India is not a signatory to the Nuclear Non Proliferation Treaty (NPT) but Iran is. Making India a far more dangerous nuclear power.
An Indonesian passenger jet was forced to turn around over Indian airspace after a nuclear-capable ballistic missile streaked across the sky, the Foreign Ministry said Friday, demanding an explanation from New Delhi.
But the outrage will be muted since India is America's new nuclear ally.
And amongst the conspiracy mongers in the Middle East this will be seen as a covert threat against Muslims by Hindus.
And like North Korea these tests show that India's ability to deliver nuclear weapons is still limited.
New Delhi: India's showpiece nuclear capability, the Agni-III was successfully test fired on Thursday. But behind the glitter of this success lies a money-guzzling missile programme which has dragged on for 24 years and still counting.
After a national investment of Rs 1,700 crore over a period of 24 years, the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) has the Prithvi, the Agni and other missile celebrities to flaunt.
What the organisation set out to do and promised to develop by 1995 also included the Akash, the Nag and the Trishul.
Despite a time overrun of 12 years and a cost overrun of almost Rs 1,400 crore, completion of these projects is still nowhere in sight.
The success of the nuclear-capable Prithvi and the Agni series has created a semblance of assurance in the face of technology denials. But there's a worry here as well: insufficient testing
Major powers have tested their strategic missile hundreds of times to demonstrate their reliability. But the Agni series of missiles - the mainstay of India's nuclear deterrence - have been declared operational on the basis of just three tests each.
So, should the world believe that India has a reliable delivery system for its nuclear weapons? Opinion is divided.
See:
No Nukes
Did Nuke Cause Earth Quake
North Korea Discovers TNT
Nyah, Nyah
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