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How Pakistan defeated India's Operation Parakram in 2001

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NEW DELHI, FEB. 5. Problems with India‘s military doctrine, and a lack of clarity within the Union Cabinet and on its war objectives may have undermined Operation Parakram at the very outset.

In an exclusive interview to The Hindu , the former Chief of the Army Staff, General S. Padmanabhan, has thrown new light on the reasons for the failure of Operation Parakram, the massive build-up ordered in the wake of the December 13, 2001, terrorist attack on Parliament House. He was responding to criticism that a slow mobilisation of the troops “gifted” Pakistan time to prepare its defences — and eventually meant that the Operation had to be called off.

Gen. Padmanabhan argues that significant military gains could have been achieved in January 2002, had politicians made the decision to go to war. These objectives, he says, could have included “degradation of the other force, and perhaps the capture of disputed territory in Jammu and Kashmir. They were more achievable in January, less achievable in February, and even less achievable in March. By then, the balance of forces had gradually changed.”

Critics of Gen. Padmanabhan’s management of Operation Parakram have argued that air strikes against terror training camps could have been carried out within days the December 13 outrage. The Army, in turn, said that it needed time to prepare for the escalatory consequences of such attacks. Pakistan, Army planners believed, had an interest in taking the conflict towards a nuclear flash-point as soon as possible. The Army believed the best prospects of avoiding such a situation was having forces in place that could rapidly secure war objectives.

According to Gen. Padmanabhan, the kinds of limited strikes some were pushing for would have been “totally futile.” “If you really want to punish someone for something very terrible he has done,” he said, “you smash him. You destroy his weapons and capture his territory.” “War is a serious business,” he continues, “and you don’t go just like that. When December 13 happened, my strike formations were at peace locations. At that point, I did not have the capability to mobilise large forces to go across.”

Military doctrine — problems

Part of the problem appears to have been India’s defence-oriented military doctrine, which assigns most formations to hold ground against enemy attack. Offensive roles are largely assigned to three strike formations, the Mathura-based 1 Corps, the Ambala-based 2 Corps and the Bhopal-based 21 Corps. Unlike these strike formations, most other Corps can at best carry out very limited offensive tasks. India, Gen. Padmanabhan’s remarks suggest, could have ended up starting a war from which it would have gained very little, and that too at great cost.

Doctrinal baggage, he accepts, crippled India’s early options in 2002. “You could certainly question why we are so dependent on our strike formations,” he said, and “and why my holding Corps don’t have the capability to do the same tasks from a cold start. This is something I have worked on while in office. Perhaps, in time, it will be our military doctrine.” Gen. Padmanabhan’s new book, “The Writing on the Wall — India Checkmates America 2017,” among other things, describes a fictional war in which India retakes the Haji Pir pass in Pakistan-Occupied Kashmir.

Correctives being taken

Efforts are now under way to rectify some of these problems in doctrine identified in the course of Operation Parakram. The present Army Chief, Gen. Nirmal C. Vij, has pushed through an ambitious modernisation of India’s ground forces. New weapons systems are now being introduced which will allow each Corps a limited offensive capability of its own, reducing dependence on the strike formations. India’s Special Forces are also being re-equipped to improve their ability to operate behind enemy lines for considerable lengths of time, and could play a key role in a future war.

It remains unclear, however, just why the politicians who ordered the build-up finally chose not to use the military machine they had assembled. “Everyone seems to feel that the U.S. held us back,” Gen. Padmanabhan says. “Perhaps they did; perhaps they didn’t. I don’t know anything specific on this. I do know that that there was great consternation on the other side, Pakistan, because of the huge Indian build-up. Finally, it was a decision that had to be made by our political masters.”

There are no answers, either, to the evident confusion in policy-making that underpinned Operation Parakram. Gen. Padmanabhan’s account of decision-making suggests that India’s security establishment had not planned exactly how it would respond to a major terrorist attack.

Nor, it would appear, did the political leadership clearly understand the military options available, just how long they would take to execute, and what their potential consequences could be.

Just as important, few within the Army seemed to have planned and prepared for a short, sharp conflict with Pakistan, suggesting the lessons of the Kargil war remained unlearned. The Hindu. S. Padmanabhan. Gen. Padmanabhan mulls over lessons of Operation Parakram By Praveen Swami

Indo-Pak – SEMINAR REPORT
#88, 30 August 2003
Coercive Diplomacy: Operation Parakram: An Evaluation

Report of the IPCS seminar held on 8 August 2003
Aisha and Prafulla Ketkar, Research Officers, IPCS

Chair:PR Chari

Speaker:Maj Gen Ashok Mehta

Discussant:Lt Gen VK Sood

The moderator for the session, P R Chari, initiated the discussion by stating that Operation Parakram cannot be dubbed either as an ‘outstanding success’ or a ‘great failure’ as the truth lies somewhere in between. While ceding the floor to the main speaker Lt. Gen. Ashok Mehta, he suggested the discussion look into two important issues: i) Feasibility of limited conventional or nuclear war in the subcontinent and ii) State of reforms in the defence apparatus

Maj Gen Ashok Mehta

Last year India embarked upon the path of ‘coercive diplomacy’ through Operation Parakram. The venture was undertaken in the name of ‘self-defence’, which provided adequate justification in the post 9/11 environment. But to judge Operation Parakram as a failure or success would be wrong, as it was an untested venture. However, coercive diplomacy failed due to the mismatch of India-US diplomacy and India’s failure to think through the end game.

Operation Parakram, the name given to the 10 month-long mobilization and deployment of troops along the LOC, comprised of 3 distinct strands namely Diplomacy, Conventional Military and Nuclear. The aim of the Operation was to curb proxy war and end terrorism. The mobilization was intended to back diplomacy; hence the entire exercise was an attempt at coercive diplomacy. The Operation pressed into service the Indian Army and Air Force. The big picture sketched out for the Operation consisted of 4 essential ingredients and 1 assumption.

The 4 ingredients were:
Application of military pressure for meeting political ends
Backing coercive diplomacy with regular diplomacy;
Asserting the importance of war as an instrument of last resort;
Reiterating the primacy of political will.

The underlying assumption on which Operation Parakram was based was the unflinching support and cooperation of the US to end CBT (Cross Border Terrorism).

On the question of how close the two countries came to war, Gen. Mehta said that it was touch and go on many occasions with special reference to six strategic opportunities that came India’s way. While the first two opportunities, pre 9/11 and post 9/11, were prior to the December 13 attack on the Indian Parliament, the others came in the wake of the attack on Parliament. 16 December, 9 January and 9 June were some of these critical occasions. December 16 saw passions run high after the Parliament attack, making war with Pakistan seem inevitable. January 9 provided an opportune time for India to initiate an offensive against Pakistan, which was preoccupied with the Taliban on the Durand Line. US assurances and Musharraf’s speeches defused the volatile situation. Musharraf’s 12 January and 27 May speeches need special mention. While the former was seen as a statement of intent that helped defuse the January 9 crisis, the 27 May speech embodied a guarantee to end cross-border terrorism and thereby facilitate defusing the June 9 situation. However, by June 9, the surprise element was lost. What followed in later months were incessant deliberations about the future course of action. September-October provided the much needed window closing incentive that brought to an end the 10 month long deployment. The military was convinced of the feasibility of undertaking a successful short duration, limited war under the nuclear threshold. Lack of political will proved to be the stumbling block.

On the reasons for not going to war with Pakistan, the General said that they ranged from costs-benefit analysis to lack of courage. Here are some of them:

The costs and risks of going to war outweighed the gains accruing from it.

India did not have the stomach for war, especially with the US failing to act as a force multiplier.

Gujarat riots opened another front for India.

Going to war would signal the failure of coercive diplomacy.

The Government was not as certain as the military was on the efficacy of going to war.

As for the reasons for the failure of Operation Parakram, they are:
Coercion was not calibrated. Issues like who is coercing whom and to what ends, were not deliberated beforehand. Last step, i.e. deployment, was taken first.

The entire Operation lacked synergy and packaging

Absence of an exit strategy. This resulted in the futile threat of war for a period long beyond its relevance.

On the issue of US involvement the speaker said that the US played an ‘intimate and intricate’ role in the entire crisis. It shifted between being Musharraf’s messenger to being his guarantor. The US’s objective was to prevent the outbreak of war between India and Pakistan, which it considers as a ‘nuclear flashpoint’, at all costs. It deterred India from following in its footsteps as in Afghanistan by stating that India was not the US and Pakistan was not the Taliban and hence India should show restraint and solve the differences by dialogue.

Operation Parakram had positive as well as negative fallouts. Among the positive ones were:

1.Professional benefits for the Army. There was no loss of morale.

2.Infiltration came down considerably; by as much as 53% according to one estimate.

3.For the first time the complicity of Pakistan Army and its support to jehadi elements came under international scrutiny.

4.The Operation dispelled doubts of nuclear instability in the region. Between 22 May – 8 June, as many as 7-8 signals were exchanged between the two countries to present a nuclear showdown.

The negative fallouts of the Operation included the following:

1.Pakistan was emboldened by the episode. It felt they had deterred India. However, according to the speaker, India was in reality ‘self-deterred’; and only slightly deterred by the US.

2.India felt let down by the US in its mission of tackling CBT.

3.India failed to achieve strategic space as well as strategic autonomy.

The end result was that,

US strategic presence increased in the region.

Pakistan continues to be a frontline ally of the US.

13/12 stalemate continues.

The only positive result has been the initiation of a peace dialogue between India and Pakistan.

Among the lessons learnt was the fact that coercive diplomacy is most effective in an asymmetric situation. Between equals, conventional diplomacy works best. Finally, Operation Parakram cannot be compared to Operation Brasstacks. While Operation Brasstacks was a training exercise, Operation Parakram was a real operation, but not put to test. Hence to state that it was a success or a failure would be incorrect.

Lt Gen VK Sood

Operation Parakram, an enormous exercise in logistics, was intended as an attempt at coercive diplomacy, without its perquisites. Coercive diplomacy is meant to back ones’ demand on an adversary with the threat of punishment for non-compliance, which is potent enough for the adversary to comply. It comprises four essential variables:

1.Demand.

2.Means used for creating a sense of urgency.

3.Defining the threatened punishment for non-compliance. Threatened use of force marks the threshold.

4.Use of incentives for compliance.

Efficacy of coercive diplomacy depends on:
Adversary’s motivation and commitment and,
Adversary’s assessment of the credibility or potency of own threat.

According to the Gen. Sood, Musharraf never took India seriously, especially after January, when India lost a golden opportunity to embark on an offensive against a distracted Pakistan, which was waging war against the Talibans on the Durand Line. The two biggest flaws that proved to be the undoing of Operation Parakram were:
Lack of political will: This was the reason for India’s inability to wage a war against Pakistan, as also for Pakistan ignoring the threat. Despite the mobilization being initiated in December, no political directive was provided to the Service Chiefs for execution as late as in August 2002. On the contrary, the Chief of Army Staff was asked to draw up a directive in August to extricate the Army from the imbroglio.
Lack of exit strategy: Exit strategy for the adversary as well as own self is of paramount importance to the success of any operation. Operation Parakram lacked this basic component. Only at the time of demobilization was some objective ‘contrived’; and put forth as reasons for pulling out which was termed ‘strategic relocation’.

Other shortcomings noted included:
Late and unrealistic assessment of US help – This aspect should have been looked into before embarking on the mission, not after, as was done in this case.

Wrong move – During Kargil, military action followed conventional diplomacy. In Operation Parakram, it was the opposite, ensuring its doom from the very beginning. The goal of achieving a ‘Kargil in reverse’ required the use of air power, which could then have a cascading effect and escalate the crisis. However, salami slicing or surgical strikes would have served the purpose and prevented further escalation.
Loss of credibility is equivalent to loss of war, which India had to suffer by undertaking this unsuccessful Operation. Deployment without the ability to use force is ‘puffery’, which India indulged in. Though there was no long-term and permanent damage to the morale of the Armed Forces, there was certainly great disillusionment among the younger officers as a result of this Operation.

Discussion

Some of the issues and queries that were raised in the ensuing question and answer session were as follows:

Gen VP Malik: Gen. Malik’s basic premise was that India is, at least at the psychological level, a ‘non-military’ nation. Therefore no military action should take place without national support. On Operation Parakram, the General was of the opinion that it was lack of a clear aim (e.g. putting an end to CBT or demanding the handing over of the list of 20) and political objectives that resulted in the fiasco. On the larger issue of the efficacy of coercive diplomacy, he believed that any long drawn out coercive diplomacy will erode defence credibility and capability, thereby proving ineffectual. This is all the more pertinent for a country like India, which is an amateur in the field of coercive diplomacy, as seen during the Sri Lankan crisis. Pointing to the disconnect at two levels – between military personnel and diplomats on the one hand and political leadership and military leadership on the other, Gen. Malik blamed this on the lack of comprehensive understanding of each others compulsions that led to eventual failure of these operations. According to the General, post-Pokhran II has heralded a new situation in which the military man is entrusted with the task of providing different options to political masters. The General had coined the term ‘strategic relocation’ for describing what was to be the escape route from Operation Parakram.

Gen. Vohra: Gen. Vohra dwelt on the place of war for middle level countries like India. He was of the opinion that India is not in a position to overwhelm Pakistan through exercises in coercive diplomacy. Punitive action and surgical strikes are two feasible options against Pakistan.

Anand Verma: Mr. Verma was of the opinion that India’s capability of engaging in coercive diplomacy is a myth considering its poor record in the past. Coercive diplomacy is not India’s cup of tea as India lacks the essential ‘killer instinct’ to carry out such tasks. This was proved beyond doubt during Operation Brasstacks, which had a hidden political agenda, but failed because of the lack of will power on India’s part. He strongly believed that Pakistan will never give upon Kashmir, nor stop its proxy war. Dependence on US good offices to remedy the situation will also prove futile as being an ally of Pakistan, the US is bound to fail us, as seen on many occasions in the past, when India’s national interests clashed with those of Pakistan’s. In a situation where neither coercive diplomacy nor good offices will yield results, the only solution is to make India overwhelmingly superior to Pakistan in all respects.

Air Commodore Jasjit Singh:In Jasjit Singh’s view use of force includes questions of credibility, capability and communication. It also calls for an immaculate selection of time, method and limits. Operation Parakram was India’s first venture in offensive defence. Its failure was because of the stalemate that it permitted. He made two important observations: i) political will sans national will in a democratic set up will result in failure as seen in the case of Operation Parakram, which failed to muster consensus within and outside government. ii) One cannot ignore the international environment or global opinion while making a choice of strategy and application of force.

Ambassador Salman Haider: Amb. Haider, at the outset, dispelled the popular assumption that all government departments work in opposition to each other. He said that there is a harmonious and constructive relationship among various government agencies. On the question of war, his conviction was that no self- respecting government would ever go to war on emotive issues.

Lt Gen BS Mallik: Gen BS Mallik stated that Pakistan thought that India backed out, because of its own weakness, and hence there was no need to make any concessions. However, the Europeans are of the view that coercive diplomacy achieved a lot. It established a connection between CBT and deterrence. Moreover, it has shown that the cost of CBT can be raised to cause internal failure.

Dr Salma Bawa: Dr Bawa blamed the lack of a politico-strategic decision-making culture as the root cause of India’s dismal performance in Operation Parakram. She was critical about India’s dependence on outside players, like the US, for assistance, despite having grand illusions of becoming a global player. She lamented the lack of synergy between the defence and political leadership in a democratic setup like ours.

Brigadier Subhash Kapila: Brig Kapila felt that India had no scope for coercive diplomacy in Operation Parakram, as it lacked the three essential components required, namely, i) political will, ii) war preparedness and iii) strategic vision. The US will never allow India to impose its will on Pakistan. He questioned the role and effectiveness of advisory bodies like the NSAB (National Security Advisory Board) and NSC (National Security Council). On the issue of diplomacy, the primacy of PMO (Prime Minister’s Office) over Foreign office was questioned. The two suggestions made by Brig. Kapila were: i) Need for constructive political engagement of the armed forces with the leadership and ii) evolving other options, apart from the use of force, in dealing with Pakistan.

Kalyan Raman:He blamed the lack of a well thought out course of action as the main cause for the failure of India’s tryst with coercive diplomacy. Negating the allegation that coercive diplomacy fails between nuclear weapon states, he cited the example of the USA and the USSR during the Cuban missile crisis. Appreciating the sanctity of the LOC, which India maintained during the Kargil crisis, he suggested the need for crossing the international border at other points to punish Pakistan.

Arpit Rajain: Arpit felt that the attack on the Indian Parliament was violation of the highest threshold, which compelled India to undertake a game of bargaining in the form of Operation Parakram. But for any bargain to work the response of the party targeted (in this case Pakistan) is crucial. One of the main reasons for the failure of Operation Parakram was India’s lack of credibility in the eyes of Pakistan. According to him, the US factor was a big factor in the entire crisis.

Some of the other issues that found mention during the discussion were:
How does one use military force to achieve political objectives in a nuclearised environment?

How can a limited war be kept limited, when two nuclear powers are involved?

How can a limited war be fought in pursuit of limited objectives?

There was speculation that the change in US support might be a result of the change in India’s stand from short, surgical strikes to deep, penetrating attacks.

The Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies (IPCS) is the premier South Asian think tank which conducts independent research on and provides an in depth analysis of conventional and non-conventional issues related to national and South Asian security including nuclear issues, disarmament, non-proliferation, weapons of mass destruction, the war on terrorism, counter terrorism , strategies security sector reforms, and armed conflict and peace processes in the region.

For those in South Asia and elsewhere, the IPCS website provides a comprehensive analysis of the happenings within India with a special focus on Jammu and Kashmir and Naxalite Violence. Our research promotes greater understanding of India’s foreign policy especially India-China relations, India’s relations with SAARC countries and South East Asia.

