Perhaps it is time to play the game reeeally subtle and get Thimpu to announce an N-test soon.

LOLHari Seldon wrote:NoKo is indeed becoming a stick-ing point here. Dilli doesn't have a NoKo of its own to outsource testing to.
Perhaps it is time to play the game reeeally subtle and get Thimpu to announce an N-test soon.
There is no one fixed model for integrating with the world and it does not necessarily call for the door mat approach as seems to be the common understanding of "integration" in some sections of the GoI.vina wrote: However for India to progress, we NEED TO INTEGRATE WITH THE WORLD . .
If the yield was 45 kT it was expected to be less than 60 kT?csharma wrote:http://news.rediff.com/interview/2009/a ... uccess.htm
I have maintained and will always maintain that the test was not more than 60 per cent successful in terms of the yield it generated. I have made this assessment based on the report of the instrumentation data that is available and also the programme coordinator.
Yup.. All part of the good cop /bad cop routine. But the message is very clear. Push CTBT against our will and the Pokhran range will communicate to the seismometers around the world. Loud and clear.More smoke and mirrors
This puts the credibility of APJ in grave doubts , he is "the" establishment mancsharma wrote: Former President A P J Abdul Kalam, who was also involved with the tests, has said that Pokhran II was entirely successful.
I would like to react to that. First of all, Dr Kalam is not a nuclear scientist. He is a missile scientist and he was not present there at that time. He is blissfully ignorant of the facts. Do I need to say more?
ravi_s wrote:checking out the websites of cnn-ibn and ndtv, i see that this issue does not even figure at all..not even in the sidelines..
is it a deliberate enforcement by GOI to stuff out any discussion in the media..
Austin -he sure did the greatest of services to the nation -only he should have done it earlier -before the nuclear deal was signed - why he did not do then and doing now is the question markSanty is great , he has nerves and balls of steel that too a maragning steel.
He did a great service to his country , by bring out the truth and standing by it.
It takes a great courage to stand against the entire establishment and speak the truth
KS has come out openly and indicted APJ too . Now he says that his statement is based on the instrumentation data and not just on gora experts opinion.... is it the old DRDO instrumentation data which he is again referring to?Q: Former President A P J Abdul Kalam, who was also involved with the tests, has said that Pokhran II was entirely successful.
KS: I would like to react to that. First of all, Dr Kalam is not a nuclear scientist. He is a missile scientist and he was not present there at that time. He is blissfully ignorant of the facts. Do I need to say more?
All I want to say is that I stand my ground on this issue.
Read the passage again: "Instrumentation data that is available.."ravi_s wrote:From an interview with KS available in rediff..
http://news.rediff.com/interview/2009/a ... uccess.htm
Q: Former President A P J Abdul Kalam, who was also involved with the tests, has said that Pokhran II was entirely successful.
KS: I would like to react to that. First of all, Dr Kalam is not a nuclear scientist. He is a missile scientist and he was not present there at that time. He is blissfully ignorant of the facts. Do I need to say more?
All I want to say is that I stand my ground on this issue.
KS has come out openly and indicted APJ too . Now he says that his statement is based on the instrumentation data and not just on gora experts opinion.... is it the old DRDO instrumentation data which he is again referring to?
- Ravi
How do you reconcile the above public statements with this?Avarachan wrote:
Why the nuclear deal is just not doneIndo-US nuclear treaty: A good dealDr Santhanam said he thought it was going to be a win-win deal for India.
How do you reconcile this?
Arun_S wrote:14 Apr 2008 Added later: 1.B. One comment on that BR Missile article by Shri Santhanam was "but America has capped Indian ability to realize and mount that small TN payload on its missiles with this India-US civil nuclear deal"
http://www.drdo.org/pub/nl/aug2000/personnel.htmKS: I would like to react to that. First of all, Dr Kalam is not a nuclear scientist. He is a missile scientist
The valuable research contributions of Dr Santhanam include: understanding the biochemical mechanism underlying nutritional requirement for adaptation to high altitude stress and for accelerated healing of wounds; evaluation of dietary fibre in processed foods and ration items to formulate diets/compo-packs for maximum health benefits, biochemical demonstration of cancer preventive properties of some dietary constituents, use of commercial enzymes for food processing, induction of mobile malaria clinic in Assam: and field trial of quick test kits to detect cerebral malaria.
