"We know that there will be pressures on India if we exercise the nuclear option," says Mishra. "We believe that if such pressures are resisted, they will fade away after some time. If we perceive nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles as necessary for our security we will have to go ahead with it." The Pakistani establishment, too, is apprehensive about the BJP's policies and not just on nuclear issues. For them, the BJP's handling of Kashmir and the Indo-Pak dialogue is of as much importance as the nuclear stand. In any case, says Shireen Mazari, a Pakistani strategic affairs analyst, Indians are all the time upgrading their nuclear programme. "It is a continuous process and it's wrong to assume otherwise. New Delhi has not signed the CTBT so what difference will the BJP make? At least they will be more open about it." It is felt that eventually the Indian establishment will override what the BJP wants in the foreign affairs or the security fields, as it did in the case of Gujral's initiatives vis-a-vis Pakistan.