IE Highlights

Search
Indian Express
Web
Advanced Search
Search Archives

Advertisments

Matrimonials Register FREE on Naukri.com. airtel call home@6/min Tata AIG's Maharaksha Book International flights & get 10000 Money Back No minimum balance NRI account

Send Flowers

Live Cricket

National Network

Declassified papers show US feared n-race after Pokhran-I

Press Trust Of India

Posted online: Wednesday, January 16, 2008 at 0002 hrs Print Email


Washington, January 15 : India, France and Israel were unlikely to proliferate as a matter of national policy, but was “susceptible” to the lure of economic and political advantages to be gained from exporting nuclear arms-related technology, a just-declassified US intelligence report, that came after the 1974 Pokhran tests, had said.

In the wake of the Indian nuclear tests on May 17, 1974 and growing concern about the spread of nuclear weapons capabilities, the US intelligence community prepared a Special National Intelligence Estimate (SNIE) titled “Prospects for Further Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons”, a document that was released on Tuesday by the National Security Archive (NSA).

Though the introductory note said that the paper includes “discussions of Indian nuclear intentions”, the NSA has pointed out that “when it reviewed the 1974 SNIE for the most recent release, the CIA heavily excised the discussion of the Indian nuclear programme.” The SNIE had estimated that “many countries” would have the economic and technological capability to produce atomic weapons, believed that Israel has already produced nuclear arms and expressed apprehension that terrorists might attempt theft of either weapons or fissionable materials.

“France, India and Israel, while unlikely to proliferate as a matter of national policy will prove susceptible to the lure of economic and political advantages to be gained from exporting materials, technology and equipment relevant to nuclear weapons programmes. And most proliferators are on good terms with one or all others,” the SNIE had said.

“The 1974 Indian test created shock waves in the US, not only because of its broader implications, but because the intelligence had failed to detect that it was imminent,” the NSA said in its release.

“The possibility that the Indian test might lead to a nuclear arms race in South Asia and create new pressures for nuclear proliferation elsewhere induced the US Government, which under Secretary of State Henry Kissinger had treated this problem as a lower-level issue, to begin viewing developing policies to curb proliferation as a higher priority,” it said.

The SNIE estimated that “many countries” would have the economic and technological capability to produce nuclear weapons by the 1980s underlined the seriousness of the problem, as did another statement: “terrorists might attempt theft of either weapons or fissionable materials.”

The heavily excised document noted that there were over 50,000 nuclear weapons in the world and said that the “absolute assurance about future security is impossible.” The CIA released the 1974 SNIE in response to a Freedom of Information Act, request by National Security Archive senior fellow Jeffrey Richelson.

Ads By Google

Post CommentView CommentsWrite to Editor

All Headlines All Front Page News
Your comment[s] on this article


Be the first to comment on this story.

Total comment[s]:0 | Read comment[s]| Post your comment

Full Coverage

School PulseThe CM WritesTaking on NaxalsBenazir's AssassinationThird Eye

Most Read Articles

SP deals Kalam trump cardInflation set to cross 11.7% today, Govt plans ad campaign to set the record straightCollege principal murdered after he stood up to BSP MLALeft to ask Govt when it plans to go to IAEAColombia frees Betancourt, 14 others from rebels

Most Emailed Articles

Colombia frees Betancourt, 14 others from rebelsLeft to ask Govt when it plans to go to IAEAChina troop build-up, Tibet upgrade impact our security: Army chiefBandh gets mixed responseShy and mighty: At 39, there\\\'s still no stopping Sanath