Through close interaction with leading strategic thinkers, former members of the Indian Administrative Service, the Foreign Service and the three wings of the Armed Forces – the Indian Army, Indian Navy, and Indian Air Force, – the academic community as well as the media, the IPCS has contributed considerably to the strategic discourse in India.

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Pakistani Nukes: Youm e Takbir defiantly screams "Don't Mess with us"

“Our military first policy calls for an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, retaliation for retaliation, ultra-hardline for hardline, war for war, total war for total war, nuclear war for nuclear war.” – Kim Jong-il

TOKYO – A little-noted fact about the second nuclear test conducted on May 25 by the Kim Jong-il administration of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) is that it was a highly successful fission trigger test for multi-megaton warheads.

These types of warheads can be detonated in outer space, far above the United States, evaporating its key targets. This is a significant indication of the supreme leader’s game plan for nuclear war with the crippled superpower and its allies, Japan and South Korea.

The North Korean Foreign Ministry on April 29 announced its plan to test-fire what it termed a long-awaited “intercontinental ballistic missile” (ICBM), the first public ICBM test after numerous missile tests, short-range, medium-range, and long-range, were conducted without notice.

On March 9, the General Staff of the nuclear-armed Korean People’s Army had begun preparing to launch simultaneous retaliatory strikes on the US, Japan and South Korea in response to their act of war.

Although no appropriate test site for a thermonuclear bomb is available on the Korean Peninsula, North Korean scientists and engineers are confident, as a series of computer simulations have proved that their hydrogen bombs will be operational. The North Korean message is that any soft spots of the US, Japan and South Korea’s defense lines will be used as the testing grounds for their thermonuclear weapons.

The Korean Central News Agency said on May 25 that the underground nuclear test was carried out at the request of nuclear scientists and engineers and reported:

The current nuclear test was safely conducted on a new higher level in terms of its explosive power and technology of its control and the results of the test helped satisfactorily settle the scientific and technological problems arising in further increasing the power of nuclear weapons and steadily developing nuclear technology.

John Pike, the founder and director of globalsecurity.org, told the Weekly Standard on October 19, 2006, that the North Korean nuclear test that year may have been a test of a “trigger device” for a much larger hydrogen bomb. Writing in the New York Times on April 7, 2009, he revealed that “North Korea’s low-yield nuclear test in October 2006 did “coincide with the sub-kiloton tests of the fission trigger for a hydrogen bomb”. He added, “possibly North Korea’s hydrogen bombs can be easily fitted on missiles”.

The Kim Jong-il administration has developed its global nuclear strike capability primarily as a deterrent to US invasion to keep the Korean Peninsula out of war. Secondly, it needs operational nuclear missiles targeted at US and Japanese targets in the event of a DPRK-US war.

The North Korean state-run newspaper, Minjo Joson, vowed on June 9 to use nuclear weapons in war as “merciless means of offense to deal retaliatory strikes” against anyone who “dares infringe upon the dignity and sovereignty of the DPRK even a bit”.

Scenario for nuclear war

After shifting to a plan B, Supreme Leader Kim Jong-il has put in place a nuclear game plan as a part of the plan’s military first policy to deal with nuclear rogue state America and its allies South Korea and Japan. (See Kim Jong-il shifts to plan B, Asia Times Online, May 21)

The nuclear game plan is designed firstly to militarily prevent the US from throwing a monkey wrench into the plans of the Kim Jong-il administration for economic prosperity by 2012 – the centenary of the birth of founding father Kim Il-sung – in a bid to complete its membership of the three elite clubs of nuclear, space and economic powers.

Its second aim is to win the hearts and minds of the 70 million Korean people, North, South and abroad, and leave little doubt in their eyes that Kim Jong-il has what it takes to neutralize and phase out the American presence in Korea. This will hasten the divided parts of ancestral Korean land – bequeathed by Dankun 5,000 years ago and Jumon 2,000 years ago – coming together under a confederal umbrella as a reunified state.

It is designed to impress upon the Korean population that Kim Jong-il is a Korean David heroically standing up to the American Goliath, that he can lead the epic effort to settle long-smoldering moral scores with the US over a more than 100-year-old grudge match that dates as far as the 1905 Taft-Katsura Agreement and the 1866 invasion of Korea by the USS General Sherman.

Third, Kim Jong-il has described the shift to plan B as a stern notice for the governments of the US and its junior allies that they cannot get away with their hostile behavior any longer, unless they are prepared to leave their booming economies consumed in a great conflagration of retaliatory thermonuclear attacks.

The game plan assumes that the US is unlikely to shake off its aggressive behavior until it is wiped off this planet. The Barack Obama administration has not taken much time to reveal its true colors, which are no different from the George W Bush administration. There have been four compelling signs:

First, the March 9-20 Key Resolve (Team Spirit) joint war games between the US and South Korea.

Second, the US-led United Nation Security Council’s (UNSC) condemnation of an innocuous April 5 satellite launch.

Third, the rehashing of counterfeit money charges that the US has failed to produce compelling evidence to support. As Newsweek wrote in its June 8 issue, “The Treasury Department couldn’t find a single shred of hard evidence pointing to North Korean production of counterfeit money.”

Fourth, the presence of Bush holdovers in the Obama administration, such as Stuart Levy, the architect of Bush-era financial sanctions intended to criminalize the DPRK.

Four types of hydrogen bomb raids

The game plan for nuclear war specifies four types of thermonuclear assault: (1) the bombing of operating nuclear power stations; (2) detonations of a hydrogen bombs in seas off the US, Japan and South Korea; (3) detonations of H-bombs in space far above their heartlands; and (4) thermonuclear attacks on their urban centers.

The first attack involves converting operating nuclear power plants on the coastline of the three countries into makeshift multi-megaton H-bombs.

The New York Times on January 24, 1994, quoted Paul Leventhal, president of the Nuclear Control Institute, warning that North Korea could easily launch de-facto hydrogen bomb attacks on South Korea.

“North Korean retaliation to bombing could result in vastly more fallout in the South than in the North … North Korean retaliatory bombing could bring Chernobyls multiplied.”

If bombed, one average operating nuclear power station is estimated to spew out as much deadly fallout as 150-180 H-bombs. Bombing one nuclear power station would render the Japanese archipelago and South Korea uninhabitable. Doing the same to the US may require bombing one plant on its west coast and another on its east coast.

Nothing is easier than bombing a power plant on a coastline. There is no need to use a ballistic missile. Primitive means will do the job.

The US has 103 operating nuclear power stations with onsite storage of a huge quantity of spent fuel rods and Japan has 53 operating atomic power stations. Japan has a stockpile of weapons-grade plutonium – enough to assemble more than 1,000 atomic bombs in a short period of time. South Korea has 20 operating nuclear power stations with onsite storage of a huge quantity of spent fuel rods.

The detonation of sea-borne or undersea H-bombs planted on the three countries’ continental shelves will trigger nuclear tsunamis with devastating consequences.

A 2006 RAND study of a ship-based 10-kiloton nuclear blast on the Port of Long Beach had some harrowing conclusions:

“Within the first 72 hours, the attack would devastate a vast portion of the Los Angeles metropolitan area. Because ground-burst explosions generate particularly large amounts of highly radioactive debris, fallout from the blast would cause much of the destruction. In some of the most dramatic possible outcomes:

Sixty thousand people might die instantly from the blast itself or quickly thereafter from radiation poisoning.

One hundred and fifty thousand more might be exposed to hazardous levels of radioactive water and sediment from the port, requiring emergency medical treatment.

The blast and subsequent fires might completely destroy the entire infrastructure and all ships in the Port of Long Beach and the adjoining Port of Los Angeles.

Six million people might try to evacuate the Los Angeles region.

Two to three million people might need relocation because fallout will have contaminated a 500-square-kilometer area.

Gasoline supplies might run critically short across the entire region because of the loss of Long Beach’s refineries – responsible for one-third of the gas west of the Rocky Mountains.

RAND projects that the economic costs would exceed $1 trillion.

The third possible attack, a high-altitude detonation of hydrogen bombs that would create a powerful electromagnetic pulse (EMP), would disrupt the communications and electrical infrastructure of the US, the whole of Japan, and South Korea.

Many of the essential systems needed to survive war would be knocked out, as computers are instantly rendered malfunctioning or unusable. Military and communications systems such as radars, antennas, and missiles, government offices, would be put out of use, as would energy sources such as nuclear power stations and transport and communications systems including airports, airplanes, railways, cars and cell phones.

Ironically the ubiquity of high-tech computing gadgets in the US, Japan and South Korea has made them most vulnerable to EMP attacks.

The last and fourth attack would be to order into action a global nuclear strike force of dozens of MIRVed ICBMs – each bearing a thermonuclear warhead on a prefixed target.

The Yongbyon nuclear site has always been a decoy to attract American attention and bring it into negotiations on a peace treaty to formally end the Korean War. Since as far back as the mid-1980, North Korea has assembled 100-300 nuclear warheads in an ultra-clandestine nuclear weapons program. The missiles can be mounted on medium-range missiles designed to be nuclear capable.

A prototype ICBM was assembled by the end of the 1980s. Two prototype ICBMs were test-fired on May 29, 1993, with one splashing down off Honolulu and the other off Guam. The Kim Jong-il administration gave an advance notice to the US government of the long-range missile test. But the American reaction was skeptical.

In April 2001, the Associated Press quoted Navy representative Mark Kirk’s “terrifying encounter in 1993 with what seemed possible nuclear attack” from North Korea. He recalled:

It was a no notice, no warning missile launch out of North Korea, and for the first and only time in my career in the NMJIC [National Military Joint Intelligence Center], I got to see all of the panoply of the United States military wake up in a few seconds.

We did not know what kind of missile it was, so the impact area, at the beginning, was the entire United States, and you thought about what we might be doing in the next 12 minutes: would we be notifying the president that we had lost an American city? We were going to know the answer in 12 minutes.

At first it still included the Pacific Coast, then it included Hawaii.

AP added: “Little was made of the 1993 launch at the time because it wasn’t determined until later that it likely flew over Japan and landed in the Pacific Ocean, Kirk said.”

It was not until 1998 that the US notified the Japanese government of the flyover of a North Korean long-range missile before splashing down off Hawaii. The US National Aeronautics and Space Administration quietly labeled the 1998 satellite launch a success.

According to a February 12, 2003, AP report, US intelligence had concluded a few years earlier that North Korea has a ballistic missile capable of hitting the western United States and possibly targets farther inland.

Kim Myong Chol is author of a number of books and papers in Korean, Japanese and English on North Korea, including Kim Jong-il’s Strategy for Reunification. He has a PhD from the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea’s Academy of Social Sciences and is often called an “unofficial” spokesman of Kim Jong-il and North Korea. Nuclear war is Kim Jong-il’s game plan By Kim Myong Chol

(Copyright 2009 Kim Myong Chol.)

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Pakistan has more nukes than India: US experts confirm

The source of this information are Mr. Norris and Mr. Kristensen.

http://thebulletin.metapress.com/content/xm38g50653435657/?p=ddf52842837645c2aa6a20690e04960c?=9

Estimated Globa l Nuclear Weapons Inventories , 2009
  • Russia 13,000*
  • United States 9,400**
  • France 300
  • China 240
  • Britain 180
  • Israel 80–100
  • Pakistan 70–90
  • India 60–80
  • North Korea ?
  • Tota l ~23,360
* Approximately 4,850 of the Russian warheads are operational or active. The status of the other 8,150 warheads is unclear. Some portion may be in reserve with the balance retired and awaiting dismantlement.

** Approximately 5,200 of the U.S. warheads are in the military stockpile (about 2,700 deployed); 4,200 retired warheads are awaiting dismantlement.

WASHINGTON: Pakistan is estimated to have more nuclear warheads than India and the two Asian neighbours along with China are increasing their arsenals and deploying weapons at more sites, two eminent American atomic experts have claimed.

While Pakistan is estimated to possess 70-90 nuclear weapons, India is believed to have 60-80, claims Robert S Norris and Hans M Kristensen in their latest article ‘Nuclear Notebook: Worldwide deployments of nuclear weapons, 2009′.

The article published in the latest issue of ‘Bulletin of the Atomic Science’ claimed that Beijing, Islamabad and New Delhi are quantitatively and qualitatively increasing their arsenals and deploying weapons at more sites, yet the locations are difficult to pinpoint.

For example, no reliable public information exists on where Pakistan or India produces its nuclear weapons, it said.

“Whereas many of the Chinese bases are known, this is not the case in Pakistan and India, where we have found no credible information that identifies permanent nuclear weapons storage locations,” they said.

“Pakistan’s nuclear weapons are not believed to be fully operational under normal circumstances, India is thought to store its nuclear warheads and bombs in central storage locations rather than on bases with operational forces. But, since all three countries are expanding their arsenals, new bases and storage sites probably are under construction,” the two nuclear experts said. Pakistan has more nuclear weapons than India, claim US experts, PTI, Nov 18, 2009, 01.11pm IST

India

Chandighar Plant Punjab Various Possible warhead production.

Jodhpur Storage Facility Rajasthan Prithvi/Agni SSMs Potential underground storage facility for Prithvi and/or Agni missile launchers.

Unknown air force facility Unknown Bombs For possible use by Jaguar IS at Gorakhpur and

Lohegaon Air Bases and Mirage 2000H at Ambala and Gwalior Air Bases.

Unknown army facility12 Unknown Prithvi/Agni SSMs For use by 222nd and 333rd Missile Groups (Prithvi), and 334th and 335th Missile Groups (Agni).

Unknown navy facility Unknown Dhanush SSMs For Dhanush ship-launched SSMs.13

SUBTOTAL 5

Pa kistan

Fatehjang National Defense Complex

Punjab SSMs Missile development and potential warhead storage capability.

Masroor Weapons Depot Sindh Various Possible storage of bombs for Mirage Vs at Masroor Air Base and/or warheads for SSMs.

Sargodha Weapons Depot

Punjab Various Possible storage site of bombs for F-16s at nearby

Sargodha Air Base and warheads for SSMs.15

Shanka Dara Missile Complex

Punjab SSMs Missile development and potential warhead storage capability.

Three kilometers north of Quetta Air Base

Balochistan Bombs Possible storage site with underground facilities in high-security weapons storage area.

Wah OrdnanceFacility

Punjab Various Possible warhead production, disassembly, and

dismantlement facility.16

Unknown air force facility

Unknown Bombs Central air force storage facility with bombs for F-

16s at Sargodha Air Base and Mirage Vs at Kamra Air Base.

Unknown army facility

Unknown SSMs/GLCM s Central army storage facility with warheads for

SSMs and Babur cruise missiles.

Posted in Current Affairs, India CA, Pak CAComments Off

Pakistani Nukes: Holes in the Washington Post "story"

Pakistan’s nuclear programme is being targeted for more than a decade now, but fresh assaults indicate a change in tact to discredit Pakistani nukes. Once again, R Jeffery Smith and Joby Warrick, Washington Post staff writers, on December 28, hit back with their fresh piece titled: Pakistani scientist depicts more advanced nuclear programme in North Korea in response to an article, Alleging nuclear proliferation, published last week in this paper. The respected columnists, quoting Pakistani nuclear scientist Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan’s previously unpublicised account, “reveal” that North Korea has constructed a plant to manufacture gas needed for uranium enrichment. A development that indicates Pyongyang opened a second way to build nuclear weapons as early as the 1990s. According to scale by 2002, with “maybe 3,000 or even more” centrifuges, and that Pakistan helped the country with vital machinery, drawings and technical advice for at least six years.

The writers state that Dr Khan’s “revelation” could not be independently corroborated but an American intelligence official and a diplomat jumped on the information, concluding that it adds to their suspicions that North Korea has long pursued the enrichment of uranium in addition to making plutonium for bombs, and that may help explain its assertion in September that it is in the final stages of such enrichment.

There are numerous loopholes in the “exposé”. Firstly, in an attempt to contradict Pakistan’s stand that the government, especially the custodian of Pakistan’s nuclear programme, its army was also involved, has been clumsily dealt with by adopting “name-dropping”. For example, the authors mention the period of 1990 and name Lieutenant General Khalid Kidwai, who currently oversees Pakistan’s atomic arsenal as the Director General of the Strategic Plans Division (SPD), the nucleus of Pakistan’s Nuclear Command Authority, for approving the proliferation. I know General Kidwai personally, and can vouch that in 1990; he was only a lieutenant colonel and had nothing to do with Pakistan’s nuclear assets; and became associated with the SPD in 1999.

Dr Khan’s account reveals details of the pilot plant, alleging that North Korea built it without help. He describes that during a visit to North Korea in 1999, he toured a mountain tunnel, where his hosts showed him boxes containing components of three finished nuclear warheads, which he was told could be assembled for use atop missiles within an hour and six boxes containing split cores for the warheads, as well as 64 igniters/detonators per bomb packed in six separate boxes.

The authors quote Simon Henderson, Dr Khan’s journalist friend for over two and a half decades, who has a rationale for soft-pedalling the Pakistani scientist because he is soliciting his cooperation in inscribing the Khan biography. However, Dr Khan’s motive for permitting his name to be used in the “disclosure” is best explained by a quote from Siegfried S Hecker, a former Los Alamos National Laboratory director, who was allowed to see some North Korean plutonium during a visit to its nuclear facilities in January 2004. Hecker said after hearing Khan’s description of the trip that he remains unconvinced that the country in 1999 had enough fissile material on hand to make such weapons. He said that Khan may have tried to get himself “off the hook, to say what [he]…did was not that bad because these guys already had nuclear weapons. That’s a nice way to cover his own tracks.”

