Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)
December 2002 - India Special Weapons News
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- YEARENDER- INDIA - PAKISTAN Voice of America 17 December 1999 -- 1999 was a year of turmoil in South Asia. After a promising beginning, relations between South Asia's two biggest countries, India and Pakistan deteriorated to their lowest point in years.
- Commerce Department Will Remove 51 Indian Entities from Sanctions List Bureau of Export Administration, U. S. Department of Commerce - December 16, 1999 -- The Commerce Department will remove 51 Indian entities from the list of entities originally sanctioned in 1998 in response to the detonations of nuclear explosive devices by India and Pakistan
- Entities to be Removed from Entity List as of December 15, 1999 Bureau of Export Administration, U. S. Department of Commerce
- YEARENDER: KASHMIR Voice of America 15 December 1999 -- 1999 was an especially-painful year for those who call the Kashmir Valley home. They saw their beautiful valley once again become the focus of conflict between India and Pakistan.
- YEARENDER: INDIAN POLITICS Voice of America 15 December 1999 -- Atal Behari Vajpayee -- India's 75-year-old Prime Minister began the year as the head of a weak coalition government but later won national elections, becoming the first Indian prime minister since 1971 to win a second consecutive term in office.
- Remarks on Iraq, Pakistan and India Thomas R. Pickering, Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Foreign Policy Forum, George Washington University, December 6, 1999 -- The nuclear program raises the chances of a mistake of the use of such weapons--either in conflict with Pakistan over Kashmir or by accident or miscalculation. U.S. officials have been very frank in explaining to both governments how very important--and incredibly expensive--nuclear safety and surety are.
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