Chagai-II is the
codename
A code name, codename, call sign, or cryptonym is a code word or name used, sometimes clandestinely, to refer to another name, word, project, or person. Code names are often used for military purposes, or in espionage. They may also be used in ...
assigned to the second
atomic test conducted by
Pakistan
Pakistan, officially the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, is a country in South Asia. It is the List of countries and dependencies by population, fifth-most populous country, with a population of over 241.5 million, having the Islam by country# ...
, carried out on 30 May 1998 in the
Kharan Desert in
Balochistan Province of Pakistan.
''Chagai-II'' took place two days after Pakistan's first successful
test, ''
Chagai-I'', which was carried out on 28 May 1998 in the
Ras Koh area in
Chagai District, Balochistan, Pakistan.
The initial goals were to test the new designs of the weapon rather than studying the effects, and were different from the first tests in that they were primarily conducted by the
Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC), with the
Pakistan Armed Forces engineering formations having only a supporting role.
The tests detonated
implosion-type boosted-fission military-grade plutonium devices, contrary to the
Chagai-I tests that were
weapons-grade uranium devices.
The performance of these tests made it a total of six tests performed by Pakistan in May 1998.
Test preparations
Selection and planning
The
Kharan Desert is a
sandy and
mountainous desert, with very high temperatures. The region is characterised by very low rainfall, high summer temperature, high velocity winds, poor soils, very sparse vegetation and a low diversity of plant species; its average temperature are recorded in summer and in winter session (sources vary).
Safety and security required an isolated, remote, and
inhabitant area with
extreme weather
Extreme weather includes unexpected, unusual, severe weather, severe, or unseasonal weather; weather at the extremes of the historical distribution—the range that has been seen in the past. Extreme events are based on a location's recorded weat ...
conditions to prevent any possible
Radioactive Fallout. For this purpose, a
three-dimensional
In geometry, a three-dimensional space (3D space, 3-space or, rarely, tri-dimensional space) is a mathematical space in which three values (''coordinates'') are required to determine the position (geometry), position of a point (geometry), poi ...
survey was commenced by nuclear physicist Dr.
Ishfaq Ahmad assisted by
seismologist Dr. Ahsan Mubarak; it received final approval from
Munir Ahmad in 1976.
Unlike the
granite
Granite ( ) is a coarse-grained (phanerite, phaneritic) intrusive rock, intrusive igneous rock composed mostly of quartz, alkali feldspar, and plagioclase. It forms from magma with a high content of silica and alkali metal oxides that slowly coo ...
mountains, the PAEC requirement was to find a suitable site in a desert region with almost no wildlife to prevent any kind of
mutation
In biology, a mutation is an alteration in the nucleic acid sequence of the genome of an organism, virus, or extrachromosomal DNA. Viral genomes contain either DNA or RNA. Mutations result from errors during DNA or viral replication, ...
, and to study blast effects of the weapons.
The weapon-testing sites were suspected to be located at
Kharan, in a desert valley between the
Ras Koh region to the north and
Siahan Range to the south.
Subsequently, the
Chagai-
Ras Koh-Kharan were cordoned off, becoming restricted entry zones closed to the public.

After PAEC officials clearing with Prime minister
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto (5 January 1928 – 4 April 1979) was a Pakistani barrister and politician who served as the fourth president of Pakistan from 1971 to 1973 and later as the ninth Prime Minister of Pakistan, prime minister of Pakistan from 19 ...
, the preparations and
logistics
Logistics is the part of supply chain management that deals with the efficient forward and reverse flow of goods, services, and related information from the point of origin to the Consumption (economics), point of consumption according to the ...
matters were given to the
Pakistan Armed Forces.
A secretly coded telegram was sent from the
Prime Minister's Secretariat to
V Corps Brigadier Muhammad Sarfraz.
A helicopter, was arranged for the civilian scientists by Sarfraz.
In 1977, Sarfraz was dispatched to the
Military Engineering Service to commission
engineering formations of the Pakistan military by General
Zia-ul-Haq, the
Chief of Army Staff.
The PAEC officials readily agreed that the secondary tests would be scientific in nature with the armed forces playing the engineering roles.