Smith, Warrick et al quote a rebuttal from Song Ryol Han, the North Korean ambassador to the United Nations, who denied that his country had a uranium programme before last spring or that it ever discussed the issue “with Dr Khan in Pakistan.” Song said that “only after last April, when the US hostility entered an extremely critical stage” the country did start such a programme as a “nuclear deterrence” measure. However, in the next breath, Smith and Warrick “reveal” quoting Dr Khan that “10 North Korean experts came to Kahuta and were housed within the complex,” referring to the city in northeastern Pakistan where his laboratory is situated. They maintain Khan said three army staff chiefs approved the stay of the North Koreans, who “were officially allowed to visit all the workshops and meet and discuss freely with the scientists and engineers.” This is not only preposterous but belies reason, since Pakistan has not only shared its findings of the investigations into the case of the “rogue proliferator” with IAEA, but has won accolades internationally for its robust nuclear security protocol. The complicity of any army chief or any other army personnel in the alleged proliferation activity is out of question. Discrediting Pak nukes again By S.m. Hali | Published: December 30, 2009. The writer is a political and defence analyst.

Posted in Current Affairs, Pak CA, Politics, US CAComments Off

Maligning Pakistan: Why the Washington Post is rehashing old urban legends about “proliferation”

Here we go again—an old story rehashed by the paragon of news veracity—the same newspaper that ran the story about the Iraqi WMDs multiple times. It is now in the forefront of war hysteria against another Muslim country. It is again repeating the same old story that was repeated a decade ago. The timing of this story is significant—it is being published while President Barack Obama is on his tour of Beijing.

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Friday dismissed a media report about Beijing providing it with weapons-grade uranium and a blueprint for an atomic bomb and described it as an effort to divert attention from support being extended by “some states” to India’s nuclear programme. Foreign office spokesman Abdul Basit described the allegations made in an article in the Washington Post newspaper as “baseless”.

 ”Pakistan strongly rejects the assertions in the article that is evidently timed to malign Pakistan and China,” he said.
“This is yet another attempt to divert attention from the overt and covert support being extended by some states to the Indian nuclear programme since its inception and intensified more recently in stark contradiction to their self-avowed commitment to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty,” he said.

Pakistan and China have “comprehensive and all-dimensional cooperation”, which includes civilian nuclear cooperation for peaceful purposes, Basit said.

“This has always been above board. Pakistan and China have always respected their respective international obligations and non-proliferation norms,” he said.

Citing an account provided by disgraced nuclear scientist A Q Khan, the Washington Post reported on Friday that China provided Pakistan enough weapons-grade uranium for two atomic bombs and the blueprint for a simple nuclear weapon in 1982.

The US state department dismissed the Washington Post sensationalism.

Washington, Nov.14 (ANI): The US State Department has said it has no specific concern about nuclear proliferation from Pakistan.

“We don’t have any specific concerns about proliferation per se specifically from Pakistan. We feel confident that the command and control of nuclear weapons in Pakistan secure,” The News quoted spokesman Ian Kelly, as saying.

The statement came hours after reports were flashed in the media about China providing weapons-grade uranium, sufficient for making two atomic bombs, to Pakistan in 1982.

The transfer of nuclear fuel was ‘part of a broad-ranging, secret nuclear deal approved years earlier by Mao Zedong and Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto that culminated in an exceptional, deliberate act of proliferation by a nuclear power,’ a US newspaper had reported.

The United States maintains that had information about illegal nuke transfers between Pakistan and China, but has never raised the issue in public.

The issue is expected to come up for discussion during President Barack Obama’s maiden Beijing visit next week. (ANI)Read more: http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/south-asia/us-has-no-specific-concern-about-nuclear-proliferation-from-pakistan_100274630.html#ixzz0WuFqU1Jr

The unsubstantiated Washington Post story is a rehash of old wine in new bottle type of reporting. It is this type of reporting about the Iraqi WMDs that led up to the frenzy of the war on Iraq.

In 1982, a Pakistani military C-130 left the western Chinese city of Urumqi with a highly unusual cargo: enough weapons-grade uranium for two atomic bombs, according to accounts written by the father of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons program, Abdul Qadeer Khan, and provided to The Washington Post.

The uranium transfer in five stainless-steel boxes was part of a broad-ranging, secret nuclear deal approved years earlier by Mao Zedong and Prime Minister Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto that culminated in an exceptional, deliberate act of proliferation by a nuclear power, according to the accounts by Khan, who is under house arrest in Pakistan.

U.S. officials say they have known about the transfer for decades and once privately confronted the Chinese — who denied it — but have never raised the issue in public or sought to impose direct sanctions on China for it. President Obama, who said in April that “the world must stand together to prevent the spread of these weapons,” plans to discuss nuclear proliferation issues while visiting Beijing on Tuesday.

According to Khan, the uranium cargo came with a blueprint for a simple weapon that China had already tested, supplying a virtual do-it-yourself kit that significantly speeded Pakistan’s bomb effort. The transfer also started a chain of proliferation: U.S. officials worry that Khan later shared related Chinese design information with Iran; in 2003, Libya confirmed obtaining it from Khan’s clandestine network.

China’s refusal to acknowledge the transfer and the unwillingness of the United States to confront the Chinese publicly demonstrate how difficult it is to counter nuclear proliferation. Although U.S. officials say China is now much more attuned to proliferation dangers, it has demonstrated less enthusiasm than the United States for imposing sanctions on Iran over its nuclear efforts, a position Obama wants to discuss.

Although Chinese officials have for a quarter-century denied helping any nation attain a nuclear capability, current and former U.S. officials say Khan’s accounts confirm the U.S. intelligence community’s long-held conclusion that China provided such assistance.

“Upon my personal request, the Chinese Minister . . . had gifted us 50 kg [kilograms] of weapon-grade enriched uranium, enough for two weapons,” Khan wrote in a previously undisclosed 11-page narrative of the Pakistani bomb program that he prepared after his January 2004 detention for unauthorized nuclear commerce.

“The Chinese gave us drawings of the nuclear weapon, gave us kg50 enriched uranium,” he said in a separate account sent to his wife several months earlier.

China’s Foreign Ministry last week declined to address Khan’s specific assertions, but it said that as a member of the global Non-Proliferation Treaty since 1992, “China strictly adheres to the international duty of prevention of proliferation it shoulders and strongly opposes . . . proliferation of nuclear weapons in any forms.”

Asked why the U.S. government has never publicly confronted China over the uranium transfer, State Department spokesman Philip J. Crowley said, “The United States has worked diligently and made progress with China over the past 25 years. As to what was or wasn’t done during the Reagan administration, I can’t say.”

Khan’s exploits have been described in multiple books and public reports since British and U.S. intelligence services unmasked the deeds in 2003. But his own narratives — not yet seen by U.S. officials — provide fresh details about China’s aid to Pakistan and its reciprocal export to China of sensitive uranium-enrichment technology.

A spokesman for the Pakistani Embassy in Washington declined to comment for this article. Pakistan has never allowed the U.S. government to question Khan or other top Pakistani officials directly, prompting Congress to demand in legislation approved in September that future aid be withheld until Obama certifies that Pakistan has provided “relevant information from or direct access to Pakistani nationals” involved in past nuclear commerce.

Insider vs. government

The Post obtained Khan’s detailed accounts from Simon Henderson, a former journalist at the Financial Times who is now a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and who has maintained correspondence with Khan. In a first-person account about his contacts with Khan in the Sept. 20 edition of the London Sunday Times, Henderson disclosed several excerpts from one of the documents.

Henderson said he agreed to The Post’s request for a copy of that letter and other documents and narratives written by Khan because he believes an accurate understanding of Pakistan’s nuclear history is relevant for U.S. policymaking. The Post independently confirmed the authenticity of the material; it also corroborated much of the content through interviews in Pakistan and other countries.

Although Khan disputes various assertions by book authors, the narratives are particularly at odds with Pakistan’s official statements that he exported nuclear secrets as a rogue agent and implicated only former government officials who are no longer living. Instead, he repeatedly states that top politicians and military officers were immersed in the country’s foreign nuclear dealings.

Khan has complained to friends that his movements and contacts are being unjustly controlled by the government, whose bidding he did — providing a potential motive for his disclosures.

Overall, the narratives portray his deeds as a form of sustained, high-tech international horse-trading, in which Khan and a series of top generals successfully leveraged his access to Europe’s best centrifuge technology in the 1980s to obtain financial assistance or technical advice from foreign governments that wanted to advance their own efforts.

“The speed of our work and our achievements surprised our worst enemies and adversaries and the West stood helplessly by to see a Third World nation, unable even to produce bicycle chains or sewing needles, mastering the most advanced nuclear technology in the shortest possible span of time,” Khan boasts in the 11-page narrative he wrote for Pakistani intelligence officials about his dealings with foreigners while head of a key nuclear research laboratory.

Exchanges with Beijing

According to one of the documents, a five-page summary by Khan of his government’s dealmaking with China, the terms of the nuclear exchange were set in a mid-1976 conversation between Mao and Bhutto. Two years earlier, neighboring India had tested its first nuclear bomb, provoking Khan — a metallurgist working at a Dutch centrifuge manufacturer — to offer his services to Bhutto.

Khan said he and two other Pakistani officials — including then-Foreign Secretary Agha Shahi, since deceased — worked out the details when they traveled to Beijing later that year for Mao’s funeral. Over several days, Khan said, he briefed three top Chinese nuclear weapons officials — Liu Wei, Li Jue and Jiang Shengjie — on how the European-designed centrifuges could swiftly aid China’s lagging uranium-enrichment program. China’s Foreign Ministry did not respond to questions about the officials’ roles.

“Chinese experts started coming regularly to learn the whole technology” from Pakistan, Khan states, staying in a guesthouse built for them at his centrifuge research center. Pakistani experts were dispatched to Hanzhong in central China, where they helped “put up a centrifuge plant,” Khan said in an account he gave to his wife after coming under government pressure. “We sent 135 C-130 plane loads of machines, inverters, valves, flow meters, pressure gauges,” he wrote. “Our teams stayed there for weeks to help and their teams stayed here for weeks at a time.”

In return, China sent Pakistan 15 tons of uranium hexafluoride (UF6), a feedstock for Pakistan’s centrifuges that Khan’s colleagues were having difficulty producing on their own. Khan said the gas enabled the laboratory to begin producing bomb-grade uranium in 1982. Chinese scientists helped the Pakistanis solve other nuclear weapons challenges, but as their competence rose, so did the fear of top Pakistani officials that Israel or India might preemptively strike key nuclear sites.

Mohammed Zia ul-Haq, the nation’s military ruler, “was worried,” Khan said, and so he and a Pakistani general who helped oversee the nation’s nuclear laboratories were dispatched to Beijing with a request in mid-1982 to borrow enough bomb-grade uranium for a few weapons.

After winning Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping’s approval, Khan, the general and two others flew aboard a Pakistani C-130 to Urumqi. Khan says they enjoyed barbecued lamb while waiting for the Chinese military to pack the small uranium bricks into lead-lined boxes, 10 single-kilogram ingots to a box, for the flight to Islamabad, Pakistan’s capital.

According to Khan’s account, however, Pakistan’s nuclear scientists kept the Chinese material in storage until 1985, by which time the Pakistanis had made a few bombs with their own uranium. Khan said he got Zia’s approval to ask the Chinese whether they wanted their high-enriched uranium back. After a few days, they responded “that the HEU loaned earlier was now to be considered as a gift . . . in gratitude” for Pakistani help, Khan said.

He said the laboratory promptly fabricated hemispheres for two weapons and added them to Pakistan’s arsenal. Khan’s view was that none of this violated the 1968 Non-Proliferation Treaty, because neither nation had signed it at the time and neither had sought to use its capability “against any country in particular.” He also wrote that subsequent international protests reeked of hypocrisy because of foreign assistance to nuclear weapons programs in Britain, Israel and South Africa.

U.S. unaware of progress

The United States was suspicious of Pakistani-Chinese collaboration through this period. Officials knew that China treasured its relationship with Pakistan because both worried about India; they also knew that China viewed Western nuclear policies as discriminatory and that some Chinese politicians had favored the spread of nuclear arms as a path to stability.

But U.S. officials were ignorant about key elements of the cooperation as it unfolded, according to current and former officials and classified documents.

China is “not in favor of a Pakistani nuclear explosive program, and I don’t think they are doing anything to help it,” a top State Department official reported in a secret briefing in 1979, three years after the Bhutto-Mao deal was struck. A secret State Department report in 1983 said Washington was aware that Pakistan had requested China’s help, but “we do not know what the present status of the cooperation is,” according to a declassified copy.

Meanwhile, Chinese Premier Zhao Ziyang promised at a White House dinner in January 1984: “We do not engage in nuclear proliferation ourselves, nor do we help other countries develop nuclear weapons.” A nearly identical statement was made by China in a major summary of its nonproliferation policies in 2003 and on many occasions in between.

Fred McGoldrick, a senior State Department nonproliferation official in the Reagan and Clinton administrations, recalls that the United States learned in the 1980s about the Chinese bomb-design and uranium transfers. “We did confront them, and they denied it,” he said. Since then, the connection has been confirmed by particles on nuclear-related materials from Pakistan, many of which have characteristic Chinese bomb program “signatures,” other officials say.

Hans M. Kristensen, director of the Nuclear Information Project at the Federation of American Scientists, said that except for the instance described by Khan, “we are not aware of cases where a nuclear weapon state has transferred HEU to a non-nuclear country for military use.” McGoldrick also said he is aware of “nothing like it” in the history of nuclear weapons proliferation. But he said nothing has ever been said publicly because “this is diplomacy; you don’t do that sort of thing . . . if you want them to change their behavior.”

A nuclear power’s act of proliferation
Accounts by controversial scientist assert China gave Pakistan enough enriched uranium in ’82 to make 2 bombs

By R. Jeffrey Smith and Joby Warrick Washington Post Staff Writer Friday, November 13, 2009

Warrick reported from Islamabad. Staff researcher Julie Tate in Washington and Beijing bureau assistant Wang Juan contributed to this report.

Posted in Current Affairs, Pak CA, Politics, US CA, US Int Rel.Comments Off

America’s dealings with Pakistan may be increasing the risk of radicalization.

US machinations against Pakistani nukes: Analyzing Seymour Hersh

The US media has over the years repeatedly made a “non-issue” an issue. By repeatedly discussing the Pakistani nukes almost every week, the Americans increase Anti-Americanism in Pakistan and fuel militancy. The overt and covert discussion of Pakistan’s Nuclear program, the US. Seymour Hersh, the Jewish writer for the New Yorker is an American icon and a great journalist. He has done some seminal research on various subjects–most notably the “Mail Lai” massacre of Vietnamese civilians in South East Asia. However, many of Mr. Hersh articles have been based on rumor and innuendo. For example his paranoid article about the imminent attack on Iran were totally bogus. Many of his conspiracy theories have impacted his credibility and many think of him as a total crockpot with a great past.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AIUmAI6ag4U

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AIUmAI6ag4U]

Mr. Hersh has a couple of pet topics. One of them is Iranian nukes and the other is Pakistan’s Nuclear program. Whenever he cannot find enough material on other subjects be conjures up his old theories and publishes another article on Pakistani nukes–interviewing the same people with the same subject matter.

During the Bush era he wrote an article of how American troops were ready to take over Pakistan’s Atomic bombs. This caused much consternation in the Bush Administration because President Musharraf confronted President Bush about the Seymour Hersh article.

Things have remained the same. However his current article has caused much embarrassment in the Pakistani parliament where Prime Minister Gilani had to deny the US machinations and once again repudiate the American media reports about Pakistani nukes.

These Western reports provide fuel to the 5th column in Pakistan–to people like Pervez Hoodbhoy who use it to malign the country.

This sort of report provides Oxygen to India which then responds with haughty and pompous statements about “concern” and “worry”, as if anyone is worried about what Delhi thinks–least of all Pakistanis.

The article is all over the place, it starts off with hubris and arrogance saying that the US has done this that and the other–however as one reads the entire article, one realises that Mr. Hersh is a bit disjointed in his reporting.

On the nuclear security agreement also, some claims are debatable at least. For instance, he describes Pakistan’s nuclear doctrine as being based on a de-mating of the warheads from their triggers. This is absolutely false and nowhere has the military ever claimed this either in any reference to doctrine. In fact, the weapons are not de-mated at all but are simply not on hair trigger alert – which they do not need to be on in any case. So if his source of information is so incorrect, many of the other assumptions are also subject to doubt. For instance his claim, and he cites a former US intelligence officer to prove his point, that the Pakistanis gave the US a virtual look at such sensitive information as number of warheads, some locations, and so on is bizarre since even within the nuclear community this knowledge is not known except by very few. As for giving them information about command and control, Pakistan is one of the few countries that has put out a detailed explanation of its command and control structure in the public space. So what one can assume is the intelligence officer is confusing the briefing given to some journalists – foreign and Pakistani – about command and control, the programme and so on as a “virtual look”! That briefing is impressive and on seeking an explanation to the Hersh claim from SPD (Strategic Plans Division), the answer was that this is the only briefing that could have created the false impression. Shireen Mazar: Editor of The Nation

Seymour Hersh repeatedly quotes American authors as saying that even if there is some sort of understanding between the US and Pakistan, Islamabad cannot be trusted.

  • A retired senior Pakistani intelligence officer, who worked with his C.I.A. counterparts to track down Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, said that he was deeply troubled by the prospect of Pakistan ceding any control over its nuclear deterrent.
  • “Suppose the jihadis strike at India again—another attack on the parliament. India will tell the United States to stay out of it, and ‘We’ll sort it out on our own,’
  • “My belief today is that it’s better to have the Americans as an enemy rather than as a friend, because you cannot be trusted,” the former officer concluded. “The only good thing the United States did for us was to look the other way about an atomic bomb when it suited the United States to do so.”
  • Pakistan’s fears about the United States coöperating with India are not irrational
  • “We have twenty thousand people working in the nuclear-weapons industry in Pakistan, and here is this American view that Pakistan is bound to fail.” The official added,
  • “The Americans are saying, ‘We want to help protect your weapons.’ We say, ‘Fine. Tell us what you can do for us.’ It’s part of a quid pro quo.
  • You say, also, ‘Come clean on the nuclear program and we’ll insure that India doesn’t put pressure on it.’ So we say, ‘O.K.’ ”
  • But, the Pakistani official said, “both sides are lying to each other.”
  •  The information that the Pakistanis handed over was not as complete as the Americans believed.
  • “We haven’t told you anything that you don’t know,” he said. The Americans didn’t realize that Pakistan would never cede control of its arsenal:
  • “If you try to take the weapons away, you will fail.”
  • Musharraf also confirmed that Pakistan had constructed a huge tunnel system for the transport and storage of nuclear weaponry.
  • “The tunnels are so deep that a nuclear attack will not touch them,” Musharraf told me, with obvious pride.
  • The tunnels would make it impossible for the American intelligence community—“Big Uncle,” as a Pakistani nuclear-weapons expert called it—to monitor the movements of nuclear components by satellite.

