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India-Pakistan
Musharraf sez anti-state elements behind Pakistani nuclear proliferation
2004-01-24
Pakistan’s president, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, acknowledged Friday that scientists from his country appeared to have sold nuclear designs to other nations probably "for personal financial gain." He denied that the Pakistan government knew of any sales at the time but vowed that suspects would be dealt with "as antistate elements."
Good idea. Stretch their necks...
General Musharraf’s statement at a global economic forum here came after weeks of delicate efforts to force Pakistan to deal with the scientists, according to diplomats and American officials. Technical documents recently obtained from Libya on its nuclear program, as well as documents relating to Iran’s nuclear activities, undercut years of Pakistani denials and appeared to force General Musharraf’s hand, diplomats and American officials said. The documents "have created a situation in which the denials no longer hold up," one senior American official said.
Took awhile to back him into a corner, didn't it?
General Musharraf met several times in recent weeks with Abdul Qadeer Khan, the father of the Pakistani atomic bomb, who is revered in the country as a national hero. A number of scientists closely tied to Dr. Khan have been detained for questioning. There have already been protests in Islamabad over the detentions, and some European and American officials said that General Musharraf seemed to be preparing for arrests or other legal actions. Starting in late December, Pakistani government officials began backing away from their vigorous denials that their scientists had provided critical help to several aspiring nuclear states, including Iran and North Korea. But on Friday, General Musharraf went further. "Well, I would not like to predict," he said in an interview with CNN, "but it appears that some individuals, as I said, were involved for personal financial gain." General Musharraf continued to insist that the government was not involved in the sales, portraying the actions as the efforts of corrupt scientists.
Time to toss them overboard, unless he can get out of doing it...
American officials, however, are clearly skeptical of those claims. They note that when Pakistan received missile parts from North Korea — believed to be the quid pro quo for nuclear aid — a Pakistani air force cargo jet was dispatched to Pyongyang, North Korea, to pick up the parts. They also note that the A. Q. Khan Research Laboratories are the crown jewel of the Pakistani nuclear program, with close ties to both the military and the intelligence agency, the I.S.I. "I don’t think anyone has proven the case for officially sanctioned transfers of technology," one senior American official said recently. But a senior European diplomat who has reviewed much of the evidence said that "it stretches credulity that proliferation on this scale can occur without senior officials in the government knowing about it."
Yes, but this is Pakistan, where people are prepared to believe five impossible things before breakfast...
General Musharraf told CNN that there were also credible allegations against European nuclear middlemen and other nations, "so it is not Pakistan alone." The same theme was struck Friday by the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Mohamed ElBaradei, who said that the global black market in nuclear materials and equipment had grown into a virtual "Wal-Mart" for weapons-seeking countries.
Yeah. And Qadeer Khan's the greeter...
Dr. ElBaradei, director general of the agency, the United Nations’ watchdog on atomic weapons, said he was astonished by the scale and complexity of the illicit trafficking through which the Libyans obtained material and blueprints for nuclear weapons designs. "All of that was obtained abroad," he said in an interview during the World Economic Forum meeting here. "All of what we saw was a result of the Wal-Mart of private-sector proliferation. When you see things being designed in one country, manufactured in two or three others, shipped to a fourth, redirected to a fifth, that means there’s lots of offices all over the world," Dr. ElBaradei said. "The sophistication of the process, frankly, has surpassed my expectations."
Perhaps someone should devote some attention to shutting down that network?
Dr. ElBaradei said he was satisfied with the level of cooperation shown by the Libyans. Documents provided by the Libyans indicated that the uranium enrichment equipment they were using was based on a sophisticated design that could only have come from the A.Q. Khan Research Laboratories. The centrifuge design is known as a "Pak-2," indicating that it was a second-generation version that probably dates from the late 1980’s, American officials said. "They are taking us everywhere we want to go," Dr. ElBaradei said of the Libyans. "They are answering all our questions, they are showing us all of what they have."
I'll bet toilet paper consumption in Islamabad is up 900 percent...
In interviews, American officials have insisted that Pakistan, not the United States, is leading the investigation, though the American officials acknowledge goosing them providing information to Islamabad. The biggest trove came after the Libyan leader, Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, agreed in December to dismantle his unconventional weapons programs, and to turn over documents about how he developed them. "Pakistan’s cooperation is key for us to understand the dimension of the problem," Dr. ElBaradei said in the interview on Friday. "I have no reason to believe the government was involved, but I hope to have a clear picture in a few weeks." Dr. ElBaradei’s confidence, however, was leavened by his acknowledgment that neither his agency, nor the intelligence branches of the big countries, have a clear idea of the extent of nuclear trafficking. "The system is under a good deal of stress," he said. "We need to take this seriously." American officials say they are uncertain why General Musharraf is now moving against the scientists.
Gee. Golly. Which part of his anatomy do you think he's covering?
They suggested in recent interviews that the evidence has become so overwhelming that he has begun to fear the reimposition of sanctions by Congress. But they also suggest that he may be trying to reassert his power, demonstrating that he will not be intimidated by critics who say he has warmed up too much to the United States, both in the hunt for Al Qaeda terrorists and in Washington’s demands to clamp down on proliferation.
Posted by:Dan Darling

#1  "wal-mart for weapons"--i thought they only like sold walls in wal-mart--paris hilton
Posted by: SON OF TOLUI   2004-1-24 12:14:13 AM  

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