<p> Terrorism should not be a national strategy of any country, India said on Wednesday, even as it subtly underlined the danger of terrorists getting access to the nuclear arsenal of Pakistan.<br /><br /></p>.<p>“The dangers of discriminating among terrorists – good or bad or even yours and mine – are increasingly recognised. Terrorism is an international threat that should not serve national strategy. Nuclear terrorism even more so,” Foreign Secretary S Jaishankar said, inaugurating the meeting of the Implementation and Assessment Group of the Global Initiative to Combat Nuclear Terrorism (GICNT).<br /><br />The GICNT, which came into existence in 2006, emerged over the past 10 years as a voluntary international partnership of 86 nations and five international organisations, which are committed to strengthening global capacity to prevent, detect and respond to nuclear terrorism. <br /></p>
<p> Terrorism should not be a national strategy of any country, India said on Wednesday, even as it subtly underlined the danger of terrorists getting access to the nuclear arsenal of Pakistan.<br /><br /></p>.<p>“The dangers of discriminating among terrorists – good or bad or even yours and mine – are increasingly recognised. Terrorism is an international threat that should not serve national strategy. Nuclear terrorism even more so,” Foreign Secretary S Jaishankar said, inaugurating the meeting of the Implementation and Assessment Group of the Global Initiative to Combat Nuclear Terrorism (GICNT).<br /><br />The GICNT, which came into existence in 2006, emerged over the past 10 years as a voluntary international partnership of 86 nations and five international organisations, which are committed to strengthening global capacity to prevent, detect and respond to nuclear terrorism. <br /></p>