Defending the Arsenal

America’s dealings with Pakistan may be increasing the risk of radicalization.

America’s dealings with Pakistan may be increasing the risk of radicalization.

In the tumultuous days leading up to the Pakistan Army’s ground offensive in the tribal area of South Waziristan, which began on October 17th, the Pakistani Taliban attacked what should have been some of the country’s best-guarded targets. In the most brazen strike, ten gunmen penetrated the Army’s main headquarters, in Rawalpindi, instigating a twenty-two-hour standoff that left twenty-three dead and the military thoroughly embarrassed. The terrorists had been dressed in Army uniforms. There were also attacks on police installations in Peshawar and Lahore, and, once the offensive began, an Army general was shot dead by gunmen on motorcycles on the streets of Islamabad, the capital. The assassins clearly had advance knowledge of the general’s route, indicating that they had contacts and allies inside the security forces.

Pakistan has been a nuclear power for two decades, and has an estimated eighty to a hundred warheads, scattered in facilities around the country. The success of the latest attacks raised an obvious question: Are the bombs safe? Asked this question the day after the Rawalpindi raid, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said, “We have confidence in the Pakistani government and the military’s control over nuclear weapons.” Clinton—whose own visit to Pakistan, two weeks later, would be disrupted by more terrorist bombs—added that, despite the attacks by the Taliban, “we see no evidence that they are going to take over the state.”

Clinton’s words sounded reassuring, and several current and former officials also said in interviews that the Pakistan Army was in full control of the nuclear arsenal. But the Taliban overrunning Islamabad is not the only, or even the greatest, concern. The principal fear is mutiny—that extremists inside the Pakistani military might stage a coup, take control of some nuclear assets, or even divert a warhead.

On April 29th, President Obama was asked at a news conference whether he could reassure the American people that Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal could be kept away from terrorists. Obama’s answer remains the clearest delineation of the Administration’s public posture. He was, he said, “gravely concerned” about the fragility of the civilian government of President Asif Ali Zardari. “Their biggest threat right now comes internally,” Obama said. “We have huge . . . national-security interests in making sure that Pakistan is stable and that you don’t end up having a nuclear-armed militant state.” The United States, he said, could “make sure that Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal is secure—primarily, initially, because the Pakistan Army, I think, recognizes the hazards of those weapons’ falling into the wrong hands.”

The questioner, Chuck Todd, of NBC, began asking whether the American military could, if necessary, move in and secure Pakistan’s bombs. Obama did not let Todd finish. “I’m not going to engage in hypotheticals of that sort,” he said. “I feel confident that the nuclear arsenal will remain out of militant hands. O.K.?”

Obama did not say so, but current and former officials said in interviews in Washington and Pakistan that his Administration has been negotiating highly sensitive understandings with the Pakistani military. These would allow specially trained American units to provide added security for the Pakistani arsenal in case of a crisis. At the same time, the Pakistani military would be given money to equip and train Pakistani soldiers and to improve their housing and facilities—goals that General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani, the chief of the Pakistan Army, has long desired. In June, Congress approved a four-hundred-million-dollar request for what the Administration called the Pakistan Counterinsurgency Capability Fund, providing immediate assistance to the Pakistan Army for equipment, training, and “renovation and construction.” 

The secrecy surrounding the understandings was important because there is growing antipathy toward America in Pakistan, as well as a history of distrust. Many Pakistanis believe that America’s true goal is not to keep their weapons safe but to diminish or destroy the Pakistani nuclear complex. The arsenal is a source of great pride among Pakistanis, who view the weapons as symbols of their nation’s status and as an essential deterrent against an attack by India. (India’s first nuclear test took place in 1974, Pakistan’s in 1998.)

A senior Pakistani official who has close ties to Zardari exploded with anger during an interview when the subject turned to the American demands for more information about the arsenal. After the September 11th attacks, he said, there had been an understanding between the Bush Administration and then President Pervez Musharraf “over what Pakistan had and did not have.” Today, he said, “you’d like control of our day-to-day deployment. But why should we give it to you? Even if there was a military coup d’état in Pakistan, no one is going to give up total control of our nuclear weapons. Never. Why are you not afraid of India’s nuclear weapons?” the official asked. “Because India is your friend, and the longtime policies of America and India converge. Between you and the Indians, you will fuck us in every way. The truth is that our weapons are less of a problem for the Obama Administration than finding a respectable way out of Afghanistan.” 

But for Hersh, Imam provides a logical development to his other theory, that it is not so much a Taliban seizure of the Pakistani nukes that is worrisome to the Americans but the fear of a “mutiny” within the army with extremists believing in the Hizbul Tahrir goal of setting up a Caliphate taking control of some nuclear assets or even diverting a warhead. Talk about being far fetched given that there is no history of mutiny in the army and the organisational interest is always supreme. Also, to a large extent the prevailing culture within the army reflects, to a large extent, the leadership at any given time. Also to assume that extremism is rampant in the military because generals no longer serve alcohol to visiting journalists is a bit ridiculous. I had argued on this point long and hard with Hersh after his last visit to Pakistan, when we met abroad, but clearly when a point has to be made, it will be made despite evidence to the contrary and no matter how fanciful the “proof”! 

First, let us look at some of the inaccuracies, if not outright falsehoods. The manner in which Hersh has dealt with Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal and his claims that Pakistan and the US began sensitive nuclear cooperation, reveal a preconceived mindset. The author set out to make certain points and then sought mostly unidentified sources to prove his point! This is evident because the largest single interview cited is of “Colonel Imam” whom Hersh describes as “the archetype of the disillusioned Pakistani officer”! Now anyone who knows Col Imam knows he is a maverick, with his own idiosyncratic perspective and is certainly not typical of even disillusioned army officers – although how many of those Hersh has actually met is also questionable. Shireen Mazar: Editor of The Nation

The ongoing consultation on nuclear security between Washington and Islamabad intensified after the announcement in March of President Obama’s so-called Af-Pak policy, which called upon the Pakistan Army to take more aggressive action against Taliban enclaves inside Pakistan. I was told that the understandings on nuclear coöperation benefitted from the increasingly close relationship between Admiral Michael Mullen, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and General Kayani, his counterpart, although the C.I.A. and the Departments of Defense, State, and Energy have also been involved. (All three departments declined to comment for this article. The national-security council and the C.I.A. denied that there were any agreements in place.)

In response to a series of questions, Admiral Mullen acknowledged that he and Kayani were, in his spokesman’s words, “very close.” The spokesman said that Mullen is deeply involved in day-to-day Pakistani developments and “is almost an action officer for all things Pakistan.” But he denied that he and Kayani, or their staffs, had reached an understanding about the availability of American forces in case of mutiny or a terrorist threat to a nuclear facility. “To my knowledge, we have no military units, special forces or otherwise, involved in such an assignment,” Mullen said through his spokesman. The spokesman added that Mullen had not seen any evidence of growing fundamentalism inside the Pakistani military. In a news conference on May 4th, however, Mullen responded to a query about growing radicalism in Pakistan by saying that “what has clearly happened over the [past] twelve months is the continual decline, gradual decline, in security.” The Admiral also spoke openly about the increased coöperation on nuclear security between the United States and Pakistan: “I know what we’ve done over the last three years, specifically to both invest, assist, and I’ve watched them improve their security fairly dramatically. . . . I’ve looked at this, you know, as hard as I can, over a period of time.” Seventeen days later, he told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, “We have invested a significant amount of resources through the Department of Energy in the last several years” to help Pakistan improve the controls on its arsenal. “They still have to improve them,” he said.

Coming to the Mullen news conference of 4th May where Hersh claims the Admiral spoke openly about increased cooperation on nuclear security between the US, Mullen did note that the US had worked with the Pakistanis to improve the security of their nuclear arsenal. Of course even this limited access to the US military is too much from the point of view of our arsenal’s security, but it does not imply “highly sensitive understanding” of the US “with the Pakistani military”. There is also little proof that ongoing consultations on nuclear security between Washington and Islamabad intensified after Obama’s Af-Pak policy – especially since the Af-Pak idea got a cold reception in Islamabad. Finally, the most far-fetched claim, citing an American official, in Hersh’s piece is that the army is controlled by the Punjabis who cannot get along with the Pushtuns, so somehow that creates a simmering undercurrent within the military, creating a veritable goldmine for mutiny! He really needs to look more carefully into the Pakistan army and its composition as well as its culture. Shireen Mazar: Editor of The Nation published on Ahmed Qureshi

In interviews in Pakistan, I obtained confirmation that there were continuing conversations with the United States on nuclear-security plans—as well as evidence that the Pakistani leadership put much less weight on them than the Americans did. In some cases, Pakistani officials spoke of the talks principally as a means of placating anxious American politicians. “You needed it,” a senior Pakistani official, who said that he had been briefed on the nuclear issue, told me. His tone was caustic. “We have twenty thousand people working in the nuclear-weapons industry in Pakistan, and here is this American view that Pakistan is bound to fail.” The official added, “The Americans are saying, ‘We want to help protect your weapons.’ We say, ‘Fine. Tell us what you can do for us.’ It’s part of a quid pro quo. You say, also, ‘Come clean on the nuclear program and we’ll insure that India doesn’t put pressure on it.’ So we say, ‘O.K.’ ”

But, the Pakistani official said, “both sides are lying to each other.” The information that the Pakistanis handed over was not as complete as the Americans believed. “We haven’t told you anything that you don’t know,” he said. The Americans didn’t realize that Pakistan would never cede control of its arsenal: “If you try to take the weapons away, you will fail.”

High-level coöperation between Islamabad and Washington on the Pakistani nuclear arsenal began at least eight years ago. Former President Musharraf, when I interviewed him in London recently, acknowledged that his government had held extensive discussions with the Bush Administration after the September 11th attacks, and had given State Department nonproliferation experts insight into the command and control of the Pakistani arsenal and its on-site safety and security procedures. Musharraf also confirmed that Pakistan had constructed a huge tunnel system for the transport and storage of nuclear weaponry. “The tunnels are so deep that a nuclear attack will not touch them,” Musharraf told me, with obvious pride. The tunnels would make it impossible for the American intelligence community—“Big Uncle,” as a Pakistani nuclear-weapons expert called it—to monitor the movements of nuclear components by satellite.

Safeguards have been built into the system. Pakistani nuclear doctrine calls for the warheads (containing an enriched radioactive core) and their triggers (sophisticated devices containing highly explosive lenses, detonators, and krytrons) to be stored separately from each other and from their delivery devices (missiles or aircraft). The goal is to insure that no one can launch a warhead—in the heat of a showdown with India, for example—without pausing to put it together. Final authority to order a nuclear strike requires consensus within Pakistan’s ten-member National Command Authority, with the chairman—by statute, President Zardari—casting the deciding vote.

But the safeguards meant to keep a confrontation with India from escalating too quickly could make the arsenal more vulnerable to terrorists. Nuclear-security experts have war-gamed the process and concluded that the triggers and other elements are most exposed when they are being moved and reassembled—at those moments there would be fewer barriers between an outside group and the bomb. A consultant to the intelligence community said that in one war-gamed scenario disaffected members of the Pakistani military could instigate a terrorist attack inside India, and that the ensuing crisis would give them “a chance to pick up bombs and triggers—in the name of protecting the assets from extremists.”

The triggers are a key element in American contingency plans. An American former senior intelligence official said that a team that has trained for years to remove or dismantle parts of the Pakistani arsenal has now been augmented by a unit of the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC), the élite counterterrorism group. He added that the unit, which had earlier focussed on the warheads’ cores, has begun to concentrate on evacuating the triggers, which have no radioactive material and are thus much easier to handle.

“The Pakistanis gave us a virtual look at the number of warheads, some of their locations, and their command-and-control system,” the former senior intelligence official told me. “We saw their target list and their mobilization plans. We got their security plans, so we could augment them in case of a breach of security,” he said. “We’re there to help the Pakistanis, but we’re also there to extend our own axis of security to their nuclear stockpile.” The detailed American planning even includes an estimate of how many nuclear triggers could be placed inside a C-17 cargo plane, the former official said, and where the triggers could be sequestered. Admiral Mullen, asked about increased American insight into the arsenal, said, through his spokesman, “I am not aware of our receipt of any such information.” (A senior military officer added that the information, if it had been conveyed, would most likely “have gone to another government agency.”)

A spokesman for the Pakistani military said, in an official denial, “Pakistan neither needs any American unit for enhancing the security for its arsenal nor would accept it.” The spokesman added that the Pakistani military “has been providing protection to U.S. troops in a situation of crisis”—a reference to Pakistan’s role in the war on terror—“and hence is quite capable to deal with any untoward situation.”

Early this summer, a consultant to the Department of Defense said, a highly classified military and civil-emergency response team was put on alert after receiving an urgent report from American intelligence officials indicating that a Pakistani nuclear component had gone astray. The team, which operates clandestinely and includes terrorism and nonproliferation experts from the intelligence community, the Pentagon, the F.B.I., and the D.O.E., is under standing orders to deploy from Andrews Air Force Base, in Maryland, within four hours of an alert. When the report turned out to be a false alarm, the mission was aborted, the consultant said. By the time the team got the message, it was already in Dubai.

In an actual crisis, would the Pakistanis give an American team direct access to their arsenal? An adviser to the Pentagon on counterinsurgency said that some analysts suspected that the Pakistani military had taken steps to move elements of the nuclear arsenal “out of the count”—to shift them to a storage facility known only to a very few—as a hedge against mutiny or an American or Indian effort to seize them. “If you thought your American ally was telling your enemy where the weapons were, you’d do the same thing,” the adviser said.

“Let me say this about our nuclear deterrent,” President Zardari told me, when asked about any recent understandings between Pakistan and the United States. “We give comfort to each other, and the comfort level is good, because everybody respects everybody’s integrity. We’re all big boys.”

Zardari and I met twice, first in his office, in the grand but isolated Presidential compound in Islamabad, and then, a few days later, alone over dinner in his personal quarters. Zardari, who became President after the assassination, in December, 2007, of his charismatic wife, former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, spent nearly eleven years in jail on corruption charges. He is widely known in Pakistan as Mr. Ten Per Cent, a reference to the commissions he allegedly took on government contracts when Bhutto was in power, and is seen by many Pakistanis as little more than a crook who has grown too close to America; his approval ratings are in the teens. He is chatty but guarded, proud but defensive, and, like many Pakistanis, convinced that the United States will always favor India. Over dinner, he spoke of his suspicions regarding his wife’s death. He said that, despite rumors to the contrary, he would complete his five-year term.

Zardari spoke with derision about what he depicted as America’s obsession with the vulnerability of his nation’s nuclear arsenal. “In your country, you feel that you have to hold the fort for us,” he said. “The American people want a lot of answers for the errors of the past, and it’s very easy to spread fear. Our Army officers are not crazy, like the Taliban. They’re British-trained. Why would they slip up on nuclear security? A mutiny would never happen in Pakistan. It’s a fear being spread by the few who seek to scare the many.”

Zardari offered some advice to Barack Obama: instead of fretting about nuclear security in Pakistan, his Administration should deal with the military disparity between Pakistan and India, which has a much larger army. “You should help us get conventional weapons,” he said. “It’s a balance-of-power issue.”

In May, Zardari, at the urging of the United States, approved a major offensive against the Taliban, sending thirty thousand troops into the Swat Valley, which lies a hundred miles northwest of Islamabad. “The enemy that we were fighting in Swat was made up of twenty per cent thieves and thugs and eighty per cent with the same mind-set as the Taliban,” Zardari said. He depicted the operation as a complete success, but added that his government was not “ready” to kill all the Taliban. His long-term solution, Zardari said, was to provide new business opportunities in Swat and turn the Taliban into entrepreneurs. “Money is the best incentive,” he said. “They can be rented.”

Zardari’s view of the Swat offensive was striking, given that many Pakistanis had been angered by the excessive use of force and the ensuing refugee crisis. The lives of about two million people were torn apart, and, during a summer in which temperatures soared to a hundred and twenty degrees, hundreds of thousands of civilians were crowded into government-run tent cities. Idris Khattak, a former student radical who now works with Amnesty International, said in Peshawar that residents had described nights of heavy, indiscriminate bombing and shelling, followed in the morning by Army sweeps. The villagers, and not the Taliban, had been hit the hardest. “People told us that the bombing the night before was a signal for the Taliban to get out,” he said.

Zardari did not dispute that there were difficulties in the refugee camps—the heat, the lack of facilities. But he insisted that the fault lay with the civilians, who, he said, had been far too tolerant of the Taliban. The suffering could serve a useful purpose: after a summer in the tents, the citizens of Swat might have learned a lesson and would not “let the Taliban back into their cities.”

Rahimullah Yusufzai, an eminent Pakistani journalist, who has twice interviewed Osama bin Laden, had a different explanation for the conditions that led to the offensive. “The Taliban were initially trying to win public support in Swat by delivering justice and peace,” Yusufzai said. “But when they got into power they went crazy and became brutal. Many are from the lowest ranks of society, and they began killing and terrorizing their opponents. The people were afraid.”

