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Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan has been repeatedly threatening the possibility of a nuclear war with India over Kashmir after his efforts to internationalize the matter failed to gain any traction. Photo: Facebook.

No change in Pakistan's nuclear policy: FO says on Imran's statement


There is no change in Pakistan’s nuclear policy, the Foreign Office has said, hours after Prime Minister Imran Khan vowed that his country will never ever start a war with India, amid escalating tensions between the nuclear powers over the Kashmir issue.

Addressing a gathering of the Sikh community at the Governor’s House in Lahore on Monday (September 2) evening, Khan said that both India and Pakistan are nuclear-armed countries and if tension escalates, the world will face danger. “There will be no first from our side ever,” he said, without explaining further.

Also read: India punctured Pakistan’s political prestige with Article 370 repeal

However, Khan has been repeatedly threatening the possibility of a nuclear war with India over Kashmir after his efforts to internationalize the matter failed to gain any traction. Khan also said that conflict creates more problems than resolving them. “I want to tell India that war is not a solution to any problem. The winner in war is also a loser. War gives birth to host of other issues,” he said.

However, Pakistan Foreign Office said that Khan’s comments were being taken out of context and did not represent a change in Islamabad’s nuclear policy. “Prime Minister’s comments on Pakistan’s approach towards conflict between two nuclear-armed states are being taken out of context. While conflict should not take place between two nuclear states, there’s no change in Pakistans nuclear policy,” Foreign Office spokesperson Mohammad Faisal said in a late-night tweet on Monday.

In August, Defence Minister Rajnath Singh had said that India may see a major shift in its nuclear weapons doctrine by doing away with a no first use policy in the future. “Till today, our nuclear policy is No First Use. What happens in future depends on the circumstances,” he had said at an event in Rajasthan’s Pokhran, the site of India’s nuclear tests in 1998.

Tensions between India and Pakistan spiked after India abrogated provisions of Article 370 of the Constitution to revoke Jammu and Kashmir’s special status and bifurcated it into two union territories.

India has categorically told the international community that the scrapping of Article 370 was an internal matter and also advised Pakistan to accept the reality.

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