http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=116374§ionid=351020401


Press TV
January 17, 2010

 
 
US Army to 'protect' Pakistan's nuclear sites
 








 

In face of a growing anti-Americanism among the Pakistan military, the US army 
moves to train a 'crack unit' to thwart possible attacks on the country's 
nuclear facilities. 

The unit would be responsible to take back Pakistani nuclear weapons in the 
event the militants gain access to the strategic devices and materials, the 
Pakistani daily The Nation reported Sunday. 

The measure is taken as the US military fears the possibility of an attack 
"from inside the country's security apparatus," added the report. 

The daily notes that the rising anti-Americanism among the Pakistani military 
personnel, as well as a series of attacks on sensitive installations over the 
past two years, has prompted the US officials to take the action. 

“There have been attacks on (Pakistani) army bases which stored nuclear weapons 
and there have been breaches and infiltrations by terrorists into military 
facilities,"
 Rolf Mowatt-Larssen, a former CIA officer who used to run the US energy 
department's intelligence unit, was quoted as saying. 

Larssen claimed the nuclear Pakistan houses "the highest density of extremists 
in the world," declaring that the US has the right to be concerned over the 
issue. 

Heated debate has been going on between the US and Pakistani officials over the 
security of its nuclear facilities over the past two weeks. 

There have been reports that US officials' primary goal is to gain access to 
and disable or neutralize Pakistan's nuclear arsenal, which they consider as a 
possible threat to US and Israeli security. 

Pakistani nuclear arms have also been referred to as an “Islamic Bomb” in the 
American and Israeli press and political circles, highlighting their mindset 
regarding the country's atomic weapons, which was meant to rival India's. 
India's nuclear arms, however, have never been raised as a concern in
 western circles. 

In 2007, militants attacked military facilities at Sargodha, in Punjab, and at 
Kamra, in Attock district, which are thought to house nuclear weapons. 

In August 2008, militants blew up the gates to the Wah weapons complex in 
Punjab. The attack left 63 people dead. 
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