The turmoil did not end with the Army’s invasion. “Most of the people who were in the refugee camps told us that the Army was equally bad. There was so much killing,” Yusufzai said. The government had placed limits on reporters who tried to enter the Swat Valley during the attack, but afterward Yusufzai and his colleagues were able to interview officers. “They told us they hated what they were doing—‘We were trained to fight Indians.’ ” But that changed when they sustained heavy losses, especially of junior officers. “They were killing everybody after their colleagues were killed—just like the Americans with their Predator missiles,” Yusufzai said. “What the Army did not understand, and what the Americans don’t understand, is that by demolishing the house of a suspected Taliban or their supporters you are making an enemy of the whole family.” What looked like a tactical victory could turn out to be a strategic failure.

The Obama Administration has had difficulty coming to terms with how unhappy many Pakistanis are with the United States. Secretary of State Clinton, during her three-day “good-will visit” to Pakistan, late last month, seemed taken aback by the angry and, at times, provocative criticism of American policies that dominated many of her public appearances, and responded defensively.

Last year, the Washington Times ran an article about the Pressler Amendment, a 1985 law cutting off most military aid to Pakistan as long as it continued its nuclear program. The measure didn’t stop Pakistan from getting the bomb, or from buying certain weapons, but it did reduce the number of Pakistani officers who were permitted to train with American units. The article quoted Major General John Custer as saying, “The older military leaders love us. They understand American culture and they know we are not the enemy.” The General’s assessment provoked a barrage of e-mail among American officers with experience in Pakistan, and a former member of a Special Forces unit provided me with copies. “The fact that a two-star would make a statement [like] that . . . is at best naïve and actually pure bullshit,” a senior Special Forces officer on duty in Pakistan wrote. He went on:

I have met and interacted with the entire military staff from General Kayani on down and all the general officers on their joint staff and in all the services, and I haven’t spoken to one that “loves us”—whatever that means. In fact, I have read most of the TS [top secret] assessments of all their General Officers and I haven’t read one that comes close to their “loving” us. They play us for everything they can get, and we trip over ourselves trying to give them everything they ask for, and cannot pay for.

Some military men who know Pakistan well believe that, whatever the officer corps’s personal views, the Pakistan Army remains reliable. “They cannot be described as pro-American, but this doesn’t mean they don’t know which side their bread is buttered on,” Brian Cloughley, who served six years as Australia’s defense attaché to Pakistan and is now a contributor to Janes Sentinel, told me. “The chance of mutiny is slim. Were this to happen, there would be the most severe reaction” by special security units in the Pakistani military, Cloughley said. “But worry feeds irrationality, and the international consequences could be dire.”

The recollections of Bush Administration officials who dealt with Pakistan in the first round of nuclear consultations after September 11th do not inspire confidence. The Americans’ main contact was Lieutenant General Khalid Kidwai, the head of Pakistan’s Strategic Plans Division, the agency that is responsible for nuclear strategy and operations and for the physical security of the weapons complex. At first, a former high-level Bush Administration official told me, Kidwai was reassuring; his professionalism increased their faith in the soundness of Pakistan’s nuclear doctrine and its fail-safe procedures. The Army was controlled by Punjabis who, the Americans thought, “did not put up with Pashtuns,” as the former Bush Administration official put it. (The Taliban are mostly Pashtun.) But by the time the official left, at the beginning of George W. Bush’s second term, he had a much darker assessment: “They don’t trust us and they will not tell you the truth.”

No American, for example, was permitted access to A. Q. Khan, the metallurgist and so-called father of the Pakistani atomic bomb, who traded crucial nuclear-weapons components on the international black market. Musharraf placed him under house arrest in early 2004, claiming to have been shocked to learn of Khan’s dealings. At the time, it was widely understood that those activities had been sanctioned by Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence (I.S.I.). Khan was freed in February, although there are restrictions on his travel. (In an interview last year, Kidwai told David Sanger, for his book “The Inheritance,” that “our security systems are foolproof,” thanks to technical controls; Sanger noted that Bush Administration officials were “not as confident in private as they sound in public.”)

A former State Department official who worked on nuclear issues with Pakistan after September 11th said that he’d come to understand that the Pakistanis “believe that any information we get from them would be shared with others—perhaps even the Indians. To know the command-and-control processes of their nuclear weapons is one thing. To know where the weapons actually are is another thing.”

The former State Department official cited the large Pakistan Air Force base outside Sargodha, west of Lahore, where many of Pakistan’s nuclear-capable F-16s are thought to be stationed. “Is there a nuke ready to go at Sargodha?” the former official asked. “If there is, and Sargodha is the size of Andrews Air Force Base, would we know where to go? Are the warheads stored in Bunker X?” Ignorance could be dangerous. “If our people don’t know where to go and we suddenly show up at a base, there will be a lot of people shooting at them,” he said. “And even if the Pakistanis may have told us that the triggers will be at Bunker X, is it true?”

In the July/August issue of Arms Control Today, Rolf Mowatt-Larssen, who recently retired after three years as the Department of Energy’s director of intelligence and counter-intelligence, preceded by two decades at the C.I.A., wrote vividly about the “lethal proximity between terrorists, extremists, and nuclear weapons insiders” in Pakistan. “Insiders have facilitated terrorist attacks. Suicide bombings have occurred at air force bases that reportedly serve as nuclear weapons storage sites. It is difficult to ignore such trends,” Mowatt-Larssen wrote. “Purely in actuarial terms, there is a strong possibility that bad apples in the nuclear establishment are willing to cooperate with outsiders for personal gain or out of sympathy for their cause. Nowhere in the world is this threat greater than in Pakistan. . . . Anything that helps upgrade Pakistan’s nuclear security is an investment” in America’s security.

Leslie H. Gelb, a president emeritus of the Council on Foreign Relations, said, “I don’t think there’s any kind of an agreement we can count on. The Pakistanis have learned how to deal with us, and they understand that if they don’t tell us what we want to hear we’ll cut off their goodies.” Gelb added, “In all these years, the C.I.A. never built up assets, but it talks as if there were ‘access.’ I don’t know if Obama understands that the Agency doesn’t know what it’s talking about.”

The former high-level Bush Administration official was just as blunt. “If a Pakistani general is talking to you about nuclear issues, and his lips are moving, he’s lying,” he said. “The Pakistanis wouldn’t share their secrets with anybody, and certainly not with a country that, from their point of view, used them like a Dixie cup and then threw them away.”

Sultan Amir Tarar, known to many as Colonel Imam, is the archetype of the disillusioned Pakistani officer. Tarar spent eighteen years with the I.S.I. in Afghanistan, most of them as an undercover operative. In the mujahideen war against the Soviet Union, in the eighties, he worked closely with C.I.A. agents, and liked the experience. “They were honest and thoughtful and provided the finest equipment,” Tarar said during an interview in Rawalpindi. He spoke with pride of shaking hands with Robert Gates in Afghanistan in 1985. Gates, now the Secretary of Defense, was then a senior C.I.A. official. “I’ve heard all about you,” Gates said, according to Tarar. “Good or bad?” “Oh, my. All good,” Gates replied. Tarar’s view changed after the Russians withdrew and, in his opinion, “the Americans abandoned us.” When I asked if he’d seen “Charlie Wilson’s War,” the movie depicting that abandonment and a Texas congressman’s futile efforts to change the policy, Tarar laughed and said, “I’ve seen Charlie Wilson. I didn’t need to see the movie.”

Tarar, who retired in 1995 and has a son in the Army, believed—as did many Pakistani military men—that the American campaign to draw Pakistan deeper into the war against the Taliban would backfire. “The Americans are trying to rent out their war to us,” he said. If the Obama Administration persists, “there will be an uprising here, and this corrupt government will collapse. Every Pakistani will then be his own nuclear bomb—a suicide bomber,” Tarar said. “The longer the war goes on, the longer it will spill over in the tribal territories, and it will lead to a revolutionary stage. People there will flee to the big cities like Lahore and Islamabad.”

Tarar believed that the Obama Administration had to negotiate with the Afghan Taliban, even if that meant direct talks with Mullah Omar, the Taliban leader. Tarar knew Mullah Omar well. “Omar trained as a young man in my camp in 1985,” he told me. “He was physically fit and mission-oriented—a very honest man who was a practicing Muslim. Nothing beyond that. He was a Talib—a student, and not a mullah. But people respected him. Today, among all the Afghan leaders, Omar has the biggest audience, and this is the right time for you to talk to him.”

Speaking to Tarar and other officers gave a glimpse of the acrimony at the top of the Pakistani government, which has complicated the nuclear equation. Tarar spoke bitterly about the position that General Kayani found himself in, carrying out the “corrupt” policies of the Americans and of Zardari, while Pakistan’s soldiers “were fighting gallantly in Swat against their own people.”

A $7.5-billion American aid package, approved by Congress in September, was, to the surprise of many in Washington, controversial in Pakistan, because it contained provisions seen as strengthening Zardari at the expense of the military. Shaheen Sehbai, a senior editor of the newspaper International, said that Zardari’s “problem is that he’s besieged domestically on all sides, and he thinks only the Americans can save him,” and, as a result, “he’ll open his pants for them.” Sehbai noted that Kayani’s term as Army chief ends in the fall of 2010. If Zardari tried to replace him before then, Kayani’s colleagues would not accept his choice, and there could be “a generals’ coup,” Sehbai said. “America should worry more about the structure and organization of the Army—and keep it intact.”

Lieutenant General Hamid Gul was the director general of the I.S.I. in the late eighties and worked with the C.I.A. in Afghanistan. Gul, who is retired, is a devout Muslim and had been accused by the Bush Administration of having ties to the Taliban and Al Qaeda—allegations he has denied. “What would happen if, in a crisis, you tried to get—or did not get—our nuclear triggers? What happens then?” Gul asked when we met. “You will have us as an enemy, with the Chinese and Russians behind us.”

If Pakistani officers had given any assurances about the nuclear arsenal, Gul said, “they are cheating you and they would be right to do so. We should not be aiding and abetting Americans.”

Persuading the Pakistan Army to concentrate on fighting the Taliban, and not India, is crucial to the Obama Administration’s plans for the region. There has been enmity between India and Pakistan since 1947, when Britain’s withdrawal led to the partition of the subcontinent. The state of Kashmir, which was three-quarters Muslim but acceded to Hindu-majority India, has been in dispute ever since, and India and Pakistan have twice gone to war over the territory. Through the years, the Pakistan Army and the I.S.I. have relied on Pakistan-based jihadist groups, most notably Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaish-e-Mohammed, to carry out a guerrilla war against the Indians in Kashmir. Many in the Pakistani military consider the groups to be an important strategic reserve.

A retired senior Pakistani intelligence officer, who worked with his C.I.A. counterparts to track down Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, said that he was deeply troubled by the prospect of Pakistan ceding any control over its nuclear deterrent. “Suppose the jihadis strike at India again—another attack on the parliament. India will tell the United States to stay out of it, and ‘We’ll sort it out on our own,’ ” he said. “Then there would be a ground attack into Pakistan. As we begin to react, the Americans will be interested in protecting our nuclear assets, and urge us not to go nuclear—‘Let the Indians attack and do not respond!’ They would urge us instead to find those responsible for the attack on India. Our nuclear arsenal was supposed to be our savior, but we would end up protecting it. It doesn’t protect us,” he said.

“My belief today is that it’s better to have the Americans as an enemy rather than as a friend, because you cannot be trusted,” the former officer concluded. “The only good thing the United States did for us was to look the other way about an atomic bomb when it suited the United States to do so.”

Pakistan’s fears about the United States coöperating with India are not irrational. Last year, Congress approved a controversial agreement that enabled India to purchase nuclear fuel and technology from the United States without joining the Non-Proliferation Treaty, making India the only non-signatory to the N.P.T. permitted to do so. Concern about the Pakistani arsenal has since led to greater coöperation between the United States and India in missile defense; the training of the Indian Air Force to use bunker-busting bombs; and “the collection of intelligence on the Pakistani nuclear arsenal,” according to the consultant to the intelligence community. (The Pentagon declined to comment.)

I flew to New Delhi after my stay in Pakistan and met with two senior officials from the Research and Analysis Wing, India’s national intelligence agency. (Of course, as in Pakistan, no allegation about the other side should be taken at face value.) “Our worries are about the nuclear weapons in Pakistan,” one of the officials said. “Not because we are worried about the mullahs taking over the country; we’re worried about those senior officers in the Pakistan Army who are Caliphates”—believers in a fundamentalist pan-Islamic state. “We know some of them and we have names,” he said. “We’ve been watching colonels who are now brigadiers. These are the guys who could blackmail the whole world”—that is, by seizing a nuclear weapon.

The Indian intelligence official went on, “Do we know if the Americans have that intelligence? This is not in the scheme of the way you Americans look at things—‘Kayani is a great guy! Let’s have a drink and smoke a cigar with him and his buddies.’ Some of the men we are watching have notions of leading an Islamic army.”

In an interview the next afternoon, an Indian official who has dealt diplomatically with Pakistan for years said, “Pakistan is in trouble, and it’s worrisome to us because an unstable Pakistan is the worst thing we can have.” But he wasn’t sure what America could do. “They like us better in Pakistan than you Americans,” he said. “I can tell you that in a public-opinion poll we, India, will beat you.”

India and Pakistan, he added, have had back-channel talks for years in an effort to resolve the dispute over Kashmir, but “Pakistan wants talks for the sake of talks, and it does not carry out the agreements already reached.” (In late October, Manmohan Singh, the Indian Prime Minister, publicly renewed an offer of talks, but tied it to a request that Pakistan crack down on terrorism; Pakistan’s official response was to welcome the overture.)

The Indian official, like his counterparts in Pakistan, believed that Americans did not appreciate what his government had done for them. “Why did the Pakistanis remove two divisions from the border with us?” He was referring to the shifting of Pakistani forces, at the request of the United States, to better engage the Taliban. “It means they have confidence that we will not take advantage of the situation. We deserve a pat on the back for this.” Instead, the official said, with a shrug, “you are too concerned with your relationship with Pakistan.”

Pervez Musharraf lives in unpretentious exile with his wife in an apartment in London, near Hyde Park. Officials who had dealt with him cautioned that, along with his many faults, he had a disarmingly open manner. At the beginning of our talk, I asked him why, on a visit to Washington in late January, he had not met with any senior Obama Administration officials. “I did not ask for a meeting because I was afraid of being told no,” he said. At another point, Musharraf, dressed casually in slacks and a sports shirt, said that he had been troubled by the American-controlled Predator drone attacks on targets inside Pakistan, which began in 2005. “I said to the Americans, ‘Give us the Predators.’ It was refused. I told the Americans, ‘Then just say publicly that you’re giving them to us. You keep on firing them but put Pakistan Air Force markings on them.’ That, too, was denied.”

Musharraf, who was forced out of office in August, 2008, under threat of impeachment, did not spare his successor. “Asif Zardari is a criminal and a fraud,” Musharraf told me. “He’ll do anything to save himself. He’s not a patriot and he’s got no love for Pakistan. He’s a third-rater.”

Musharraf said that he and General Kayani, who had been his nominee for Chief of Army Staff, were still in telephone contact. Musharraf came to power in a military coup in 1999, and remained in uniform until near the end of his Presidency. He said that he didn’t think the Army was capable of mutiny—not the Army he knew. “There are people with fundamentalist ideas in the Army, but I don’t think there is any possibility of these people getting organized and doing an uprising. These ‘fundos’ were disliked and not popular.”

He added, “Muslims think highly of Obama, and he should use his acceptability—even with the Taliban—and try to deal with them politically.”

Musharraf spoke of two prior attempts to create a fundamentalist uprising in the Army. In both cases, he said, the officers involved were arrested and prosecuted. “I created the strategic force that controls all the strategic assets—eighteen to twenty thousand strong. They are monitored for character and for potential fundamentalism,” he said. He acknowledged, however, that things had changed since he’d left office. “People have become alarmed because of the Taliban and what they have done,” he said. “Everyone is now alarmed.”

The rise in militancy is a sensitive subject, and many inside Pakistan insist that American fears, and the implied threat to the nuclear arsenal, are overwrought. Amélie Blom, a political sociologist at Lahore University of Management Sciences, noted that the Army continues to support an unpopular President. “The survival of the coalition government shows that the present Army leadership has an interest in making it work,” she said in an e-mail.

Others are less sure. “Nuclear weapons are only as safe as the people who handle them,” Pervez Hoodbhoy, an eminent nuclear physicist in Pakistan, said in a talk last summer at a Nation and Lawyers Committee on Nuclear Policy forum in New York. For more than two decades, Hoodbhoy said, “the Pakistan Army has been recruiting on the basis of faithfulness to Islam. As a consequence, there is now a different character present among Army officers and ordinary soldiers. There are half a dozen scenarios that one can imagine.” There was no proof either that the most dire scenarios would be realized or that the arsenal was safe, he said.

The current offensive in South Waziristan marked a significant success for the Obama Administration, which had urged Zardari to take greater control of the tribal areas. There was a risk, too—that the fighting would further radicalize Pakistan. Last week, another Pakistan Army general was the victim of a drive-by assassination attempt, as he was leaving his home in Islamabad. Since the Waziristan operation was announced, more than three hundred people have been killed in a dozen terrorist attacks. “If we push too hard there, we could trigger a social revolution,” the Special Forces adviser said. “We are playing into Al Qaeda’s deep game here. If we blow it, Al Qaeda could come in and scoop up a nuke or two.” He added, “The Pakistani military knows that if there’s any kind of instability there will be a traffic jam to seize their nukes.” More escalation in Pakistan, he said, “will take us to the brink.”

During my stay in Pakistan—my first in five years—there were undeniable signs that militancy and the influence of fundamentalist Islam had grown. In the past, military officers, politicians, and journalists routinely served Johnnie Walker Black during our talks, and drank it themselves. This time, even the most senior retired Army generals offered only juice or tea, even in their own homes. Officials and journalists said that soldiers and middle-level officers were increasingly attracted to the preaching of Zaid Hamid, who joined the mujahideen and fought for nine years in Afghanistan. On CDs and on television, Hamid exhorts soldiers to think of themselves as Muslims first and Pakistanis second. He claims that terrorist attacks in Mumbai last year were staged by India and Western Zionists, aided by the Mossad. Another proselytizer, Dr. Israr Ahmed, writes a column in the Urdu press in which he depicts the Holocaust as “divine punishment,” and advocates the extermination of the Jews. He, too, is said to be popular with the officer corps.

