The Nuclear Situation in Pakistan
Historical Background 1947 British colonial India is divided into two independent states
Wars between India and Pakistan 1947-48 first war over Kashmir 1965 second Kashmir war 1999 fighting occurs in Kashmir region
The Separation of East and West Pakistan 1971 India supports East Pakistan's separation from the Pakistani state militarily This is a humitiliating defeat for Pakistan which starts to develop a nuclear weapons program
The development of the Pakistani nuclear weapons program 1956 Atomic Energy Research Council 1965 first nuclear reactor built with US aid 1968 India and Pakistan refuse to sign the Non- Proliferation Treaty 1972 decision to start a nuclear weapons program
The development of the Pakistani nuclear weapons program 1974 First Indian „peaceful“ nuclear explosion leads to intensifying of the Pakistani nuclear weapons program
The development of the Pakistani nuclear weapons program 1974 nuclear scientist Abdul Qadir Khan offers his services to the Pakistani government Khan had studied in Europe, in West Berlin, Holland and Belgium
The development of the Pakistani nuclear weapons program He had worked at Physical Dynamic Research Laboratory, a company associated with the Urenco uranium enrichment consortium, before he was transferred away for asking „suspicous questions“ 1976 Khan receives control over Pakistani uranium enrichment programs 1978 Pakistan enriches uranium for the first time at an enrichment facility made according to Khan's plans
The development of the Pakistani nuclear weapons program 1979 Pakistan is sanctioned after the US intelligence learns about the Pakistani enrichment facility However, after the Soviet Union attacks Afghanistan, Pakistan becomes the most important US ally in the region and the US government turns a blind eye on the nuclear weapons program
The development of the Pakistani nuclear weapons program 1980 Pakistan begins its missile program which is supported by China
The development of the Pakistani nuclear weapons program Mid 1980s-1990 Pakistan is able to produce enough uranium for a nuclear weapon and produces nuclear warheads 1994 Prime minister Nawaz Sharif reveals that Pakistan has a nuclear bomb
The development of the Pakistani nuclear weapons program 1998 Pakistan tests the Ghauri-I missile reaching 1,500 km 1998 Both India and Pakistan make nuclear tests which lead to US sanctions (lifted in 2001) 1999 Pakistan makes further missile tests
The Proliferation Scandal 2003 It is revealed that Abdul Qadir Khan was responsible for building a proliferation network and selling nuclear technology to countries such as North Korea, Iran and Libya Khan is pardoned by the Pakistani government but stays until today under house arrest
Pakistani Nuclear Weapons Capability Delivery Vehicles: 1. Modified F-16 fighters as well as Mirage III and Mirage V aircraft
Pakistani Nuclear Weapons Capability Delivery Vehicles: 2. Short-range Haft-II missiles and long-range surface-to-surface Ghauri missiles
Sources Ahmed, Samina: Pakistan´s Nuclear Weapons Program: Moving Forward or Tactical Retreat? (Kroc Institute Occasional Papers #18), 2000 Carnegie Endowment for International Peace: A. Q. Khan Nuclear Chronology, Issue Brief: Non Proliferation Vol. VIII, No. 8, 2005 Kerr, Paul; Nikitin, Mary Beth (eds.): Pakistan`s Nuclear Weapons: Proliferation and Security Issues (CRS Report for Congress), 2008 Mahrwald, Susanne: Die Entwicklung der Atomwaffen- und Raketenprogramme in Indien und Pakistan, 2007 (http://www.weltpolitik.net/print/3346.html, accessed on 8 May 2008)