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Bhutto and vowed
Pakistan's Prime minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto vowed in June 1974 that he would never succumb to " nuclear blackmail " or accept " Indian hegemony or domination over the subcontinent ".< ref > The Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission Chairman Munir Ahmed Khan said that the test would force Pakistan to test its own nuclear bomb.
During her first term, Bhutto vowed to repeal the controversial Hudood Ordinance and to revert the Eight Amendment to the Constitution of Pakistan.
There, Bhutto vowed never to allow a repeat.

Bhutto and take
The senior high command officers in Pakistan Armed Forces, and Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, a former Karachi University professor of political science, began to pressure General Yahya Khan to take armed action against Mujib and his party.
Jamaat also play a vital role in a struggle against Bhutto government and is a largest party in terms of workers in Pakistan National Alliance ( PNA ) who take part in the movement with heart and soul.
In his report, Hamoodur Rahman founded and criticized Bhutto for his role in the 1971 crisis, to some extent implicating him as well of having manipulating General Yahya Khan to take military action.

Bhutto and against
In November 1971, General Yahya Khan ordered Pakistan Army Corps of Military Police to led the arrest of both Bhutto and Rehman and ordered an action to be taken against the East-Pakistan's military government.
Benazir Bhutto and her younger brother Murtaza spent the next eighteen months in and out of house arrest while she worked to rally political support in an attempt to force General Zia-ul-Haq to drop murder charges against her father.
In 1990, Major-General Pervez Musharraf, who was the Director-General of the Directorate-General for the Military Operations ( DGMO ), proposed a strategic plan against India to Benazir Bhutto calling for a Kargil Infiltration, but Benazir refused because General Musharraf didn't have a strategy for dealing with any resultant international fallout.
Powerful PPP leaders such as Ghulam Mustafa Khar openly condemned Bhutto and called for protests against his regime.
Finally, on 5 April 1977, Arif succeeded in secretly meeting with Bhutto, revealing the plot against him.
President Ghulam Ishaq Khan first used the VIII Amendment on August 6, 1990 against Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto on alleged cases of nepotism and the corruption.
It was again used in 1996 by President Farooq Ahmad Khan Leghari against his own party leader Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto in November 1996.
Tapping a wave of anger and opposition against Ayub, Bhutto began travelling across the country to deliver political speeches.
On 30 March 59 military officers were arrested by army troops for allegedly plotting a coup against Bhutto, who appointed then-Brigadier Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq to head a military tribunal to investigate and try the suspects.
The democratic socialists and Bhutto himself tapped a wave of anger and showed strong opposition against Ayub Khan, leading the civil disorder, disobedience, and lawlessness that forced Ayub Khan to held talks with Bhutto who would later opposed the Six point movement, presented by socialist Peoples League led by Sheikh Mujibur Rahman.
However, Bhutto and Peoples Party's adjustment with Pakistan National Alliance failed, sparking the civil disobedience against the Peoples Party, therefore the 1977 elections were held that resulted in first parliamentary victory of Peoples Party.
He ended up joining the Pakistan Peoples Party. He Contested the Presidential Elections 1972 against s Khan Amirzadah Khan Of NAP & all opposition parties and was made President in 1973, when the head of the PPP, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto was made Prime Minister.
Bhutto lobbied for Faiz and giving the honorary capacity at the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting ( MoIB ) working to rallying the people of West-Pakistan to fight against India to defend their motherland.
Pro Jamaat labor unions also raised against the government but Jamaat did not participated in Movement for the Restoration of Democracy ( MRD ) because actual leadership was in the hands of Bhutto family and Jamaat was against the reselection of Peoples Party.
Before 1971, Pakistan's nuclear development was peaceful but an effective deterrence against India, as Benazir Bhutto maintained in 1995.
After his long active service in the army in which he held numerous prestigious assignments, he came to national prominence in 1995 when along with Major-General Ali Kuli Khan of Military Intelligence exposed the attempted coup d ' état against the government of Prime minister Benazir Bhutto who conferred him with national award.
General Karamat rose to public prominence in 1995, when he exposed the attempted coup d ' état against the government of Prime minister Benazir Bhutto.
In protest at the autocratic tendencies of the Nawaz Sharif, the then Prime Minister, Mr. Jatoi joined hands with the opposition led by Bhutto in launching a movement against the Sharif government, resulting in its dismissal in 1993.
Benazir convinced her mother Nusrat Bhutto, then president of the Pakistan Peoples Party, to run against her.
The charges of corruption and mismanagement of the economy that he levelled against Nawaz Sharif were almost identical to those he had earlier brought against Benazir Bhutto in 1990.

Bhutto and Ayub
Problems with India continued with West when in 1965, Foreign minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and Defence minister Vice-Admiral Afzal Rahman Khan approached to President Ayub Khan for the approval of the covert-back operation, codename Operation Gibraltar.
In West-Pakistan, Ayub Khan deposed Bhutto as his Foreign minister, and Vice-Admiral Khan blamed Bhutto for this failure.
Problems further mounted after deposing of Foreign minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto by Ayub Khan.
After the Tashkent Agreement ended hostilities, Bhutto fell out with Ayub and was sacked from government.
That same year, Bhutto became the youngest Pakistan cabinet minister, on appointment to the Ministry of Water and Power by President Field Marshal Ayub Khan, who had seized power and declared martial law in a successful coup d ' état.
Bhutto became a close and trusted political advisor to Field Marshal Ayub Khan, rising in influence and power despite his youth and relative inexperience in politics.
Bhutto aided Ayub Khan in negotiating the Indus Water Treaty in India in 1960.
There, Bhutto helped Ayub negotiate trade and military agreements with the Chinese regime, which agreed to help Pakistan in a large number of military and industrial projects.
Bhutto advocated for the plan, but President Ayub Khan oppose to plan he was feared of retreat by Indian troops.
Instead Ayub Khan proposed a " joint defence union " with India, Bhutto was shocked by such statement and felt Ayub Khan was unlettered in international affairs.
Bhutto joined Ayub in Tashkent to negotiate a peace treaty with the Indian Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri.
After his release, Bhutto, joined by key leaders of PPP, attended the Round Table Conference called by Ayub Khan in Rawalpindi, but refused to accept Ayub's continuation in office and the East-Pakistani politician Sheikh Mujibur Rahman's Six point movement for regional autonomy.
While, Munir Ahmad Khan had failed to convince Ayub Khan, Bhutto had said to Munir Ahmad Khan: Don't worry, our turn will come.
In 1965, Faiz was first brought to government by charismatic democratic socialist Zulfikar Ali Bhutto who was tenuring as Foreign minister in the presidency of Ayub Khan.
Understanding the sensitivity of the issue, Bhutto arranged a meeting with President Ayub Khan December 11, 1965 at Dorchester Hotel in London.

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