A senior Obama Administration official brought up Hizb ut-Tahrir, a Sunni organization whose goal is to establish the Caliphate. “They’ve penetrated the Pakistani military and now have cells in the Army,” he said. (The Pakistan Army denies this.) In one case, according to the official, Hizb ut-Tahrir had recruited members of a junior officer group, from the most élite Pakistani military academy, who had been sent to England for additional training.

“Where do these guys get socialized and exposed to Islamic evangelism and the fundamentalism narrative?” the Obama Administration official asked. “In services every Friday for Army officers, and at corps and unit meetings where they are addressed by senior commanders and clerics.” In an unstable Pakistan, can nuclear warheads be kept safe? by Seymour M. Hersh November 16, 2009

Moving on from the actual factual inaccuracies, even falsehoods, to an equally important issue raised by the article is the question of access. Why do we allow these people so much access in this country – right from the President down? President Musharraf talks openly of the supposedly secret tunnels and so on. Others are equally prone to spilling their guts out to inquisitive foreign journalists. Why? And why must we abuse each other through these journalists? Incidentally, this time round Hersh did not seek the official version from the MFA; nor did he seek an interview with General Kidwai of SPD. He told me Hersh had sought access but could not get it, but on checking I found he did not send in any written request.

Finally, a most disturbing aspect of the piece – and also the most threatening, is his description of what the US plans are for Pakistan’s nukes. That is what the game is all about – a unilateral US plan to have a force in Pakistan to attempt to take out the triggers and thereby decapitate the nukes. Is that why we are seeing so many covert US personnel coming into Pakistan? There is no deal; but there is a threatening unilateral US agenda. That Hersh has explained most vividly! Ahmed Qureshi

Posted in Current Affairs, Pak CA, Politics, US CA, US Int Rel., US PoliComments Off

1984 Orwellian Big Brother

Times & Westpoint propaganda against Pakistan's Nucler progam

1984 Orwellian Big Brother

1984 Orwellian Big Brother

The Times has published a nonsensical and absurd report about Pakistani nukes. The report in question lists three times when Pakistan nuclear sites were attacked. This is pure fiction.

The West media periodically comes up with nonsensical reports which do not have any logic to it. Of course these will be picked up by the 5th column in Pakistan. It will be music to the ears of animals like Pervez Hoodbhoy who will run with the CIA planted story which discredits Paksitani nuclear facilities.

Islamabad – Pakistan Tuesday rejected some foreign media reports claiming that extremists and terrorists had attacked its nuclear facilities at least thrice over the last two years.

“It is rubbish. These aspersions are factually incorrect and are part of typical propaganda campaign to malign Pakistan”, Pakistan Army’s chief spokesman Major General Athar Abbas told TheNation.

The spokesman said that important foreign powers have time and again acknowledged that security and safety of Pakistan’s nuclear assets was of world standard.

He asserted that Pakistan’s nuclear assets had been secured through multi-layered security mechanism and there was no chance of them falling into the hands of the extremists or terrorists.

A report published in the Indian daily ‘Times of India’ on Tuesday, was lifted and telecast by a number of American TV channels including Fox News.

Special Correspondent from Washington adds: The US military on Tuesday brushed aside an Indian Press report that ‘home-grown extremists and terrorists’ attacked Pakistan’s nuclear installations three times over the past two years, saying it was unaware of such incidents.

‘I can just repeat what you have heard time and time again from Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff, Michael Mullen and Secretary of Defence Robert Gates that they are comfortable with the security steps that the Pakistani govt, the Pakistani military have in place to ensure that their nuclear arsenal is safeguarded’, Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell told a news briefing.

Responding to a question about the claim made in ‘The Times of India’ report, Morrell said it was for the first time that he had heard about the reported incident, adding ‘I am not in a position to talk about it in particular’.

When pressed further on the issue, Morrell responded:

‘I don’t know them to be actual attacks. It is the first (time) I have heard (of this) – so I am clearly not in a position to tell you whether we were aware or were not aware – I don’t know anything what you are asking about’. Nation

liesLet us look at the three incidents that the US Military Academy Westpoint report suggests:

1) Attack on Wah

2) Attack on the buses of the PEAC

3) Storage facility in Sargodha

First of all Wah is an ordinance factory and has nothing to do with Nuclear Arms or missiles. Wah makes small arms which is supplies to the Pakistan army and to friendly countries like Sri Lanka. The attack on Wah has been confirmed as a RAW attack.

The second attack listed was on civilians on a civilian bus. This is part of the charge on soft targets in Pakistan. Hotels and buses full of civilians were attacked. It also has nothing to do with Pakistan’s nuclear facilities.

The third listing is of a so called storage facility in Sargoda. Sargodha is an airforce base, and there are no reports of any attack on this facility by terrorists.

We reproduce the Times report below.

Western propaganda

Western propaganda

Pakistan’s nuclear facilities in the last two years

Terrorists have attacked three of Pakistan’s military nuclear facilities in the past two years and there is a serious danger that they will gain access to the country’s atomic arsenal, according to a journal published by the US Military Academy at West Point.

The report, written by Professor Shaun Gregory, a security specialist at Bradford University, comes amid mounting fears that the Taleban and al-Qaeda will breach Pakistan’s military nuclear sites – most of which are in or near insurgent strongholds in the north and west of the country.

The most serious attack was a strike by two suicide bombers on the Wah Cantonment Ordnance Complex, thought to be one of Pakistan’s main nuclear weapons assembly plants, about 18 miles northwest of Islamabad, in August 2008.

The incident, which claimed 70 lives, was widely reported but little mention was made of the nuclear risk.

O

Fabricated stories and White lies

Fabricated stories and White lies

ther attacks included the suicide bombing of a nuclear missile storage facility at Sargodha, in central Punjab, in November 2007 and a suicide attack on Pakistan’s nuclear airbase at Kamra, near Wah, on December 10, 2007.

In the Counter Terrorism Center Sentinel, Professor Gregory writes that the attacks illustrate “a clear set of weaknesses and vulnerabilities” in Pakistan’s nuclear security regime.

The strikes occurred as Pakistan sought to ramp up its nuclear capability — and as US special forces formulated contingency plans in the event of the country falling to insurgents.

A US Defense Intelligence Agency document revealed in 2004 that Pakistan had a nuclear arsenal of 35 weapons, a figure it planned to more than double by 2020.

Propaganda Rupert Murdock CNN

Propaganda Rupert Murdock CNN

In June, Mustafa Abu al-Yazid, an al-Qaeda commander in Afghanistan, suggested that the group would show no hesitation in using nuclear weapons. “God willing… the mujahideen would take them and use them against the Americans,” he told al-Jazeera television.

Pakistan’s security regime is modelled on the American system and includes the separation of warheads from detonators, which are stored in underground bunkers staffed by highly vetted personnel. Many details of the country’s nuclear programme — including the location of many warheads and their exact number — remain unknown.

However, most of the country’s nuclear weapons sites were built in the north and west of the country in the 1970s and 1980s, mainly to distance them from India — a ploy which now means many are located in insurgent areas. There are also concerns that vetting programmes may not identify Islamist sympathisers, whose influence extends far up Pakistan’s military hierarchy.

CIA manual of trickery and deception psy ops Sabotage Manual

CIA manual of trickery and deception psy ops Sabotage Manual

 

Professor Gregory writes: “There is already the well-known case of two senior Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission scientists, Sultan Bashirrudin Mahmood and Chaudhry Abdul Majeed, who travelled to Afghanistan in 2000 and again shortly before 9/11 for meetings with Osama bin Laden himself, the content of which has never been disclosed.” From Times Online August 11, 2009. Terrorists ‘have attacked Pakistan nuclear sites three times’Rhys Blakely in Mumbai

The Pentagon, seeking to bolster Pakistan’s government in its fight against Al-Qaeda and Pakistani Taliban forces, expressed satisfaction with security at the nuclear facilities in Pakistan.

Defense Secretary Robert Gates and Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, are “comfortable with the security measures the Pakistani government, the military have in place to ensure that their nuclear arsenal is safeguarded,” said press secretary Geoff Morrell.

The statement came after a write-up raised doubts about the nuclear facilites in Pakistan. “Pakistan’s nuclear facilities have come under attack from the Taliban and other groups and there is a “genuine” risk militants could seize weapons or bomb-making material,” an article published in a West Point think-tank newsletter said.

The Combating Terrorism Center, which is housed at the US Military Academy at West Point, published the article in the July edition of its Sentinel newsletter, copies of which were distributed widely on Tuesday.

The center said the views expressed in the article were those of the author, and not those of West Point, the Army or the Defense Department.

Written by Shaun Gregory, director of the Pakistan Security Research Unit at the University of Bradford in Britain, the article detailed three attacks against Pakistan’s nuclear facilities, and warned that sites in the country may be vulnerable to infiltration.

“The risk of the transfer of nuclear weapons, weapons components or nuclear expertise to terrorists in Pakistan is genuine,” the article said.

“The concern, however, is that most of Pakistan’s nuclear sites are close or even within areas dominated by Pakistani Taliban militants” and Al-Qaeda, Gregory said.

US officials,however, say Washington has taken steps to mitigate the risks like checking containers leaving from key ports for radioactive materials inside Pakistan. Reuters

Posted in Current Affairs, Pak CA, US CA, US Int Rel., US PoliComments (3)

The safety of Pakistani nukes

A false alarm is being raised persistently by the Western media about Pakistan’s nuclear assets by projecting them as a threat to world peace and security on the notion of their possible fall into extremists’ hands. Understandably, Pakistan’s nuclear programme has remained an eyesore for many countries ever since it was conceived and launched in mid seventies, but now a deliberate negative and sinister campaign has been whipped up against the nuclear assets in recent years. A horrible scenario is being painted by the propaganda masters. Ridiculous hypothesis and theories about their security are being advanced to give credence to their vicious propaganda. Some Western newspapers are periodically fed and patted by hidden hands to create doubts about Pakistan’s ability to safeguard these assets. Pakistan has since been contradicting the propaganda on a regular basis, but Goeblean tactics are being followed by the prejudiced Western media to venture it out as a potent danger to the international community.

The repudiation of this calculated campaign by Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff Committee, Gen Tariq Majid, in his address at the National Defence University’s Convocation on June 18, 2009, should hopefully debunk the nonsensical propounded possibility that Pakistan’s nuclear assets may fall into the extremists’ hands for good. ‘The nuclear weapons are the cornerstone of Pakistan’s deterrence doctrine and we are determined to retain it at all costs’, he said adding ‘no amount of coercion, direct or indirect, can force us to compromise on this core interest’. The CJCSC’s address represented the resolve of the 160 million people of Pakistan to retain and defend the nation’s nuclear programme.

In the wake of mounting malicious campaign, I have discussed in detail the vital and intricate issues pertaining to the security of our nuclear assets with some of their top watchful custodians including world-wide praised Lt. Gen. (Retd) Khalid Ahmed Kidwai, Director General, Strategic Planning Division. I, therefore, deem it appropriate to reassure the nation through this write-up about the nuclear assets’ safe custody of the Pak Army. I have done so because I am deeply concerned about the nuclear assets as are the other people of Pakistan. But as my profile in the West as well as in the IAEA hierarchy is a “friend and biographer” of Dr AQ Khan, father of Pakistan’s nuclear bomb and after authoring four frequently quoted authentic books on Pakistan’s nuclear programme, I am a bit more concerned and sensitive to the issue. I would like to say with all the vehemence at my command that I am convinced, after my interaction with watchful custodians of these assets, that even the US cannot lay its hands on them due to their resolute and steadfast security arrangements.

Based on the pillars of restraint and responsibility, Pakistan has developed a very effective nuclear weapons security regime, which is multilayered, has stringent access controls and incorporates modern technical solutions and rigorous personal reliability. The system conforms to the international best practices and has the capacity to meet all challenges. There should, therefore, be absolutely no doubt about the viability of custodial controls and safe security arrangements that Pakistan has scrupulously built for its nuclear assets. The disinformation on account of their security is being deliberately spread with ulterior motives. No one should miscalculate Pakistan’s strong commitment on this count, irrespective of the machinations of the Western, Indian and Jewish lobbies that are hell-bent for creating a situation to compel Pakistan to roll back its nuclear capability, a dream that will never come true. Ironically, some quarters have yet to reconcile to the acquisition of nuclear capability by a Muslim country and they are thus conspiring against it by harping on the imaginative theory about insecurity of these assets. But there exists a national consensus that Pakistan must maintain a credible nuclear deterrence to safeguard its sovereignty and security interests. The people of Pakistan would, therefore, never kneel down or succumb to external pressures on the question of its nuclear programme. They have rendered countless sacrifices to build the nuclear deterrence as a guarantee against evil designs of its foe. It’s, therefore, pertinent that no one should underestimate their zealous devotion and commitment to it under all circumstances.

The persistent Western propaganda against Pakistan on account of its nuclear assets’ safety is obviously designed to undermine its nuclear capability. Although the US leadership including President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton have publicly acknowledged the safety of Pakistan’s nuclear assets due to its robust multilayered Command and Control system for more than once, its media is regularly publishing concocted news stories/write-ups to distort the reality on the ground. Los Angeles Times, Washington Times and Washington Post have seemingly made the publication of false and controversial news stories about the so-called danger of Pakistan’s nuclear assets falling into the terrorists’ hands a matter of policy. The paradox is that those authoring such news stories/write-ups are totally ignorant about either the Command and Control systems in vogue in the nuclear states especially in Pakistan or the objective political and military realities prevailing in our country. They have no comprehension of the intricacies of the Command and Control systems much less that of Pakistan, which is second to none among the world’s nuclear states. They apparently perceive that Pakistan has displayed its nuclear assets in a decorative manner in the see-through Almirahs, which can be picked up by anyone to drop on any city of the US or some other country. They are devoid of the knowledge that nuclear bombs are not stored in a readymade condition. It takes a couple of days to assemble various components to make it into a device. Besides, they are also naïve about the fact that the use of nuclear weapons requires a viable delivery system such as sophisticated warplanes like F-16s or high-tech high-precision and target-oriented missiles, which Al-Qaeda or extremists elements in Pakistan obviously don’t possess. How can, therefore, the al-Qaeda or other extremists pick up the components of the device stored in safe custody in different places in the country is simply unbelievable. The propaganda is, therefore, not only absurd and disgusting but also appears to be a mere fairy tale with no wisdom or logic whatsoever behind it.

The notion that Pakistan’s nuclear assets may fall into the hands of extremists and militants is simply ludicrous. With strict Control and Command system comprising military and civilian oligarchy in place under the guard of over half a million strong Pak Army, only some amorphous object may be capable of taking control of these assets.

Pakistan’s nuclear assets are, in fact, not under threat from the extremists and terrorists but are in the focus of the US, India and Israel. India and Israel have been in collusion against Pakistan’s nuclear assets for a long time. The duo miserably failed to implement their evil plans to attack and destroy them at least on two occasions in the past. Both Israel and India perceive Pakistan’s nuclear capability as a threat to their ambitions to dominate the respective regions.

Islamabad’s option to acquire nuclear technology for its security reasons has never been viewed objectively and realistically by the international community especially the Western countries. It has hitherto been viewed either with the prejudice of its Muslim nationhood or was deprecated with contempt due to its Third World status. Indian hostility towards its sovereignty and even its very existence was never considered as the cogent reason for Pakistan’s option to acquire nuclear capability. Ours is, however, strange way of rewarding our heroes. Bhutto was sent to the gallows by us for his vision to give nuclear deterrence to Pakistan and the father of Pakistan’s nuclear bomb, Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan was thrown into house arrest and subjected to humiliation following the US campaign of nuclear proliferation. He was made to confess by Gen Pervez Musharraf what the legend scientist had subsequently repudiated after the military ruler’s fall with the assertion that his confession was meant to save Pakistan’s nuclear assets, which the Western hounds were poised to pounce upon. The nation had demonstrated unprecedented love and affection for him as the present government briefly relaxed his restrictions under public pressure. REST ASSURED, OUR NUCLEAR ASSETS ARE SAFE!

Zahid Malik

Posted in Current Affairs, Pak CAComments (2)

Peace sign with Pakistani map

False Flag Plan: RAW attack on Pakistani Nukes disguised as TTP assault?

News reports confirm that RAW is planning an attack on Pakistan’s Nuclear intallations. The story doesn’t seem to die down. The Pakistan press is reporting that something is up. Where there is smoke there is fire. The threats cannot be ignored.  Apparently the Pakistani security agencies have received credible evidence that RAW is trying to create a flag in Pakistan. The scenario runs as follows:

1) Some nebulous and unknown group makes some outlandish statements about Pakistan’s Nuclear Program.

2) A group of hooligans attack civilians headed towards one of the Nuclear facilities in Rawalpindi or other place.

3) The International media jumps on the bandwagon and blows things totally out of proportion.

4) International pressure is organized to “prove” that Pakistan’s nuclear program is in jeopardy and must be secured by the thugs of the Security Council or other such agency.

Having deliberately fomented extremism and militancy in Pakistan, it is accused of manifold invented allegations. In line with their objectives Indo-US-Israeli nexus has launched a malevolent smear campaign since 2004 and the world has been fed with manufactured stories to portray Pakistan as the most dangerous country in the world. Pak army which is the custodian of nuclear arsenal is neither worried nor has raised any alarm bells or has sought any assistance from anyone for the safety of its nukes. On the contrary it has repeatedly been trying to allay motivated fears of USA and others that its safety system is foolproof. Whatever absurd stories in circulation manifest inner desire of our detractors to somehow steal our nukes. They want Pak leadership to put in an urgent request to take away nuclear weapons before they are lost to the Taliban. It is in line with this fanciful scenario that US analysts concoct bizarre stories and magnify Taliban threat and project our institutions in poor light.

