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India-Pakistan
Pakistan’s missile test called `nothing special’
2003-10-05
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Pakistan denied Friday that its firing of a nuclear-capable surface-to-surface missile had anything to do with stalled peace talks with India, which characterized the test as "nothing special."
"Oh, that missile!
The Pakistani army announced the early-morning launch of the short-range Hatf-3 Ghaznavi missile and promised "a series" of tests in coming days. The missile can carry conventional and non-conventional weapons as far as 180 miles--within reach of several important targets in India. "We have successfully test-fired the Hatf-3 at New Delhi," said army spokesman Gen. Shaukat Sultan, who declined to say where the test was conducted. The army later released a statement saying India and other neighboring countries were informed before the test flight.
Excuse me you cursed infidels, but we’ll be test-firing a missile designed to incinerate your capital. Hope you don’t mind and Allah curse you if you do."
In New Delhi, Defense Ministry spokesman Amitabh Chakravorty confirmed that his government had been notified. Indian Defense Minister George Fernandes later said the test was "nothing special." He told the Press Trust of India, "It has to be seen whether the missile is their own or provided by North Korea or China." The comments are an allusion to charges that Pakistan has exchanged nuclear and other weapons technology with North Korea, which Pakistan denies.
Yasss, the vaunted Pak high-technology program.
China is Pakistan’s main supplier of military hardware, but the Hatf-3 is said to be an indigenous Pakistani missile.
You can tell because it lands within a hundred miles of the intended target.
The test was the first by Pakistan since March 26, when it fired a short-range missile soon after India announced a similar launch. On Friday, Khan denied any link between the most recent test and failing peace efforts. An army statement added: "The timings of the tests reflect Pakistan’s determination not to engage in a tit-for-tat syndrome to other tests in the region. ... Pakistan will maintain the pace of its own missile development program and conduct tests as per its need to frighten the Hindoo infidels technical needs." The missile test came with Prime Minister Zafarullah Khan Jamali in the middle of a visit to the United States and two days after he met with President Bush. They reportedly discussed ISI-sponsored terrorism, the Kashmir situation and Washington’s desire for Pakistan to contribute peacekeeping troops for Iraq.
Just leave the peacekeeping thing alone.
Posted by:Steve White

#6  CEP = Circular Error Probable, how far off it is from target. CEP =! range
Posted by: Brian   2003-10-5 4:48:33 PM  

#5  Also wonder if Mossad has any moles in Pakistani weapons programs.

No a waste of effort. The Mossad only controls the Go Code.
Posted by: Shipman   2003-10-5 3:59:53 PM  

#4  I wonder if anyone was in the area or overhead, monitoring this test. Also wonder if Mossad has any moles in Pakistani weapons programs.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2003-10-5 1:35:54 PM  

#3  Would it have been provocative if we asked to see if one of our Patriot Pak3's could knock their missle out of the sky during the test?
Posted by: Super Hose   2003-10-5 1:20:44 PM  

#2  Korea completes its long range missile and pakistan tests it. Why haven't we nuked north korea yet?
Posted by: flash91   2003-10-5 1:11:40 PM  

#1  CEP = Range
Posted by: Shipman   2003-10-5 10:46:42 AM  

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