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Friday, May 29, 1998 Published at 15:15 GMT 16:15 UK


World: S/W Asia

Pakistan cools missile threat

Pakistanis give prayers of thanks - but where will the nuclear tests lead?

Both India and Pakistan have shown signs of a more conciliatory approach after talks on strategy by both countries' governments in the wake of Pakistan's five nuclear tests.


Pakistan's foreign minister says they took all necessary precautions
Although Pakistan has said it will now produce nuclear weapons, the Foreign Minister, Gohar Ayub Khan, has said the weapons would be entirely defensive.

The Pakistani Government has strongly denied reports that it is preparing to arm long-range missiles with nuclear warheads.

The BBC correspondent in Islamabad says there are clear signs Pakistan doesn't want to say anything too threatening to India.


[ image:  ]
And in India there have been conciliatory remarks from the Prime Minister, Atal Behari Vajpayee.

He told parliament that India did not intend to join an arms race despite its own nuclear tests earlier this month. He said Pakistan faced no threat from India.

A key concern to both countries is the imposition of sanctions by major aid donors, including the US and Japan, which will cost billions of dollars.


BBC Correspondent in Islamabad Owen Bennett-Jones: 'Pakistan has not said the programme is over'
The decision to go ahead with the tests followed explosions earlier this month by India.

Meanwhile, US officials believe Pakistan may be preparing yet another nuclear test.

The officials, who would not be identified, said American spy satellites monitoring a site in Pakistan had picked up signs of preparations; one official said a sixth nuclear test could be readied in a couple of days.

The Pakistani Finance Minister Sartaj Aziz said his country had no plans for further tests at the moment.

However, for the first time, Pakistan has stated the intention to make nuclear weapons; until now it has talked only of its capability to make them.

State of emergency

Immediately after the tests on Thursday, Pakistan's Prime Minister Nazwaz Sharif told the nation that the imposition of sanctions will cause difficulties for Pakistan.


[ image: Prime ministerial warnings came immediately]
Prime ministerial warnings came immediately
A state of emergency has been declared which will enable the government to introduce austerity measures without the risk of court challenges.

Restrictions have already been imposed on foreign exchange transactions, and banks are closed today to prevent the withdrawal of deposits.

Pakistan's information minister has said the state of emergency does not mean that the army will be on the streets, but he was unable to say how long it will last.

Celebrations continue

The nuclear blasts have been widely welcomed inside Pakistan where celebratory rallies are planned today.

Friday's newspapers in Pakistan have celebrated the tests with headlines such as "Pakistan levels the score".

Tests 'deplored'

The Indian Prime Minister, Atal Behari Vajpayee, said Pakistan's nuclear tests vindicated India's decision to conduct tests of its own earlier this month.

In the rest of the world, there was near universal condemnation of Pakistan.


President Clinton: Pakistan has lost a 'priceless opportunity'
President Clinton said: "I deplore the decision. By failing to exercise restraint Pakistan has lost a truly priceless opportunity ... two wrongs don't make a right."

He said that America would impose sanctions on Pakistan in the way it imposed them on India as punishment for the nuclear tests it conducted earlier in the month.


BBC correspondent Ben Brown reports on the nuclear rivalry on the subcontinent
"It is now more urgent than it was yesterday that both India and Pakistan renounce further tests and sign the comprehensive test ban treaty ... and reverse the dangerous arms race," he said.

Describing the tests as "extremely deplorable" Japanese officials have decided to impose economic sanctions on Pakistan as strict as those imposed in India.

Japan is Pakistan's biggest aid donor providing 32bn yen in loans and 5.7bn yen in grants-in-aid in 1997.

Sanctions are also expected to entail the suspension of new grants and loans, but will not include emergency assistance and humanitarian support.



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