Pakistan’s economic distress has put the spotlight on the country’s nuclear arsenal and its long-range missiles. Bristling with indignation, Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has tried to assure the world, and also his parliament, that the country’s nuclear and missile programmes are for deterrence.
However, his Finance Minister Ishaq Dar has been combative. On Thursday, he said nobody has the right to tell Pakistan what range of missiles should it possess, adding that the country will not abandon its long-range nuclear missiles.
Referring to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Dar told the Pakistani parliament in front of numerous foreign ambassadors: “Nobody has any right to tell Pakistan what range of missiles it can have and what nuclear weapons it can have. We have to have our own deterrence”.
Experts say that Dar’s remarks may stem from coalition partner Pakistan People’s Party (PPP)’s MP Raza Rabbani questioning the government that the people of Pakistan have a right to know if the country’s nuclear assets are under pressure. Rabbani also alleged that the Senate (Pakistani parliament) had “neither before nor today been taken into confidence on what are the conditionalities of the IMF”, and asked the Nawaz Sharif government whether the delay by the IMF was due to pressure on the country’s nuclear programme or its strategic relationship with China.
The misleading speculations about Pakistan’s nuclear & missile program are unfortunate. The stringent, fool-proof & multi-layered security safeguards, duly testified by IAEA, are in place. Our nuclear program represents the unwavering consensus of the nation & is for deterrence.
— Shehbaz Sharif (@CMShehbaz) March 16, 2023
In fact, Rabbani’s posturing in the parliament forced Sharif to respond through a tweet on Thursday night. Sharif tweeted: “The misleading speculations about Pakistan’s nuclear and missile programme are unfortunate. The stringent, fool-proof & multi-layered security safeguards, duly testified by IAEA, are in place. Our nuclear program represents the unwavering consensus of the nation & is for deterrence”.
The Prime Minister’s Office said that there would be “no compromise” on the country’s nuclear and missile programme and they are “jealously guarded by the state”. He added that in the wake of recent statements, press releases, and various assertions about Pakistan’s nuclear and missile programme, wherein even a traditional routine visit of DG IAEA Rafael Mariano Grossi for peaceful nuclear programme was portrayed in a negative light.
To the rest of the world, the statements by the two top politicians of the ruling party seem unjustifiable considering that all top Pakistani leaders have traversed the world asking for loans and bailout funds. To the world, expenditure on nuclear weapons and long-range missiles does not seem justified when the country faces historic inflation and food shortages.
Pakistan’s Finance Minister’s comments on long-range nuclear missiles partially confirms rumors that the international community sees Pakistan’s defense expenditure as unjustifiable under the current economic situation. If Pakistan’s civil and military rulers want continued int’l… https://t.co/CsPBkrTn6z pic.twitter.com/GQlIz7fOey
— FJ (@Natsecjeff) March 16, 2023
However, there has been speculation about the state of Pakistan’s nukes ever since the economic crisis broke out in 2022. And, this is not the first time. Whether the nuclear weapons are safe in Pakistan’s hands is a question was earlier raised during the two-decade long War on Terror when the Af-Pak terrain was rife with all shades of terror groups.
Pakistan has developed the Shaheen-III long-range nuclear missile that can strike at 2,750 km–covering most of India and parts of the Middle East. Senior Pakistani politicians have referred to pressure from Western countries regarding its long-range nuclear missiles which have the capacity to hit Israel.
In January this year news came out that uranium embedded in metal bars was found at Heathrow Airport. British investigators found that it had originated in Pakistan and reached the UK via Oman through a passenger flight. The uranium was meant for an Iranian company working in the UK.
At the same time, as Islamabad refuses to abandon its expensive defence, nuclear and missile programmes, it also wants the world to help it provide food and essential supplies to its population. And therein lies the dichotomy that the world sees but Pakistan refuses to even acknowledge.
Also read: Vengeful politics and weary friends prevent IMF from a $7 billion dole to Pakistan