A new story has now come to light that Indian and Israeli trainers in Afghanistan have imparted intense mission oriented training to a band of 750 terrorists belonging to Baitullah’s Tehrik-e-Taliban to carry out an attack on one or more of Pakistani nuclear installations under their direct supervision. Reportedly, modalities have been worked out with active connivance of CIA and dirty bombs have also been provided to the terrorists. The story is not new but has been made more sensational by adding spice of local Taliban and dirty bombs. Suicide bombers have already targeted ISI, FIA and anti-terror police HQ close to NESCOM building. Fake Taliban equipped with sophisticated weapons and technologies provided by their foreign patrons are already waging a war in greater part of NWFP where some nuclear installations are installed. In case such an attack takes place it would not come as a bolt from the blue. The world has already been conditioned for such an eventuality.

The idea is not to steal a nuclear weapon, which is simply impossible given the safety system in place. Real design is to create a sensation and authenticate their stance of vulnerability of Pak nukes and thus achieve multiple objectives. It would facilitate USA to move UN to either intervene and take over Pak nuclear arsenal, or allow US to shift it to a safe place outside Pakistan, or allow permanent placement of IAEA inspectors in Pakistan to monitor nuclear activities and inspect each and every defence oriented building on the pattern of Iraq under the plea of locating and safeguarding nuclear materials. Latter option would inhibit Chinese working in various projects. In case Pakistan resists, it will be subjected to harsh sanctions which it will not be able to bear given the fact that US controlled IMF has provided lifeline to Pakistan. Pakistan’s nuclear programme is a monstrosity for India, Israel and USA, which the trio is overly keen to defang and deprive Pakistan of its deterrence capability. Pakistan intelligence apparatus should further streamline its systems to offset such an eventuality. Pakistan should reassert its declared policy that onus of any attack on its nuclear installation would be entirely on India for which Pakistan reserves the right to react accordingly. 

There is precedence of such attacks. Israel attack the Iraqi nuclear plant at Osarik. It also destroyed a Syrian reactor last year. Bharat and Israeli jets tried to bomb Kahuta twice but were intercepted and the attack was aborted. Another attack on Pakistani nuclear facilities would be considered an act of war.

TAKING OUT PAKISTANI NUKES–Attacking a Major Non-NATO Alley (MNNA) and founding member of SEATO AND CENTO

Peace sign with Pakistani mapNATO defeat: Why 40 nations Can’t Deliver Peace in Afghanistan. Some lessons learned from Afghanistan and the Hindu Kush

Pakistan has a 10 division well trained and well equipped army, one of the most professional armies in the world. Most of the officers were trained in the UK, USA, and Australia etc.

The army has a centralized control with intense loyalty to the officer corps. More than 500,00 soldiers are in reserve, and like Israel all Pakistani high-schoolers (11th and 12th grades) are trained in basic two year military training called NCC (National Cadet Corp).

The army is armed to the teeth, with local arms production M-16, Kalashnikovs, missiles, tanks, nukes, heavy artillery, F-16s and  JF-17 Thunders. They also have one of the best missile programs in the world, better than that of India.”The Regime” consists of the army support, an elected National Assembly and Senate with representation of all the political parties including a heavy and intense presence of the MMA, PML and PPP opposition.

Now to eliminate all this would require a full scale invasion. 400,000 American soldiers and mercenaries (contractors) could not do it in Iraq, which has one fifth of the population and was sanctioned for ten years.Now let us talk about invading Pakistan. Whose army is going to do it? One will need at least two million soldiers to occupy the country partially, and no one in 5000 years has been able to hold it.

Pakistan rebounding from volatile events. It evaluated its dangerous geo political situation as well as a belligerent international atmosphere. The sons and daughters of Pakistan pledged “Never again” and developed a comprehensive strategy to be self-sufficient in her defense needs. It created a Nuclear deterrent, indigenous Al Khalid Tanks and a missile program that is the envy of South Asia. Neither the mercenaries sent from the across the border, not the blackmail can now harm the fabric of the country. 

Before the country is attacked many unnamed capitals and cities may go up in smoke, the Gulf of Hormuz would be blocked (ending supply of oil to the world), the Suez Canal would be choked, and many oilfields would be radio active for the next ten thousand years. This would mean the end of life as we know it. MAD (mutually assured destruction is the wave of the future). Any takers?

Peace is the only way. Let us build bridges of harmony and rethink the strategy of war and “taking out nukes”.

Islamabad, 11 July, (Asiantribune.com): It is learnt through reliable sources that Indian and Israeli special services units in collaboration with TTP (Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan ) -–a terrorist organisation– are preparing an attack on one of Pakistan ’s strategic installation in order to achieve multiple goals. Well trained TTP members, around 750, will take part in this attack. Participation of Indian and Israeli units will be confined to supervision of attack and handling post attack scenario.

India has reportedly released funds to TTP for this sole attack which will create a delicate situation for Pakistani military establishment in the world. There is also information that Indians have already planned provision of some “dirty bomb” (radioactive material) to terrorists of TTP fighting against Pakistani military for this attack.

Pakistan army already has been stretched in FATA as a result of carefully devised strategy of drone attacks by CIA which creates hatred for the army and sympathy of locals for TTP chieftain Baitullah Mehsud. It has become evident from the last three drone attacks in South Waziristan that one of them was carried out on a funeral of a TTP leader who was killed in an earlier attack on the same day.

The question here is; does CIA really want to eliminate Baitullah Mehsud and his terrorist outfit TTP?

Circumstantial evidences and confession of Baitullah’s ex-aides (Haji Turkistan and slain Qari Zainuddin) had confirmed that TTP is much more than what appears in the world media (i.e an anti-USA force in reality is a pro-US and anti-Pakistan entity).

Now this latest intelligence about a possible attack on one of Pakistan ’s strategic military sites in which TTP will play a role of foot soldiers has proved beyond any doubt that TTP is foreign funded proxy force operating inside Pakistan to fulfill agenda of Pakistan ’s enemies (read India and Israel led by US).

CIA and its agents in international media are building a case against Pakistani nuclear weapons advocating the notion that these might fall into wrong hands. According to media reports Indian Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh has already said that Pakistani installations are partially under attack from militants.

How this ominous plan will be executed is still not clear but according to reliable sources malicious activities around some of these installations have been noticed. On further investigation by Pakistani intelligence it was revealed that plan of much worse repercussions is under way.

Planning phase of this attack is carried out in Afghanistan where Indians and Israelis are training Afghan forces and intelligence.

During recent operation in Malakand and FATA bodies of dead Afghan nationalists (Most probably trained by same Indian and Israeli instructors) were recovered. It will therefore be no surprise if same Afghan elements also take part in this attack on Pakistan ’s nuclear facilities.

The contemplated attack also puts a big question mark on CIA’s sincerity and credibility since without its active involvement the said plan cannot take off. It may be recalled that the ISI provided information about Baitullah’s whereabouts, at least twice in May 2008, but CIA never attacked his hideouts. Now when Pakistan army has decided to take him out at its own, CIA has suddenly discovered that he is the biggest enemy of US.

Untimely drone strikes have raised many questions about CIA’s intentions in WoT.

1- Is CIA really trying to kill Baitullah for good?

2- If the answer is in affirmative then why now when Pakistan army is there on ground and PAF is carrying out aerial assault much more accurately than CIA’s drones?

3- Why CIA didn’t act earlier when information was passed to it by Pakistan ?

4- Why CIA/US never provided necessary gear to Pakistani forces to trace Baitullah or at least jam his communication system?

5- Why CIA attacked North Waziristan when Pakistan army’s operation in South Waziristan is underway and thereby opened a second front?

Answers to these questions lead only to one conclusion. CIA is protecting TTP to enable India and Israel to accomplish their task.

The high intensity of Pakistani operation backed by PAF in FATA has sent a clear signal to the masterminds who have conceptualised the attack on nuclear instalation that they are running short of time. The CIA instead of helping Pakistan to focus its major attention towards the chief foe Baitullah seemed to be helping RAW and Mossad to buy more time. While Pak army is trying to keep North Waziristan peaceful for the time being in spite of the deadly attack on one of the military convoy, CIA has provoked Hafiz Gul Bahadur, chief of Uthmanzai Wazir tribe by carrying out a drone attack. Gul Bahadur is already very annoyed over repeated drone attacks and suspects that Pak governent and army have a role in it.

It is suspected that CIA is playing a double game by carrying out token drone attacks against strongholds of Baitullah and at the same time is not sparing Gul Bahadur. The idea is to activate all the fronts simultaneously and make the position of army precarious.

All this proves that role of CIA is no different than that of RAW and Mossad.The trio have common objectives against Pakistan’s nuclear program which is seen as an obstacle in the way of accomplishment of US grand designs in the region. The purpose of intended attack on any Pakistani nuclear site, even partially successful or botched, will give legtimacy to their propaganda campaign that:

-Pakistan ’s nuclear weapons are unsafe and can fall into “wrong hands”. hence the need to roll it back or to be taken over by IAEA teams to ensure its “security”.

-Pakistani military is too inept to protect its own buildings and installations.

-National confidence and local support for Pakistani military that had shot up after its highly successfulopeations in Malakand Division will be considerably reduced.

-The situation will be further complicated if Pakistan , after such an attack, try to defend its nuclear program through taking a rigid stand.

-This will provide an opportunity to international media and anti-Pakistan establishments to approach UN and get Pakistan declared as a vulnerable state incapable of protecting its strategic assets physically.

-It will provide an opportunity to further defame and isolate Pakistan on the plea that it is not ready to work with “international community” to “secure” its vulnerable nuclear program.

-It would allow USA to obtain UN sanction for imposing measures on Pakistan to safeguard its nuclear instalations through nuclear inspectors of IAEA as was the case of Iraqi military sites in 1990s.

-This will also give a license to international inspectors (CIA operators always in their ranks) to access every building inside Pakistan on pretext of a possible vulnerable nuclear site.

- Pakistan could be subjected to harsh sanctions in case it resists any UN declaration against its nukes. Pakistan had already gone through similar sanctions in 1990s when there was a virtual ban in international market on selling weapons to Pakistan .

-Currently Pakistan is in process of getting its entire military upgraded under a comprehensive program to be complete by 2019. If sanctions hit Pakistan now, then most of this upgrading will face a halt as a result of ban put on sale of sophisticated weapon systems to Pakistan. India on the other hand would be free from any such restriction and thus would be in an ideal situation to tilt strategic balance heavily in its favour.

-Another dimension to this possible attack is its impact on Pak-China relations in future. Currently Chinese are working on a number of projects along with Pakistani engineers.

If Pakistan fails to protect Chinese technicians on its own soil and in case of any harm or deaths of Chinese in this kind of an attack, it will force China to think seriously about its cooperation with Pakistan .

Indo-Isreali collaboration to destroy Pak nuclear program dates back to early 1980’s. However, each time the duo conspired to execute the surgical strike, Pakistan reacted promptly. The response was so severe that the aggressors had to abandon thir plans. This time Indian plan is much more disturbing as foot-soldiers and logistical support will be provided from within Pakistan so this plan has much more probability of success than what Indians tried in 1980’s.

Stage is set and time is running short for both sides. Some “so-called” local commander of Al-Qaeda in “ Afghanistan ” have already threatened that Pakistani nuclear weapon will be used against US. They are convincing the world that any attack by Al-Qaeda against US can take place either in Afghanistan or in US or even worse inside Pakistan. The idea is to prove that Pakistani nuclear weapons are the most dangerous thing on the planet. (Like Iraqi WMDs were once).

Apart from raising security measure on all nuclear installations, Pakistan must also convey a very strong message through all possible channels that any such attempt against Pakistan ’s nuclear program will have an opposite and much more intense reaction against India and Afghanistan and situation can easily turn out of control and a full blown war can erupt in the region.

Pakistan’s foreign office must become much more clearer and vocal about what Pakistan will do if its nuclear program comes under any attack. Pakistan has already stated its policy in clear terms that in case of any attack on its nuclear instalations, whether external or internal, the onus will be on India alone and Pakistan would respond accordingly. Pakistan has earmarked targets inside India to cater for such a eventuality.

It is time Pakistan must prepare a dossier to present to international media and establishments about Indian involvement in Pakistan ’s North West creating unrest and supporting insurgencies. For the sake of its future generations Pakistan will have to play very carefully but with a vigor and honor and if Pak-US relations are hindering this in future we must have a second thought about these so-called strategic relations.

- Asian Tribune -India plans to attack Pakistani nuclear installations using Baitullah Mehsud’s gang. Published by editor Features, News Jul 11, 2009 By Farzana Shah-Asian Tribune Correspondent in Pakistan

Posted in Current Affairs, Pak CAComments (3)

Pakistan Day Celebrations are unparalled anywhere in the world

Nukes: Don't mess with us–Islamabad's defiant rebuke to threats

There has a deluge of propaganda against Pakistan’s Nuclear program. This week, Pakistani defense officials made some low key statements. PM Gilani called the nuclear program a “cornerstone of Pakistani defense”. in answer to a question on retaliation a senior Pakistani soldier has told the world “Don’t Mess with us”.

 

THIS TOO SHALL PASS! WE SHALL OVERCOME!

Pakistan Day Celebrations are unparalled anywhere in the worldPakistan Day Celebrations are unparalled anywhere in the worldPakistan Day Celebrations are unparalled anywhere in the world

Pakistan Zindabad!

The resilience of Pakistan and the nation’s continuing collective refusal to do what the west would like it to do. Pakistani resilience is tried and tested. It cannot be defeated. The sooner the West realises this the sooner there will be peace in South Asia and the world.

THE PAKISTANI RESILIENCE IN THE FACE OF THREATS: Mountbatten, Nehru, Indira, Kruschev, Johnson, Carter, Kissinger (Nixon), Gorbachev, Clinton, Armitage (Bush), Karzai (Bush and Vajpayee/Sing) have all threatened Pakistan: The Pakistanis are used to it…so what else is new?!! Pakistan’s Nuclear Program should be seen in the backdrop of these threats. The stubborn Pakistanis

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Pakistan has now become immune to “prophecies of doom“. Pakistanis are sick of “do more” lectures from a 3rd rate country that piggy-backs on superpowers to get a kick out of beating up vulnerable populations. 2 million Muslim kids died destroying the USSR. Today, Pakistan is suffering because of the failed policies of Britain and the USA. The blowback faced by many is because of the short sighted policies of London and Washington.The selective  amnesia is amazing. Pakistan was used by the USA in the First Afghan War against the USSR.

The Rupert Murdock run Western media has been unrelenting in its pursuit of justifying the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Demonising Pakistan is an essential part of the Orwellian directives to the paid writers posing as journalists who spew out their venom in The Australian,  The Guardian, and the Wall Street Journal. Justifying the Banality of Occupation in Iraq and Afghanistan: The Thinktanksattempt to complete the circle of complicity between a sycophantic press, and a non-inquisitive servile public. The nation is forced to accept the only argument that it is being repeatedly inundated with

Over the decades, the steadfast, stubborn, and indefatigable resilience of the Pakistani nation has baffled the Russians, and the Indians.The Headlines about Pakistan in the media: Understanding the Rupert Murdock, Neocon & Hunduvata doomsayer machine which is running scared of defeat and retreat. The Americans have learned about this streak of Pakistani stubborness the the hard way. In their own way, the Pakistanis have thumbed their noses at Delhi, Moscow and Washington. The USSR threatened to target Peshawar with a nuclear missile after discovering that the US U2 planes had been taking off from Pakistan. Islamabad was not perturbed by the threats made by Kruschev.

First for the good news: Pakistan is not about to explode. The Islamic militants are not going to take power tomorrow; the nuclear weapons are not about to be trafficked to al-Qaida; the army is not about to send the Afghan Taliban to invade India; a civil war is unlikely.

The bad news is that Pakistan poses us questions that are much more profound than those we would face if this nation of 170m, the world’s second biggest Muslim state, were simply a failed state. If Pakistan collapsed, we would be faced by a serious security challenge. But the resilience of Pakistan and the nation’s continuing collective refusal to do what the west would like it to together pose questions with implications far beyond simple security concerns. They are about our ability to influence events in far-off places, our capacity to analyse and understand the behaviour and perceived interests of other nations and cultures, about our ability to deal with difference, about how we see the world.

Pakistan has very grave problems. In the last two years, I have reported on bloody ethnic and politicalriots, on violent demonstrations, from the front line of a vicious war against radicalIslamicinsurgents. I spent a day with BenazirBhuttoa week before she was assassinated and covered the series of murderous attacks committed at home and abroad by militant groups based in Pakistan withshadowy connections to its security services. There is an economic crisis and social problems – illiteracy, domestic violence, drug addiction – of grotesque proportions. Osama bin Laden is probably on Pakistani soil. The west can no longer afford to impose its values and notions of democracy on countries that neither want nor need them. Jason Burke The Observer, Sunday 15 March 2009

When the Americans became too intrusive, Ayub Khan said he wanted”Friends Not Masters” and sent them packing. President Johnson was furious.The USSR wanted Pakistan to join the Asian security pact with India. Instead Islamabad formed SEATO and CENTO to thwart Soviet and Indian designs. To make matters worse for the Cold War allies Pakistan formed a bridge between China and America which has now blossomed into partnership and led to the phenomenal growth of Beijing. Many Chinese have not forgotten the bridge.

pakistan-aik-isk-aik-junoon

India at the time was on the losing side of the battle and the USSR was not only defeated, it imploded.Analysts see major cavities.  Today there is an overwhelming body of evidence that a similar fate faces “India.”

India’s major problem is not a nuclear armed Pakistan, or 160 million belligerent Pakistanis or even 160 million Bangledeshis or the 160 million Indian Muslims. India’s problem is the 40 million Hindu White widows, and the Dalits and Naxalite insurrection that threatens to destroy the heart of midland. While the urban penury competes with rural poverty the plutocratic, dynastic democrats, the extremist rightists, and the megalomaniacs (Nero’s) dream of a global power, the heart of India is in pain and destitution.