Yes. He admits this in the last interview:Sanjay wrote:What has KS done ? He has effectively stopped any govt siging the CTBT.
We should xpost the above to the Psyops thread.You speak so much about the timing of making your statement. What is this timing exactly?
There is a change in the administration in the United States of America. They are bound to further pressurise India to sign the CTBT. In such an event it was necessary to make such a statement or speak the truth on the issue so that India does not rush into signing the CTBT.
Therefore, I say the timing of my statement was perfectly right.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/n ... 037992.stmThe first ever fizzle was in the USA. America's 18th bomb test went wrong not once but twice. Buster Able failed to go off at all - presumably there was a serious "do we approach the lighted touch paper?" moment before they went back to look at what had gone wrong.
Three days later on 22 October 1951 they tried again and this time the high explosive went off but the plutonium produced a yield of - errrr... nothing.
Three years later the Soviets had to deal with their first fizzle. Fortunately it was test number 15 - if it had been the first test Stalin's henchman Beria would have sent the nuclear scientists to the gulags - at best.
Britain's first effort at a Hydrogen Bomb was a damp squib
Both the Americans and the Russians had already had a string of successes and so they either became too complacent or were trying too risky designs.
Britain's first effort at a Hydrogen Bomb was also a damp squib. The force of Grapple 1 on 15 May 1957 was a quarter of the size it was expected to be. Britain claimed it had built a super bomb but the Russians and Americans just sniggered.
A Chinese H-Bomb test in 1976 was another partial failure.
Thanks,Shankar wrote:To understand this bomb design, imagine that within a bomb casing you have an implosion fission bomb and a cylinder casing of uranium-238 (tamper). Within the tamper is the lithium deuteride (fuel) and a hollow rod of plutonium-239 in the center of the cylinder. Separating the cylinder from the implosion bomb is a shield of uranium-238 and plastic foam that fills the remaining spaces in the bomb casing. Detonation of the bomb caused the following sequence of events:
Off Topic nonsense...Willy wrote:All of you that are running down MMS need to realise that he has more ba**s than anyone in the earstwhile BJP govt had. He is in a situation where he has to fight not only the opposition but his own party as well. ABV didnt have the gumption to go after his party members and gave in to them all the time even though he knew that things needed to be done differently. ABV wanted to sack Modi but couldnt do it.All "IronMan" Advani can be remembered for these days is for freeing terrorists. No wonder he goes around tom tomming that he didnt know anything about it. MMS put his govt and political career on the line to push the nuke deal through.Point out anyone to me in the UPA or NDA govt capable of that these days. For all the shouting from the rooftop, the nuke deal was the best that India could get.Protest all you want but the deal has put India on a different level.
Is it a joke or what? Let me see MMS fight corruption at exact top of the food chain in Congress - yes the Sonia parivar - and I will give MMS credit. Sack Modi...you mean BJP should commit harakiri? When did MMS sack Budda for Nandigram? And let us see Nandigram isn't something which lasted only a few weeks. The killings and reign of terror went on for six months or more! MMS found it difficult to utter a single word. How about CBIs clean chits to everyone and anyone helping his govt? What is so "best" about nuke deal? I don't see no level change for India. I still see US forcing India to shut up after 26/11 *anyone remembers Gilani MMS summit*, I still see Pak sending terrorists in hordes to India, I still see Congress protesting arrest of terrorists, I still see China make new incursions into India everyday, I still see US requiring EUM. So what is the new level that people are claiming? Now I will provide example of something that gave India new level - nuke test. But I have never seen America dole out new level to anyone...it is only something India can do for itself.Willy wrote:All of you that are running down MMS need to realise that he has more ba**s than anyone in the earstwhile BJP govt had. He is in a situation where he has to fight not only the opposition but his own party as well. ABV didnt have the gumption to go after his party members and gave in to them all the time even though he knew that things needed to be done differently. ABV wanted to sack Modi but couldnt do it.All "IronMan" Advani can be remembered for these days is for freeing terrorists. No wonder he goes around tom tomming that he didnt know anything about it. MMS put his govt and political career on the line to push the nuke deal through.Point out anyone to me in the UPA or NDA govt capable of that these days. For all the shouting from the rooftop, the nuke deal was the best that India could get.Protest all you want but the deal has put India on a different level.
