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Under Rajiv Gandhi, India was ready with H-Bomb

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Under Rajiv Gandhi, India was ready with H-Bomb

rajiv-gandhi-bccl.jpg



NEW DELHI: India under Rajiv Gandhi made preparations in 1985 to test a hydrogen bomb in response to Pakistan’s nuclear programmes, recently released US documents showed. Concerned about the possibility of a nuclear arms race in South Asia, the Ronald Reagan administration wanted to send an emissary to mediate between the two neighbours and help ease tensions.

About 930,000 declassified documents, running into more than 12 million pages and recently posted online by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), provide interesting insights into India’s nuclear weapons capabilities during the 1980s and Delhi's increasing concerns over Pakistan's nuclear programme at the time.

In one of the documents, the world’s premier intelligence agency said it faced difficulties in gathering details of Delhi’s nuclear programme as Indian security was “extremely tight”.


The spy agency said the hydrogen bomb that the government of Rajiv Gandhi was preparing to explode was much stronger than the one tested 11years earlier, when his mother Indira was the Prime Minister. India at the time was also far ahead than Pakistan on nuclear technology, it noted.

While Rajiv Gandhi was initially hesitant to pursue his mother’s plan to push the nuclear programme, his mind changed when he got reports in early 1985 that Pakistan was making progress with nuclear weapons, according to the CIA. On May 4, 1985, he stated that Pakistan’s persistent efforts to join the nuclear club had compelled India to review its nuclear policy.

The agency said the H-bomb was created by a team of 36 scientists at the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre near Mumbai. The CIA also claimed that India was stockpiling plutonium for nuclear arsenal. “A rapid series of Pakistani tests would compel New Delhi to develop nuclear weapons and touch off a nuclear arms race between the two,” assessed a CIA document.

But, according to CIA assessment, fear of international political and economic reprisals would deter India from conducting an attack on Pakistan’s nuclear facilities. “China and not Pakistan is perceived as a long-term threat to the Indian security,” it noted.

On sending an emissary, a document said while India was not warm to the idea, it nonetheless was not against giving the person an audience.

The agency had suggested that the emissary should meet Rajiv Gandhi but refrained from predicting an outcome. On the other hand, Islamabad would welcome a US representative, according to the spy agency.

At the time, Pakistan was seen as a key ally of the US in South Asia, and India as a friend of the Soviet Union.

The Rajiv Gandhi government didn’t go ahead with the testing. It was in 1998 under Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee that India again conducted nuclear tests. Pakistan followed with its own testing. The CIA documents, posted online on January 17, were declassified after the mandatory 25 years.
 
Under Rajiv Gandhi, India was ready with H-Bomb

rajiv-gandhi-bccl.jpg



NEW DELHI: India under Rajiv Gandhi made preparations in 1985 to test a hydrogen bomb in response to Pakistan’s nuclear programmes, recently released US documents showed. Concerned about the possibility of a nuclear arms race in South Asia, the Ronald Reagan administration wanted to send an emissary to mediate between the two neighbours and help ease tensions.

About 930,000 declassified documents, running into more than 12 million pages and recently posted online by the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), provide interesting insights into India’s nuclear weapons capabilities during the 1980s and Delhi's increasing concerns over Pakistan's nuclear programme at the time.

In one of the documents, the world’s premier intelligence agency said it faced difficulties in gathering details of Delhi’s nuclear programme as Indian security was “extremely tight”.


The spy agency said the hydrogen bomb that the government of Rajiv Gandhi was preparing to explode was much stronger than the one tested 11years earlier, when his mother Indira was the Prime Minister. India at the time was also far ahead than Pakistan on nuclear technology, it noted.

While Rajiv Gandhi was initially hesitant to pursue his mother’s plan to push the nuclear programme, his mind changed when he got reports in early 1985 that Pakistan was making progress with nuclear weapons, according to the CIA. On May 4, 1985, he stated that Pakistan’s persistent efforts to join the nuclear club had compelled India to review its nuclear policy.

