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ALERT PAKISTANIS ! 


 
Pakistan, US in talks on nuclear security
Aim to keep technology away from terrorists; Uranium may be shipped to America 
for disposal
 
 
 
Navy Admiral Mike Mullen said he is "comfortable" that the nuclear weapons 
cannot be stolen. (AP Photo)
 
By Bryan Bender 
Globe Staff / May 5, 2009 





WASHINGTON - US and Pakistani officials have begun behind-the-scenes talks 
aimed at achieving a greater US role in securing Pakistan's nuclear materials, 
including a proposal to ship some highly enriched uranium to the United States 
for disposal, according to two administration officials with direct knowledge 
of the discussions.




 If successful, the talks between nonproliferation specialists at the State and 
Energy departments and their Pakistani counterparts would mark a breakthrough 
in efforts to persuade Pakistan to accept greater assistance in preventing 
terrorists from obtaining nuclear fuel or the technology to build a nuclear 
weapon.

"The Pakistanis take this very seriously," said a senior US official involved 
in the talks who asked not to be identified discussing the sensitive 
negotiations. "Pakistan faces some unique challenges."

The government of Pakistan, which is believed to have as many as 100 nuclear 
bombs, has been highly secretive about its nuclear activities for fear that the 
United States might try to destroy its arsenal or that its archenemy, 
nuclear-armed India, might launch a first strike. But the growing threat to the 
Pakistani government from the Taliban - and its allies in the Al Qaeda 
terrorist network - has given Pakistani leaders a new reason to cooperate with 
the United States, according to the officials.

"We believe the command and control of the nuclear arsenal is a primary concern 
of the Pakistanis," said the US official. The United States now provides some 
basic assistance to Pakistan in nuclear security. Measures include training 
Pakistani officials on export control and providing detection equipment for its 
seaports, airports, and border crossings to help thwart nuclear smuggling.

However, the new measures under consideration would for the first time give the 
United States access to some of Pakistan's nuclear ingredients, though not the 
actual weapons, which are reportedly stored unassembled under the control of a 
10,000-member security force headed by a two-star general.

Two of the key proposals under discussion are a joint program to secure or 
destroy radioactive materials that could be used to make a crude nuclear 
device, and shipment to the United States of some of the highly enriched 
uranium fuel used in Pakistani civilian power plants. The enriched fuel is 
believed to be sought by terrorists as possible material for a weapon of mass 
destruction, the officials said.

Pakistan's embassy did not respond to several requests for comment.

Top officials in both countries continue to express public confidence that 
Pakistan's nuclear materials are safe from theft. President Obama, who is 
scheduled to meet with Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari in Washington 
tomorrow, told a news conference last week that "we can make sure that 
Pakistan's nuclear arsenal is secure because the Pakistani Army, I think, 
recognizes the hazards of those weapons falling into the wrong 
hands."Continued...


Navy Admiral Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told Pentagon 
reporters yesterday that he, too, is "comfortable" that the nuclear weapons 
cannot be stolen. "I don't think that's going to happen," said Mullen, who 
visited Pakistan last week. "I don't see that in any way imminent whatsoever at 
this particular point in time."

Yet many nuclear specialists both inside and outside the US government 
expressed worry that such expressions of confidence do not reflect the full 
extent of Pakistan's nuclear vulnerability - which, they say, goes far beyond 
the weapons themselves.

In addition to its arsenal, Pakistan has a vast network of nuclear facilities, 
equipment, and scientists - the extent of which the United States and its 
allies know very little. Any of those elements could be pilfered by terrorists 
or their sympathizers inside the Pakistani government or military, the 
international nuclear specialists said.

They point to the fact that A.Q. Khan, the builder of Pakistan's nuclear bomb, 
oversaw a black market that sold nuclear materials and know-how to a variety of 
international customers, including Iran and North Korea, for years before the 
scheme was revealed by the CIA in 2004.

"What other society has leaked nuclear secrets like Pakistan?" asked David 
Albright, a former United Nations weapons inspector who is now president of the 
Institute for Science and International Security in Washington, citing the 
documented evidence that classified bomb designs and centrifuges to enrich 
uranium into a bomb-making grade were sold to a variety of sources. "Why do 
people just sit there and say everything is fine?"

Others have raised similar alarms. The Congressional Research Service, an arm 
of Congress, issued a report last month that stated, "While nuclear weapons are 
currently under firm control, with warheads disassembled, technology could be 
sold off by insiders during a worsened crisis."

US officials hope to persuade the Pakistani government in the coming months 
that the importance given to the security of the weapons themselves must be 
extended to other parts of its nuclear industry, according to the officials. 
The US government official involved in the talks stressed, however, that there 
are legal restrictions on how far the United States can go in providing 
assistance. Because Pakistan is not a signatory of the Nuclear Nonproliferation 
Treaty, the US government is limited in how much assistance it can provide to 
Pakistan on nuclear matters.

Yet specialists said that if Pakistan's government were willing to accept more 
help, the United States could - and should - find ways to overcome those 
restrictions.

Bernard Finel, a senior fellow at the American Security Project, a Washington 
think tank, said enhancing nuclear-security cooperation "would be a really 
valuable place for us to spend a lot of diplomatic energy."

"The worst-case scenarios in Pakistan are worse than anywhere else," he added.

Bender can be reached at [email protected]. 

© Copyright 2009 Globe Newspaper 
Company.http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2009/05/05/pakistan_us_in_talks_on_nuclear_security/




     


 
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