Pakistan on Thursday successfully test fired nuclear-capable
Hatf-III ballistic missile with a range of 290 km that could hit targets in India.
As
the test was conducted, a top Pakistani military official said the country had
developed a “strong nuclear deterrence capability” and was fully capable of
thwarting any aggression
A
statement issued by the military described the “training launch” of the
short-range Hatf III or Ghaznavi missile as successful.
“The
launch was conducted at the conclusion of the annual field training exercise of
the Army Strategic Force Command,” the statement said.
The
military did not say where the exercise was conducted.
It
said the missile could carry nuclear and conventional warheads to a range of
290 km.
The
training exercise was aimed at “testing the operational readiness of a
Strategic Missile Group,” the statement said.
Addressing
troops in the exercise area, Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee Chairman Gen
Khalid Shameem Wynne said the country had “developed a strong nuclear
deterrence capability.”
He
said: “Pakistan’s Armed
Forces are fully capable of safeguarding Pakistan’s security against
aggression.”
Wynne
said he expected the officers and men “entrusted with the task of deterring
aggression would continue to train hard and maintain professional excellence.”
He
commended the troops for a “high standard of proficiency in handling and
operating the state of the art weapon system.”
Besides
Wynne, the field training exercise was witnessed by Strategic Plans Division
Director General Lt Gen (retd) Khalid Ahmed Kidwai, Army Strategic Force
Command chief Lt Gen Tariq Nadeem Gilani, Karachi Corps Commander Lt Gen
Muhammad Ijaz Chaudhry, other senior military officials and scientists.
The
successful test was appreciated by the President and Prime Minister, who
congratulated the troops, scientists and engineers.
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