India & Pakistan: nuked up theocracies are in a dogfight

7 05 2025

Sputnik – Russia ‘Deeply Concerned’ About Escalating Military Confrontation Between India, Pakistan

BBC – Tensions escalate as Pakistan vows response to Indian strikes after Pahalgam killings

Times of India – Pahalgam Attack Live Updates: ‘Ready to retaliate if Pakistan escalates’, India tells China after Operation Sindoor


 

 

 





Kamala Harris’ Uncle On India’s Nuclear Weapons Test: India’s Deception Was Better Than The CIA’s Intelligence

3 09 2020

“Based on his writings and interviews, Gopalan Balachandran was, and is, India First. He proudly spoke of India’s deception of the United States. Less than 20 years later, he and his niece deceived Biden about who he really is.”

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It’s not a failure of the CIA,” said Indian nuclear researcher G. Balachandran. “It’s a matter of their intelligence being good, our deception being better.” See: “CIA searching for answers behind its India-Nuclear failure” Saturday, May 16, 1998 https://fas.org/irp/news/1998/05/may16_cia.html (Indian in this context means from India, not American Indian.)

Note that “our” refers to India, or possibly even himself. It doesn’t refer to the United States, where his sister was a researcher at the Lawrence Berkeley National Lab site, his niece, and maybe his daughter lived. The family is close. Based on his writings and interviews, Gopalan Balachandran was, and is, India First. He proudly spoke of India’s deception of the United States. Less than 20 years later, he and his niece deceived Biden about who he really is. Now she sits on the US Senate Intelligence committee and is VP nominee. She could soon…

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WikiLeaks: Indian MPs ‘paid off by Congress party’ ahead of nuclear vote

8 09 2011

From US Embassy Cables released March 18 –

Cable dated:2008-07-17T13:23:00
S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 04 NEW DELHI 001972

SUBJECT: POLITICAL BARGAINING CONTINUES PRIOR TO KEY VOTE IN PARLIAMENT
REF: KOLKATA 209

Classified By: Charge D'Affaires Steven White for Reasons 1.4 (B and D)

1. (C) SUMMARY. Foreign Secretary Shiv Shankar Menon and his delegation departed for Vienna on July 17 to brief the 35 Board members of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and another 19 members of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG) on the U.S.-India Civil Nuclear Cooperation Initiative. In Delhi, government officials responded positively to suggestions about how to address concerns emerging from Vienna, particularly the need to begin negotiating an IAEA Additional Protocol and for the IAEA to circulate India's (INFCIRC) already-public separation plan as an official IAEA document. Political horse-trading continued in anticipation of the special session of parliament to consider the confidence vote on July 21 followed by the vote itself . . . Small parties representing collectively about 20 votes find themselves with generous suitors; one party chief has reportedly succeeded in having the Lucknow airport renamed after his father. . . .  [blah, blah, blah] . . .

END SUMMARY.

GOI to Address IAEA Member Concerns, Fumbles on Scheduling - - -

2. (SBU) Foreign Secretary Shiv Shankar Menon departed for Vienna on July 17 for his briefing on July 18 to IAEA Board members and NSG members on the U.S.-India Civil Nuclear Cooperation Initiative. Local media had reported statements by an IAEA spokesman on July 16 that the briefing by the visiting Indian delegation had been canceled. In fact, the briefing was scaled down from all 140 IAEA members to just the 35 Board members, in addition to the 19 others that comprise the 45-member NSG that do not also sit on the IAEA Board. Menon is traveling with Department of Atomic Energy director for strategic plans Dr. R.B. Grover, Department Of Atomic Energy's (DAE) Gitish Sharma, and Chief of Staff Naveen Srivastava. They will be joined in Vienna by Geneva-based Ministry of External Affairs Counselor Venkatesh Varma, a veteran of nuclear deal negotiations.

3. (C) Pursuant to recommendations from the U.S. Mission to the IAEA, PolCouns raised two issues of concern to IAEA Board members on July 16 with Ministry of External Affairs Joint Secretary for the Americas Gaitri Kumar and Virender Paul in the National Security Adviser's office. PolCouns stressed the importance of starting negotiations on an Additional Protocol as soon as possible, relaying that such agreements usually take about a year to conclude but that IAEA Legal could have a model text ready quickly if the Indians ask to begin negotiations. PolCouns also reported, following messages from UNVIE, that some IAEA delegations did not understand the connection between the safeguards agreement (with its blank safeguarded facilities list) and the separation plan listing the civil nuclear facilities that would fall under safeguards (already a public document). PolCouns shared that the IAEA is prepared to circulate the separation plan as an official IAEA document if the Indians request it. Both Kumar and Paul promised to get on these two tasks "right away" to set things up for a productive trip to Vienna for Menon. On the Additional Protocol, the Prime Minister's Special Envoy will have to push the Department of Atomic Energy, which will have the lead. On the facilities list, an instruction could go to India's mission in Vienna fairly quickly. . . . (more)

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/us-embassy-cables-documents/162458 

These guys sure were in a hurry in 2008 to get all these nukes installed in ultra stable and corruption-free India.

While Washington frets about North Korean nukes maybe someone should inventory the nukes the US proliferated all over with  equally BLANK safeguarded facilities lists. – F.C.

Font emphasis ours.





Russia, China, India and Turkey condemn Libya strikes

1 05 2011

From the Vancouver Sun

MOSCOW – India and Russia’s prime minister hit out Monday at the Western-led air strikes in Libya as the United Nations chief pleaded for international unity on the action against Moamer Gadhafi.

India urged an immediate halt to the strikes spearheaded by French fighter jets Saturday, as Germany said it had “good reasons” for abstaining from Thursday’s UN vote on the action and African nations voiced criticism.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin slammed the UN resolution as a “medieval call to crusade”, but was later criticized by President Dmitry Medvedev who gave the action on Gadhafi’s forces qualified support.

“The resolution by the Security Council, of course, is defective and flawed,” Putin was quoted as saying by Russian news agencies.

“To me, it resembles some sort of medieval call to crusade when someone would appeal to someone to go to a certain place and free someone else,” he charged.

Medvedev, in a hastily convened press conference, said using words such as “crusade” in reference to a Muslim country was unacceptable. . .  .

. . . .  India’s Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna said the strikes on Libya would lead to more harm to “innocent civilians, foreign nationals and diplomatic missions.”

“India calls upon all parties to abjure violence and the use of threat and force to resolve the differences. I think the need of the hour is cessation of armed conflict,” he told reporters.

China also expressed regret on Sunday, saying in a foreign ministry statement that it opposed the use of force in international relations . . . . (more)

http://www.vancouversun.com/life/Russia+China+India+Turkey+condemn+Libya+strikes/4474784/story.html