SPECIAL COVERAGE
CHANDIGARH

LUDHIANA

DELHI


THE TRIBUNE SPECIALS
50 YEARS OF INDEPENDENCE

TERCENTENARY CELEBRATIONS



M A I N   N E W S

Would smash Pak if it tested N-bomb, Moraraji told US 

Washington, December 22
Refusing to enter into any formal agreement with Pakistan on non-use and non-development of nuclear weapons, the then PM Morarji Desai had told the US in 1979 that if Islamabad exploded a nuclear bomb, he would act to “smash it,” a declassified US memo shows. The conversation that transpired between Desai and the then US Ambassador to India Robert F Goheen in a one-on-one meeting in June 1979 have been made public as part of a series of declassified documents yesterday.

The meeting with Desai that lasted for about 55 minutes was held at the instance of Goheen who was following the direction of the National Security Council of White House to meet the Prime Minister on an “informal, exploratory and non-committal” basis. Starting with the premise that Washington wanted to work with New Delhi to “deflect” the Pakistani nuclear threat, Goheen could get across the idea that “India is an essential part of any solution”.

Desai, however, was not interested in the idea of a joint agreement on the non-use and non-development of weapons, the cable said.

Arguing that he had already made a pledge to that effect, Desai said that if Pakistan did the same “the two pledges would be as good as a joint agreement”.

He rejected Goheen's suggestion that a formal agreement would be more effective and dismissed altogether the nuclear weapons free zone concept. Responding to Goheen’s query about a prospective Indian reaction to a Pakistani weapons test, the Prime Minister was belligerent: “If he discovered that Pakistan was ready to test a bomb or if it exploded one, he would act at (once) ‘to smash it,” the cable said.

“Desai said he had recently assured Pakistan Foreign Secretary Shahnawaz that India had only good intentions towards Pakistan and wished to do nothing to cause it difficulties, but also that “if Pakistan tries any tricks we will smash you,” the cable says. “I gather that he went on to remind Shahnawaz of 1965 and 1971 in order to emphasise on India's readiness to react forcibly when sufficiently provoked,” Goheen wrote in his secret cable. Pakistan finally went nuclear in 1998 after India’s second nuclear test in Pokharan. — PTI

Back

 

 

 



HOME PAGE | Punjab | Haryana | Jammu & Kashmir | Himachal Pradesh | Regional Briefs | Nation | Opinions |
| Business | Sports | World | Letters | Chandigarh | Ludhiana | Delhi |
| Calendar | Weather | Archive | Subscribe | Suggestion | E-mail |