The governments of both the countries are required to exchange such lists in accordance with Article-II of the Agreement on prohibition of attacks against nuclear installations and facilities between Pakistan and India of 31 December 1988.
Pakistan handed over its list to a representative of the Indian High Commission at the Foreign Office, while India provided its list to the Pakistan High Commission in New Delhi.
Pakistan has previously maintained that its nuclear weapons capability is a deterrent against India's much larger conventional military.
Both the countries are not signatories to the nuclear non-proliferation treaty.
Pakistan and India have been developing missiles of varying ranges since they conducted nuclear tests in May 1998.
Pakistan recently test fired a nuclear-capable ballistic missile with a range of 1,300km. The military described the Hatf V Ghauri missile as a liquid fuel missile, which can carry both conventional and nuclear warheads.
US intelligence estimates in 2011 put the number of nuclear weapons developed by Pakistan at 90 to 110. Analysts say its nuclear arsenal is the fastest growing in the world.
COMMENTS (5)
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Nuclear Arsenal for self protection.
And won't think before using it as our inspiration is USA and USA bombed hiroshima and nagasaki.
Last line clearly shows...Nothing escapes the US and they are watching you
@lols, keep dreaming
@KSB: funny. It will destroy you from within.
absolutely "loweeed" the last line of the article