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Pakistan: Musharraf Warns of Possible Greater Nuclear Dependency Western countries should not allow India to develop a military superiority that would force Pakistan to rely solely on nuclear weapons for its defense, Pakistani President Gen. Pervez Musharraf said yesterday (see GSN, June 13). A recent increase in Indian military spending, combined with continued restrictions on Pakistan seeking to purchase military equipment abroad, could create a “dangerous” military imbalance between the two nuclear-armed South Asian rivals, Musharraf said. If such an imbalance were to occur, Pakistan would be forced to rely on its nuclear arsenal to serve as its main deterrent, he said. “The other element of deterrence is your capability of striking and causing such damage to an enemy that is unbearable to him, and that can be done with a smaller force,” Musharraf said in an interview with the London Times. “Every country has to survive. Any country which wants to live in honor and dignity wants to preserve sovereign equality and its sovereignty. Nobody will compromise with that,” he said. Musharraf said he plans to warn U.S. President George W. Bush of the dangers of such a military imbalance when he meets with him at Camp David next week. If defense purchase restrictions on Pakistan cannot be lifted, then a similar “embargo” should be placed on India, he said. Musharraf also said that peace talks with India should begin as soon as possible, but criticized India’s suggestion that the disputed region of Kashmir be only one of several topics of the talks. “Kashmir cannot be sidelined,” Musharraf said (Evans/Maddox, London Times, June 19).
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