escalation of violence in the disputed region of Kashmir, Islamabad  renewed its proposal for a bilateral agreement for a moratorium on testing of nuclear devices.

Read more: India raises CPEC, NSG concerns with top Chinese envoy

The bilateral arrangement will send a positive signal to the members of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), which are currently discussing non-proliferation commitments of non-NPT states in relation to the question of membership, Foreign Office spokesperson Nafees Zakria said in a statement the other day.

Read more: Failure of NSG bid doesn’t put a damper on India’s planned military expansion

Pakistan and India both seek a membership of the NSG and have already voluntarily declared that they will not conduct more nuclear tests. But Zakria said the unilateral moratoriums declared by the two countries were legally non-binding and could be withdrawn unilaterally.

“A bilateral arrangement will be mutually binding and difficult to withdraw unilaterally,” he added.

Foreign Office spokesperson Nafees Zakaria said that following the nuclear tests in 1998, Pakistan had proposed to India simultaneous adherence to the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) but the proposal did not elicit a favourable response from India. “Once again, in the larger interest of peace and stability in the region, as also in the global context, Pakistan has indicated the possibility that the two countries may consider a bilateral arrangement, which is reflective of its policy of promoting restraint and responsibility in South Asia and its consistent support for the objectives of the CTBT,” he said.

“The bilateral non-testing arrangement, if mutually agreed, could become binding immediately without waiting for the entry into force of the CTBT at the international level,” the spokesperson added.

Both countries could consider working out the details of the arrangement and mutually agreed on confidence-building measures in relation to it. It could set the tone for further mutually agreed measures on restraint and avoidance of arms race in South Asia.

Earlier, Aziz had said that Pakistan is prepared to consider translating its unilateral moratorium into a bilateral arrangement on non-testing with India. He had added that Pakistan is confident of the merits of its membership application as its export controls were harmonised with those of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) and Australia Group.

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2 COMMENTS

  1. Keep it to yourself. Our nuclear policy is our national policy and we have nothing to do with you, period.

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