Army says missile test is successful VIENNA: Pakistan appears to be building a fourth military nuclear reactor, signalling its determination to produce more plutonium for atomic weapons, a US-based think-tank said. The report came as India and Pakistan agreed to resume peace talks that were broken off by New Delhi after the 2008 Mumbai attacks, a move that should help ease tensions in the volatile region. The nuclear-armed neighbors have been under pressure from the United States to reduce tension because their rivalry spills over into Afghanistan, complicating peace efforts there. The Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS), a think-tank specializing in nuclear proliferation issues, said it had obtained commercial satellite images from mid-January. They showed “what appears to be a fourth reactor under construction at Pakistan's Khushab nuclear site,” ISIS experts David Albright and Paul Brannan said in the Feb. 9 report. “Pakistan is determined to produce considerably more plutonium for nuclear weapons,” they wrote. Pakistan's mission to the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the UN nuclear watchdog, was not immediately available for comment. Pakistan has made clear its opposition to global talks to ban future production of nuclear bomb-making material, arguing that existing stocks of plutonium and enriched uranium should be included to counter India's advantage. India is believed to hold about 100 warheads and Pakistan 70 to 80, according to the Washington-based Arms Control Association. Some analysts say Pakistan's nuclear arsenal and stockpile of weapons-grade material pose a risk in the region because of internal security threats from the Taliban and al Qaeda. Iran and North Korea, seen as major proliferation risks by the West, are believed to have benefited from a nuclear smuggling ring run by Pakistani scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan, the father of Pakistan's atomic bomb and a national hero. ISIS published images which it said showed a building relatively early in its construction at Khushab, about 170 km southwest of Islamabad. It added that “the footprint for the building is similarly sized to that of the second and third Khushab reactors.” In imagery from late 2009, vapor could be seen rising from the second reactor's cooling tower fan blades, indicating it was at least at some stage of initial operation, ISIS said. “Vapor can again be seen rising from some of the second reactor's cooling towers in the January 15, 2011 imagery, though none can be seen yet over the third reactor's cooling towers.” Meanwhile, Pakistan's military says it has successfully test-fired a cruise missile capable of carrying “strategic and conventional” war heads. An army statement says the Hatf-VII or Babur missile, which has a range of 600 km, was test-fired from an undisclosed location Thursday. The statement did not specifically say if the missile could carry nuclear warheads. Senior army officials and scientists attended the testing. Pakistan and its nuclear-armed rival neighboring India routinely test different versions of their missiles.