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Army Chief General Bipin Rawat said that Pakistan’s “nuclear bogey” in response to the abrogation of Article 370 shows that it does not have faith in its army, The Economic Times reported.
He further said that Pakistan seemed to have made “precautionary deployments” along the Line of Control “even as it has given a free run to terror organisation[s] operating from its soil.” He declared that if Pakistan is successful in conducting a terror attack, it should expect retaliation from India and said that India is fully prepared for the same.
Since conducting its second nuclear tests, Pokhran-II, in 1998, India has a 'no first use' policy, which means it has pledged to not strike first. However, it retained the right to retaliate in response to a strike.
Meanwhile, Pakistan does not have a stated 'no first use' policy. Its nuclear policy is India-centric, as it is driven by threat to its security from India. The country retains the option of using nuclear weapons first in the event of a war.
On being asked about the statement by Rajnath Singh, Military spokesman Major General Asif Ghafoor at a media briefing on Wednesday, 4 September said, "We don't have any 'no first use' policy. Our weapons are for deterrence. As far as India is concerned, it us up to them to formulate any policy.”
(With inputs from The Economic Times, PTI)
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