The Special Development Works (SDW), assisted by the
Corps of Engineers,
Pakistan Army Corps of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering (PEME), and
Frontier Works Organisation (FWO), spearheaded the engineering of the potential sites. The military engineers were well aware of satellite detection, therefore the site at Kharan was constructed with extra cautions. The SDW built around 24 cold test sites, 46 short tunnels, and 35 underground accommodations for troops and command, control and monitoring facilities. The test site was and was L-shaped
horizontal shafts. Extensive installations of diagnostic cables,
motion sensors, and monitoring stations were established inside the test site. It took nearly 2–3 years for the SDW to prepare and preparations were completed in 1980, before Pakistan acquired the capability to physically develop an atomic bomb.
After posting at the
General Headquarters, Sarfraz transferred the work to Lieutenant-General
Zahid Ali Akbar, the
Engineer-in-Chief of the
Pakistan Army Corps of Engineers. The modernisation of the tests labs were undertaken by the FWO; the FWO uncredited work in the construction of the weapon-testings labs in Kharan Desert, and had supervised the entire construction on the sites along with the SDW.
Final preparations were overseen by then-Lieutenant-Colonel
Zulfikar Ali Khan and PAEC chairman
Munir Ahmad, assisted by Dr.
Ishfaq Ahmad, the
Member (Technical) of PAEC.
Test and blast yields
The Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC) teams of scientists and engineers arrived at the site led by Dr.
Samar Mubarakmand, a
nuclear physicist.
The tests were conducted on 30 May 1998 at 13:10
hrs (1:10 pm) (
PKT).
The
atomic bomb was small in size but very efficient and produced a very powerful
shock wave
In physics, a shock wave (also spelled shockwave), or shock, is a type of propagating disturbance that moves faster than the local speed of sound in the medium. Like an ordinary wave, a shock wave carries energy and can propagate through a me ...
and
blast yield.
The devices were
boosted fission weapons using
military-grade plutonium, yielding 60.1% of the first tests performed two days earlier.
The device was of a design cold tested in 1992. The Theoretical Physics Group (TPG) calculated that the blast yield was 20
kt of
TNT equivalent
TNT equivalent is a convention for expressing energy, typically used to describe the energy released in an explosion. A ton of TNT equivalent is a unit of energy defined by convention to be (). It is the approximate energy released in the de ...
.
Although the
American Physical Society
The American Physical Society (APS) is a not-for-profit membership organization of professionals in physics and related disciplines, comprising nearly fifty divisions, sections, and other units. Its mission is the advancement and diffusion of ...
estimated the yield at based on data received by their computer,
Dr.
Abdul Qadeer Khan confirmed the TPG blast calculations in an interview in 1998.
A crater now takes the place of what used to be a small hillock in the rolling desert, marking the ground zero of the nuclear test.
The Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (or PAEC) had tested one or more plutonium nuclear devices, and the results and data of the devices were successful as was expected by the Pakistan's mathematicians and seismologists.
[
]
Test teams
Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission
*
Samar Mubarakmand,
Member (Technical) at
PAEC.
*
Hafeez Qureshi, Directorate of Technical Development (DTD)
*Irfan Burney, Director of Directorate of Technical Procurement (DTP).
*Tariq Salija, Director of the Radiation and Isotope Applications Division (RIAD).
*Muhammad Jameel, Director of Directorate of Science and Engineering Services (DSES)
*Muhammad Arshad, the Chief Scientific Officer (CSO).
*
Asghar Qadir, director, Theoretical Physics Group
Pakistan Army Corps of Engineers
*
Lieutenant General
Lieutenant general (Lt Gen, LTG and similar) is a military rank used in many countries. The rank traces its origins to the Middle Ages, where the title of lieutenant general was held by the second-in-command on the battlefield, who was norma ...
Zulfikar Ali Khan
Engineer-in-Chief of the
System
A system is a group of interacting or interrelated elements that act according to a set of rules to form a unified whole. A system, surrounded and influenced by its open system (systems theory), environment, is described by its boundaries, str ...
and
Combat Engineering Division of the
Pakistan Army Corps of Engineers
See also
*
Chagai-I
References
*
*
*
External links
*
*
*
{{coord missing, Balochistan, Pakistan
1998 in military history
1998 in Pakistan
Kharan District
Code names
Project-706
Nuclear history of Pakistan
Nawaz Sharif administration
History of science and technology in Pakistan
Pakistani nuclear weapons testing
Underground nuclear weapons testing
1998 in science
May 1998 in Asia