12don MSNOpinion
Will Trump make Buddha 'smile' again? 27 years after Pokhran nuclear tests, India at critical point
In an era where global powers are flexing their nuclear muscles and dormant arsenals hum with renewed urgency, India stands ...
SHANTI has drawn considerable critique. Opponents argue the shift toward private sector involvement puts corporate profit motives ahead of public safety.
India’s parliament this week approved sweeping legislation designed to open the country’s tightly controlled nuclear power ...
5don MSN
India proposes landmark nuclear law to end state monopoly and allow private sector operators
India on Monday set in motion steps to end decades of state control over nuclear power, by introducing a bill in parliament that would allow private firms to build and operate plants as the government ...
India is preparing major reforms to open its nuclear power sector to private investment, aiming to accelerate its ...
(Dec 8): India’s planned overhaul of its energy laws will effectively open its atomic power sector for new investment, ...
India Today on MSN
India, China playing cat-and-mouse games in Bay of Bengal?
Indian Navy officers stand on INS Vagir, the fifth submarine of Project 75 (Reuters) India declares a no-fly zone over the ...
The Agni-V’s development and recent test firings mark a significant leap in India’s military prowess, particularly in the realm of nuclear deterrence. As part of India’s Agni series of ballistic ...
India demonstrated its nuclear capabilities by conducting a missile test on Wednesday as its rival, China, sent a spy ship capable of tracking missiles to the Indian Ocean. The Chinese Foreign ...
India formally announced the establishment of its Strategic Forces Command (SFC) on January 4, 2003, five years after testing a nuclear device at the Pokhran Test Range in 1998. The SFC is headed by a ...
Civilian flights and ships will avoid this area during this period and the Indian Navy and Air Force will monitor the zone.
13don MSNOpinion
View: India, revise the nuclear doctrine
India's 22-year-old nuclear doctrine, based on 'no first use' and 'credible minimum deterrence', faces urgent re-evaluation.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results