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This is an archive article published on May 17, 1998

No more N-tests, asserts Vajpayee

NEW DELHI, May 16: The Prime Minister today categorically stated that India was not planning any more nuclear tests. In an interview to Outl...

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NEW DELHI, May 16: The Prime Minister today categorically stated that India was not planning any more nuclear tests. In an interview to Outlook he also maintained that the only reason for undertaking the tests at this particular time was 8220;to ensure our security and to let the people of India and the world know that we have a credible deterrent8221;.

Answering a question about the Government8217;s position on the CTBT, he said that India8217;s position was 8220;a matter for negotiation8221; and that he would not disclose it in advance.

Expressing his disappointment over US president Bill Clinton8217;s statement calling the tests a 8220;terrible mistake8221;, he said that he had expected a better understanding of India8217;s security interests from President Clinton.

Taking the standard MEA line about the nuclear weapons regime being discriminatory, he shrugged off the global outrage at the tests by saying that most of the nations criticising India were themselves nuclear powers or those that were covered by a 8220;nuclearumbrella8221;. 8220;This is a classic case of double standards. Let them search their hearts and tell us if we have done anything worse than what they have done for the last fifty years,8221; he said.

Talking specifically about China, he expressed the hope that Sino-Indian relations would not suffer too much despite the strong reaction the tests had drawn from Beijing. About the possibility of a meeting between the Pakistani premier Nawaz Sharif and himself he trotted out the standard reply about outstanding issues being best resolved through dialogue.

 

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