Pakistan takes its nuclear responsibilities seriously: White House

The remark came a day after a report claimed Pakistan fastest growing nuclear arsenal


Web Desk August 29, 2015
PHOTO: INTER-SERVICES PUBLIC RELATIONS

The White House said on Saturday that it is confident Pakistan is aware of its responsibilities pertaining to the safety and security of its nuclear weapons.

"We continue to be confident that the government of Pakistan is aware of those responsibilities and takes those responsibilities quite seriously," White House spokesperson Josh Earnest said at a news conference.

The remark came a day after two leading US think tanks claimed in a report that Pakistan would have more than 350 nuclear weapons in a decade, which means that the country would have the third largest stock piles of nuclear weapons after the US and Russia.

Read: Report on weapons: ‘Pakistan outpacing India in nuclear race’

Commenting on the report, Earnest said, "I did see the report. I don't have an official administration assessment to share with you. I would say there a couple things that come to mind.”

The spokesperson went on to add that responsibility for nuclear stockpile remains with all countries who have secureda  nuclear stockpile.

"This applies not just to Pakistan but to countries around the world that have a nuclear stockpile - they have a responsibility for securing that nuclear stockpile."

Read: Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal could become world’s third-biggest: report

Meanwhile a statement issued by Pakistan's Foreign Office, regarding the nuclear report said "Such utterly baseless reports are designed to divert attention from the exponential increase in India's fissile material stockpiles."

The White House spokesperson also added that President Barack Obama had set a long-term goal of a world free of nuclear weapons. A year after becoming president, Obama had hosted the first nuclear security summit in Washington to galvanise world leaders to achieve this goal.

"The President's made clear that he has a long-term goal of a world without nuclear weapons. And the President has convened, you know, every couple of years at an international summit to try to counter nuclear proliferation. And that continues to be a top foreign policy priority of his. I believe we're cited to have a next meeting next year. So the president is certainly looking forward to that," Earnest said.

Read: ‘Fastest growing’: Pakistan dismisses nuclear arsenal report as baseless

The US president has also announced to host the fourth and last Nuclear Security Summit of his presidency March-April of next year. Many world leaders including Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is expected to attend the summit.

Soon after the report was released in Washington, the US State Department had cautioned Pakistan from flaunting its nuclear status as it would worsen tensions between India and Pakistan.

This article originally appeared on The Economic Times

COMMENTS (6)

Khan | 9 years ago | Reply @Dipak: Personalities do not matter so much in foreign policy as you think. Strategy is not crafted by one person, but is instead delegated to committees set up to discuss each country and region. America's relationship with India matters less and less to its relationship to Pakistan and vice versa for one simple reason: It is not in America's self-interest to distance itself too far from either India or Pakistan, but it is in America's interest to have close relationships with both, Everything in diplomacy is about self-interest, not individual personalities.
Neutral | 9 years ago | Reply It definitely does.
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