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When Brezhnev sent his tanks into Kabul, many Russian Generals wanted to taste the warm waters of the Arabian sea and send their goods down through Karachi.

Pakistan started harassing the Soviet two years before the Americans thought it wise to join the effort. Most Americans weaned on the spin on the Cold War think that Ronald Reagan rode on the white steed and led the USA to victory over the USSR. Few know that 2 million AfPakkids died in defeating the USSR and thus ensuring that they implode after their colossal defeat in Kabul. Pakistan faced bombs in her cities, bazaars, Imam Baras, and Mosques. The lethal Khad-Raw-KGB combination played havoc with the Pakistan way of life. 3.5 million Afghan refugees camped out in Pakistan, but the nation allowed them a hospitable welcome. Today more Afghans have been born in Pakistan than anywhere else. Millions simply melted into Pakistan society and call Pakistan their first home. Pakistan is home to the majority of the Pakhtuns, and the largest Pakhtun city in the world is Karachi.

During the 80s the Pakistanis defied all Western pressure to build a Nuclear War and endured a decade of sanctions but never succumbed to the US and Western pressure to abandon the program.It did not work.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nN2hdqsOImc

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After 2001  the Pakistanis advised the American not to get embroiled in the quicksand of AfPak. The US propelled by the Neocons wanted to teach the world a lesson–and wanted to dispel the notion that America was a Paper Tiger. President Bush threatened Pakistan and told President Musharraf that if he did not join the war against the “Taliban” Pakistan would be bombed back to the stone ages.

Pakistan acquiesced, and tried to guide the Americans into talking to the moderate elements of the Taliban, but the sane advice fell on deaf ears. The Neocons listened to the Indians and tried to bulldoze an American agenda “Made in Delhi“.

That agenda was followed up with one of the most comprehensive campaigns of disinformation and demonization of Pakistan. Pakistan could do not good. Pakistan faced overt bombings and covert operations. The lethal network of RAW, CIA and Afghan agents wreaked havoc with the Pakistan population. Even Vice President Biden confirmed the covert operations against Pakistan by refusing to talk about them on Face the Nation. He said “I Can’t talk about and won’t talk about it”. That is pretty much an admission of the sabotage carried on in Pakistan by the CIA. India’s multiple Consulates, information centers, and sub offices work in tandem to rain destruction on Pakistani cities.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A-twbVndkIo

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India has been unable to comprehend or appreciate Pakistani resilience either. In her mad rush towards “world power” status, it only sees Pakistan as an impediment to its growth beyond its borders. In its quest for hegemony in South Asia, it perpetuates the myth of failed states around her neighborhood. Thus Sikkim, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Maldives are all considered Failed States in the minds of the Indian media, think tanks and the temples. In Delhi speak this simply means that all the neighboring states should join “India” per the Hinduvata. This irridentist revanchist imperialism has been dubbed Hindu Ziionism.

Hindu Zionism has been defined in many different ways. It is the perpetual quest of the Hinduvata to acquire all lands from the Oxus (Amy Darya ) to the Brahmaputra and from the Himalayas to the Indian Ocean. It does not end there–many have plans to take Akhand Bharat East of Bali to a mythical land called Raj Kalhani. Another facet of the Hindu Zionists to to bring about a U-Turn in Delhi’s foreign policy, abandon the Palestinians and support the religious claims of the Zionists of all lands from The Nile to the Euphrates. Narendra Modi, Adhvani, and others adhere and openly propagate the tirades of the Hinduvata which include both strains of the Hindu Zionists.Pakistan: Here we go again: Another prophecy of doom: The first one came in 1946

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The world is sick of Indian prophecies of doom for all states surrounding Bharat. By triggering unrest in Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Sikkiim, Bhutan and Bangladesh and by labeling them as “failed states” India wants to legitimize its own existence.

With 50 million White widows, Dalits in anger, 150 million Muslims in servitude, Naxilte insurrection, Mizuram and Tamil secession and Kashmiri rebellion, isn’t India a failed sate? Yes it is. And it has kept South Asia in penury because of its bad policies and tactics. Forget about Lal Masjid, the Crescent and Star will by flying atop Lal Qila AGAIN!

THEN: Hindu leaders agreed on partition of the subcontinent, as they thought and hoped that the dismemberment of India would be a temporary arrangement and reunification of India was a matter of time. History says that the riot of 1947 was masterminded to divide Bengal and Punjab, which were Muslim majority provinces at that time. Riots would not have occurred if they were not politically motivated. Neither innocent people would have been displaced or massacred; if Nehru, India’s first Prime Minister and his preceptor Gandhi would not had set a pre-condition that division of India “must mean a division also of Bengal and Punjab.” (See Nehru’s letter written on May 23, 1947, to Ashraffuddin Ahmad Chowdhury, the Congress President of Tripura, now Comilla, and district.) Nehru also did not keep secret the goal of his demand.

He in the same letter informed Ashraffuddin.

 

That is the only way to have a United India soon after. If we have a United India straightway, without such division that will, of course be very welcome.”
Pakistan Day Celebrations are unparalled anywhere in the world
NOW: Here we go again. Another Indian prophecy of doom. The first one came in 1947. Today Pakistan is a nuclear state growing robustly with 7% growth rate and foreign investment coming in which India could only envy.

 

 

Pakistan Day Celebrations are unparalled anywhere in the worldPakistan Day Celebrations are unparalled anywhere in the world

 

 

They had thought that 2007 would be a bad year. 2007 was one of the best years for the Pakistani economy. It takes more than a few mercenaries traind by RAW and KHAD to derail the “Mian bhais” of Pakistan. Alama Iqbal said it best “Qari nazar aat a hakeekat main hai Quran”.

The resilience of the Pakistani economy is akin to that of Israel and India. The Israeli economy is immune to political shocks. Similarly India has more than 89 active insurgencies. However both economies are growing. Similarly Thaliand despite a coup and active insurgencies continues to growl as an Asia Tiger.

The capacity of Pakistan to sustain some fifteen major disarticulations in polity, power, and structure and still preserve a national identity is a phenomenon one is tempted to explain by recourse to the supernatural. Pakistan which has been pummelled by external events (three wars with India, secession of Bangladesh, 3.5 million Afghan refugees) … to a degree which no other state established since 1945 has suffered. In this respect it stands as an exemplar of a nation whose adversities “common sense” might suggest make its viability impossible. Yet its continued existence defies the reality induced by such speculation. The enormity and persistence of these difficulties and the resilience of the nation in absorbing and somehow surviving them must be regarded with awe if not admiration.” RALPH BRAIBANTI

Pakistan Day Celebrations are unparalled anywhere in the worldPakistan Day Celebrations are unparalled anywhere in the worldPakistan Day Celebrations are unparalled anywhere in the world

Pakistan’s political unrest may delay, but not deter Canada’s rapidly expanding trade with the South Asian nation, Canadian business leaders say.

Yet Pakistani-Canadians with ties to their homeland continue to open doors for Canadian companies across the Pacific and, at the same time, create more demand here for products and services from Pakistan.

 

Questions also remain about his handling of the Bhutto assassination and whether or not his agents were perhaps even behind her death, charges that his government has rejected.

But Merchant, who emigrated to Canada in 1959, believes commerce will continue to thrive in Pakistan. He points to rapid increases in cellphone purchases, automobile manufacturing and foreign-currency reserves as signs that Pakistan’s middle class is becoming more affluent and able to afford higher-priced items.

Canadian companies have an important role to play as Pakistan tries to meet rising demand for information technology, oil and gas, hydroelectric power, new homes and other products and services, he adds.

SNC-Lavalin, Bombardier, Borealis Infrastructure and CAE are among major companies that have set up shop in Pakistan or gone on federal trade missions there.

 

Jean-Michel Laurin, vice-president of global business policy for the Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters Association (CME), says small to medium-sized companies have fuelled most of the rapid trade growth in Pakistan.

…large firms such as Bombardier and CAE, which can benefit from large military contracts, have no concerns because they operate globally and are willing to go anywhere.

Citing Statistics Canada figures, Laurin says Canadian exports to Pakistan have increased almost fourfold since 2001. Last year, Canadian firms shipped $397 million worth of goods, compared to a modest $73 million in 2001.

Between 2002-03, Canadian exports to Pakistan more than tripled from $85 million to $302 million.

“Our exports have increased quite dramatically – I’ve never seen something like that,” says Laurin.

Carey Healey, president and CEO of Coquitlam, B.C.-based Infosat Communications Inc., predicts Canadian companies doing business in Pakistan are unlikely to increase their investments there until the turmoil subsides. But Healey has no qualms about continuing Infosat’s relationship with its Pakistani partner, Comstar.ISA Ltd.

 

Infosat supplied a satellite hub and engineering services as part of the contract that will see Comstar provide network links and closed-circuit TV services for Pakistani police stations and other organizations in remote locations. The two companies aim to provide satellite and network services to Pakistani banks as they install more automated-teller machines around the country.

Doing business in Pakistan appealed to Infosat, because many executives in that country have trained in Canada or the U.S. and English is widely spoken.

“… “In India, it’s very competitive. There are tons of companies doing this. If you go over to Pakistan, people are falling all over themselves to be your partner. It’s because they’re just craving the ability to take on some of this new technology and new products.”

Comstar president Sami Bajwa is a McGill University MBA graduate who lived in Canada for two decades.

Healey says he felt little fear for his safety while travelling to Islamabad, Karachi and Lahore in 2006. Monte Stewart of Business Edge of Canada

Pakistan Day Celebrations are unparalled anywhere in the worldPakistan Day Celebrations are unparalled anywhere in the worldPakistan Day Celebrations are unparalled anywhere in the world

Military Strategy

Pakistani defense based on missile nuclear deterrent. Hatf, Shaheen, Ghauri, Babar and Abdali are far more advanced then previously thought

Pakistan’s “214 Subs” made in Karachi 5th Generation Su-35 spinoffs made in China as J-11s
Pakistan rapidly moving beyond basic JF-17 Thunders. The J-10s J-11s and newer versions of JF-17

Jointly Redesigned and upgraded Chinese J-10Bs built in Pakistan as FC-20s to be operationalized before 2015
The Pakistani hawks in the sky: Y-89 AWACS
Nothing succeeds like success: Hataf, Ghauri, Babar, Abdali missiles

JF-17 Thunders: Designed, built and operationalized in a record time of 4 years. Custom built for Pakistani needs The impact of Pakistan’s first indigenous JF-17 Thunder Squadron deployment

 

 

 

 

Serial production of JF-17 Thunder expedited:30-50 per year to 100 per annum
Beyond the Pakistani made JF-17 Thunder Fighter Plane, Chinese made J-10s.PAF next acquisition the J-11s?
Pakistan defense based on missile nuclear deterrent Hataf, Shaheen Babar and Abdali Hamza: Pakistan’s Augusta class Subs made in Karachi Pakistan’s 500 Al-Khalid tanks have been in production since 2001. Next generation tanks exported via IDEAS Pakistani made UAVs: Uqaab & Jasoos

 

 

 

3 New shipyards support Pakistani ship building & Frigates

Pakistan’s F-22 Frigates made in Karachi Chinese SAMs S-300s for Pakistan When with Iranian S-300s be operational? Why did Pakistan buy fewer F-16s?

 

 

 

 

PAF: Nuclear armed deterrent to hegemony

 

 

 

Pakistan already has a Nuclear Deal with China! India tried to raise expectations to portend failure!

 

 

 

 

IAF vs PAF: Defined by IAF

 

 

 

Tanks: Bharati Arjun vs. Pakistani Al Khalid

Russian 5th generation Su 35s spinoff of Su 27 Made in China as J-11

China achieves techonological independence in arms production

 

 

 

Russian Arms–Made in China

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

With $30 Billion China building Jxx 5th Generation Fighter

 

 

 

Pakistan’s 250 JF-17s, 50 F-16: Indias panicky “concern”

 

 

 

 

Indian missile failures

 

 

 

Why doesn’t Russia transfer plane technology to India?

When will Delhi ground the New Flying Coffins?

Indo Russian bickering disputes delay FGFA to stretch target in 2017

 

 

 

 

How Abdul Kalam stole US NASA secrets for India

 

 

 

Indian Airforce crying wolf? or facing shortage of jets?

Indian Airforce crying wolf? or facing shortage of jets?

South Asia Air Forces: PAF counters IAF strategy

The declining Indo-Russian relationship leaves Delhi scrambling for new arms sources—but they come with strings

Pakistan’s as Nuclear power: 250 bombs

Pakistan’s Plutonium based Tritium H-Bombs deter Indian agression

Pakistan Space Agency (SUPARCO) to launch 3 satellites in 3 years

Pakistan indigenous Satellite launch Vehicle & PakSat launch in 2011

Are Are the F-35s total failures like the scrapped F-111s? The Australians think so

F-22 canceled because they were duds

PAKISTANIS ESCAPED UNTOUCHABILITY—450 MILLION STILL ENSLAVED IN BHARAT

Congress has taken notice, and last month passed a resolution calling for the United States to work with India to address the problem of untouchability by “encouraging US businesses and other US organisations working in India to take every possible measure to ensure Dalits are included and are not discriminated against in their programming”.

Sitting in a circle as they waited to hear whether they would get jobs, Kamble and the other students talked about the often harrowing discrimination they faced. “I knew there was hatred in the world and in India, when as a child I watched some upper castes refuse to sell my mother lentils and rice in the nicer part of the market because we were `dirty,’ and from a backward caste,” said Vivek Kumar Katara, 22, who has a master’s degree in social work focusing on helping the mentally ill. Without quotas, Katara said, “I honestly don’t know if professors would have even let me sit in the same class as upper castes”. http://www.thepeninsulaqatar.com/features/featuredetail.asp?file=augustfeatures302007.xml

“It is now time for this Congress to speak out about this ancient and particularly abhorrent form of persecution and segregation – even if it is occurring in a country considered to be one of America’s closest allies,” Rep Trent Franks, R-Ariz., said during a speech last spring on the House floor. Franks went on to call Dalits “one of the most oppressed peoples on Earth.”

The 2006 study found that public health workers refuse to visit 33 per cent of Dalit villages, while mail is not delivered to the homes of 24 per cent of Dalits. The reason for the neglect, the study said, is that some in the upper castes believe lower-caste people are dirty and lack dignity in their labor as latrine cleaners, rickshaw drivers, butchers, herders and barbers.

The debate on affirmative action in India is similar to the one in the United States in terms of discrimination and ways to end it. But in India, those who experience discrimination, especially in rural areas, are the majority and are ruled by an elite. The issue here is complicated by India’s turbulent history of race, class and caste. Centuries-old customs of arranged marriages and inherited professions perpetuate caste divisions, which are further reinforced by some interpretations of Hinduism, India’s dominant religion, which sanctions the caste system.

 
The country’s education system also hardens caste. Lower castes largely attend public schools, which teach local languages, while private schools attended by upper castes teach English – the most important criterion to be hired at a call center, where young employees spend their nights helping customers phoning from the United States.

Pakistan Day Celebrations are unparalled anywhere in the world

India as World Power 1

Extremist Hindus show power using the Swastika in triple entendre–as an ancient Hindu symbol, reverence for Hitler and sign of Anti-Western Indian power
Superpower India Pt 2 Extremist Hindus revere Hitler and use the Swastika as the Indian flag

How long to extripate penury from india? 300 years! India’s budget– fit for a superpower Murder of 10 million Indian girl babies:Before or right after birth. The media is silent.

Sino-Indian relationship

India Balkanizing? Naxalite insurrection widening cracks in deep cavaties
The 2nd world revolution (after Buddhism) from Nepal: Another threat to India Pakistan is China’s “Israel”

Red Nepal: Clear and present danger to India

Saving the Pashtuns of Afghania from Afghanistan. Eradicating the Pashtun plight and ending occupation.

Mohandas Gandhi’s Unmasked Sex life of Mohandas Gandhi, his failures and sexual perversion

Sex life of Indira Gandhi

Nehru was Gay! Affair with Edwina also
French First Lady Carla Bruni nude
Is India a failed state? Peek behind the Bollywood gloss!
Chilled Urine drinking hot in India. Gandhi to PM Desai to common man
India: A gift from the Hindu Gods:Cows Urine: UK Telegraph report by Julian West

How long to end poverty in “Bharat”? 3 Centuries
India as world power! Part 1
World power India: Part 2
A gift from the Brahmin Gods to Hindus. Bottled Cow Urine. UK Telegraph story
GANDHI’s RACISM AGAINST BLACKS

Gandhi condones Zulu massacres and defends the British. Aug 4 1906
The sex life of Gandhi. His failure as a politician
The myth of Mohandas K. Gandhi debunked. He gets an “F” on South Africa, Salt Match, Non-Violence, and nationalism
Which war did Mohandas Gandhi support? All of them. There wasn’t a war that the “prophet” of Non-Violence did not support. He was Sergeant Major in the British Army & won a medal for his combat service
Gandhi’s racism. The truth behind the mask. Behold Sergeant Major Gandhi who supported the British in the Boer war, against the Zulu rebellion. Behold the prophet of peace who worked to stratify the South African society.
Gandhi extended the life of British Empire by helping UK wars

Gandhi’s letter to his friend Hitler.
Gandhi sex life deviant sexual perversion, and political failures

 

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Progressive Bloggers<img Pakistani Bloggers

Real Estate values are skyrocketing, the Stock Exchange keeps going higher and the Porche dealership is backlogged. The reason is the economy is fundamentally sound and Middle Easter, Chinese and Asian investors aware of the robust infrastructure of Pakistan are still coming in droves to invest.As America spend $400 Billion on oil syphoned into the Middle East and other oil producing nations, those countries (after the Dubai Ports deal fiasco) are reluctant to invest in the USA. The result booming business in Pakistan. Please read about the Pakistani growth: http://tinyurl.com/2ftzt6

The 2nd world revolution (after Buddhism) from Nepal: Another threat to India Pakistan is China’s “Israel”

Red Nepal: Clear and present danger to India

 

 

 

 

 

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