The agency said the H-bomb was created by a team of 36 scientists at the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre near Mumbai. The CIA also claimed that India was stockpiling plutonium for nuclear arsenal. “A rapid series of Pakistani tests would compel New Delhi to develop nuclear weapons and touch off a nuclear arms race between the two,” assessed a CIA document.

But, according to CIA assessment, fear of international political and economic reprisals would deter India from conducting an attack on Pakistan’s nuclear facilities. “China and not Pakistan is perceived as a long-term threat to the Indian security,” it noted.

On sending an emissary, a document said while India was not warm to the idea, it nonetheless was not against giving the person an audience.

The agency had suggested that the emissary should meet Rajiv Gandhi but refrained from predicting an outcome. On the other hand, Islamabad would welcome a US representative, according to the spy agency.

At the time, Pakistan was seen as a key ally of the US in South Asia, and India as a friend of the Soviet Union.

The Rajiv Gandhi government didn’t go ahead with the testing. It was in 1998 under Prime Minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee that India again conducted nuclear tests. Pakistan followed with its own testing. The CIA documents, posted online on January 17, were declassified after the mandatory 25 years.
Haha, :rofl: a hydrogen bomb with yield 20 Kt
Plz check yield of our first h bomb test, 4 million ton then posting nonsense
 
Haha, :rofl: a hydrogen bomb with yield 20 Kt
Plz check yield of our first h bomb test, 4 million ton then posting nonsense
It's 200 kt
And if you read the article which I think you not it's purely larger than what was tested during 1998

That's why it clearly mentioned India was allied to soviet union and

Russians has tested worlds most devastating hydrogen bomb
 
It's 200 kt
And if you read the article which I think you not it's purely larger than what was tested during 1998

That's why it clearly mentioned India was allied to soviet union and

Russians has tested worlds most devastating hydrogen bomb

The Indian h bomb test was a dud. As of now, India only possesses A Bomb, not H bomb.
 
The Indian h bomb test was a dud. As of now, India only possesses A Bomb, not H bomb.
By told whom Barc offered anyone who counters the tests to certify with scientific papers to proove it was a dud

Surprisingly no one has guts to counter it except some Western media retorics

Please read what Stockholm research institute studies and there papers on India hydrogen generated city in Mysore
 
Now read this Intel report Published by
Source: Janes Intelligence Review, January 1998

''How tritium extracted from
CANDU-type power reactors
supports India's H-Bomb capability''

http://www.ccnr.org/india_tritium.html

We have a saying out here -- Kala akshar bhais barabar. Do you really think that the gallery out here is remotely capable or willing to have a debate based purely on technicalities minus the rhetoric?

I have finally cracked the code to PDF. Use it as a source of humor. Don't bother with posting facts and figures, because .. to our esteemed gallery it is indeed Bhais Bararbar :coffee:
 
Never really understand the logic behind H-Bomb. In an atomic bomb you have the capacity to destroy entire city, Now why would you also want to fry the neighbouring towns and villages with H-bomb

Better focus on tactical nuclear weapons
 
It's 200 kt
And if you read the article which I think you not it's purely larger than what was tested during 1998

That's why it clearly mentioned India was allied to soviet union and

Russians has tested worlds most devastating hydrogen bomb
Simple fact, you haven't and couldn't and never will be
 
Too bad it still fizzled out 13 years later.


The only thing fizzling out my friend is the Pakistani militrays race to match a regional super power
dollar for dollar
plane to plane
missle to missle.

They have failed miserably because 1$ cannot match 8$.
 
The lullis here should know that India is one of the largest producers of tritium. Country which conducted it's first test in 1974 remains without TN device is only a wet dream of lullis. With India's own Boson collider India will achieve far more far more superiority in the areas of physics and quantum mechanics and nuclear physics. Lulli's can only imagine to have one.
 

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