Right govt will do all in its power to do whatever it wants. But what I don't understand is how come most Indians are naive enough to assume one is enough. I have never seen even one US military leader who will allow such a joke to stand. Hell...even after hundreds of test and most advanced nuke industry in the world they still want to test more and not depend on nuke simulations.csharma wrote:Does this really stop India from signing CTBT? I am not 100% sure. There can be a sustained media campaign to discredit him if the govt wants to go ahead with CTBT. So we have to wait and watch.
But then everybody would want their own test series, and not just the India+N5+Pakistan+NoKo, but everybody else as well.shiv wrote:Consider this "what if?" scenario that comes to mind.
MMS gives a firm commitment to sign the CTBT, but only after a series of tests. Just like China and France did?
Nice idea. Though its highly improbable that he will commit to signing the CTBT even before the tests are conducted. Infact a resolution to sign the CTBT is a good firefighting solution to the hulla balloo that will be raised after the tests are actually conducted. JMT.shiv wrote:Consider this "what if?" scenario that comes to mind.
MMS gives a firm commitment to sign the CTBT, but only after a series of tests. Just like China and France did?
http://www.ptinews.com/news/253135_Pokh ... --Kakodkar* Pokhran-II achieved 100 per cent desired results: Kakodkar
STAFF WRITER 17:6 HRS IST
Indore, Aug 28 (PTI) Dismissing a top nuclear scientist's contention that Pokharan II was not a complete success, Atomic Energy Commission chief Anil Kakodkar today said the tests in 1998 achieved "100 per cent desired results".
Speaking at a function organised by the Raja Ramanna Centre for Advanced Technology here, Kakodkar said, "Pokhran II tests were a complete success and they achieved 100 per cent desired results."
On Wednesday, Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) representative for Pokhran II K Santhanam had said that India should not sign the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT) as the country needed to carry out more tests since the thermonuclear tests in 1998 had failed to produce the desired results.
The reasons to test are different. I would think that the Indian TN weapon (whether it fizzled or not is debatable, lets say it needs further testing to be perfected) will be at par, weight and yield wise with the others in the world or at best wont be too far behind.Right govt will do all in its power to do whatever it wants. But what I don't understand is how come most Indians are naive enough to assume one is enough. I have never seen even one US military leader who will allow such a joke to stand. Hell...even after hundreds of test and most advanced nuke industry in the world they still want to test more and not depend on nuke simulations.
Problem for Amirkhan is Pakiland. Pig Nation will say what about equal/equal Unkil ?. Unkil has to say screw you, you are no equal ( Condi said that to the Porkis, BO has to repeat it loudly and clearly and show it in actions) . And more importantly, cut the Chin-Paki link of weapons and strategic support.CTBT has tremendous costs,both on you and us. So think carefully and deeply before pushing us on CTBT and trying to railroad it over an unwilling India. If you really want it that badly, it can happen only in two ways 1) You push us, and then you will hear from us at Pokhran on your seismometers or 2) We negotiate and we agree to a limited number of tests and we enter as a de jure power . For India , singing CTBT AND NPT AFTER testing makes eminent sense
harbans wrote: tests in 1998 achieved "100 per cent desired results".
http://www.ptinews.com/news/253135_Pokh ... --Kakodkar