Pakistani troops fired a short-range nuclear-capable ballistic
missile during exercises on Wednesday in the third such training
launch in as many weeks, the army said.
Soldiers from the country's strategic force command carried
out a "successful" launch of the Hatf III (Ghaznavi)
missile, which has a range of 290 kilometres (180 miles), an
army statement said.
The launch was witnessed by caretaker Prime Minister Mohammedmian
Soomro and army chief Ashfaq Kayani, the statement added, saying
that more details would be announced later.
Pakistan and India have routinely conducted missile tests since
the nuclear-armed South Asian neighbours carried out tit-for-tat
atomic detonations in May 1998.
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However in 2004 they launched a slow-moving peace process aimed
at ending six decades of hostility and resolving their dispute
over the Himalayan territory of Kashmir, the cause of two of
their three wars.
In February 2007 Pakistan and India signed a deal to cut the
risk of atomic weapons accidents.
The two countries have an agreement to notify each other about
tests of ballistic missiles but not cruise missiles.
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