It's jaw dropping - the incompetence and stupidity of the American state. If
terrorism is coming back to bite their bottoms, they themselves are to blame
largely. It was at least understandable during the cold war, and even
after,  that they looked the other way when non-Western countries fell
victims of terrorism, but when their own safety is jeopardized - it beats
me.

As long as the West refuses to see the reality that Pakistan is a major
component of the real axis of evil, things won't change.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article2368174.ece

How the West summoned up a nuclear nightmare in PakistanAdrian Levy and
Catherine Scott-Clark reveal how misguided deals with Pakistan have created
a terrifying threat of nuclear terrorism

General Pervez Musharraf was surprised. Visiting New York for a session of
the UN, the last thing the Pakistani president expected was to be confronted
with evidence of his country's secret sales of nuclear bomb technology and
equipment to members of the "axis of evil".

Yet here on the polished wooden table of Musharraf's hotel suite, George
Tenet, director of the CIA, was laying out a sheaf of incriminating
evidence.

There were intricate drawings of Pakistan's P-1 uranium-enrich-ing
centrifuge, with part numbers, dates and signatures. And there were details
of the activities of Abdul Qadeer "A Q" Khan, the so-called Father of the
Pakistani Bomb: his travels around the world, bank statements, even
paperwork showing what his organisation had offered for sale and to which
countries.

A senior Musharraf aide described it disingenuously as "the most
embarrassing moment in the president's life" - not because of the evidence
but because he had felt Pakistan was on a long leash as it was integral to
the Americans' war on terror.

It was only three months since President George W Bush had cancelled a $1
billion debt and instigated a new $3 billion military and economic
assistance package for Pakistan.

"Now the leash was being wound in, but Musharraf got over his surprise. He
moved on and thought, so be it. He was a survivor. Pakistan was a survivor.
We would adapt to a new reality," a source said.

But he was not going to confess all: "Musharraf would play dumb until he
ascertained what the US knew and whom we could blame."

The general feigned ignorance. But everyone in the room during this
"confrontation" four years ago knew that they were involved in a charade.

American officials knew that Musharraf had known about the nuclear trade all
along. And Washington had itself not only turned a blind eye to Pakistan's
nuclear bomb project for decades but had covered it up for imperative
geopolitical reasons, even when Islamabad began trading its secret
technology.

By 2003 there was mounting evidence - still kept from Capitol Hill and the
UK parliament - that Pakistan's clients now encompassed North Korea, Iran
and Libya and probably other countries and individuals too.

Britain had privately been pressing America to tell Musharraf it had to
stop. In October 2003 MI6 uncovered Pakistani nuclear material on a boat
heading for Libya. But the consensus in Washington was that saving
Pakistan's vulnerable (and valuable) president mattered more than
prosecuting the guilty.

A senior British Foreign Office source explained: "He would come up with his
own framework for survival and we would help him get through it, as long as
the dirty deals were wound up. It was a compromise struck in the world of
realpolitik."

The details were agreed between Musharraf and Richard Armitage, the deputy
secretary of state, at a meeting in Islamabad. A drama was conceived that
drew from Musharraf a promise to shut down Pakistan's nuclear black market
in return for winning continued US support for his unelected regime.

It was agreed that A Q Khan and his aides would be arrested and blamed for
"privately" engaging in proliferation. The country's military elite - who
had sponsored Khan's work and encouraged sales of technology to reduce their
reliance on American aid - were left in the clear.

Khan was made to admit his "unauthorised activities" on television. Bush
subscribed to the deceit, announcing: "Khan has confessed his crimes and his
top associates are out of business . . . President Musharraf has promised to
share all the information he learns about the Khan network, and has assured
us that his country will never again be a source of proliferation."

The truth was that Musharraf had been reducing Khan's role in the nuclear
enterprise and had pushed him into official retirement. The nuclear
programme and trading were - and are - completely under the military
government's control. And proliferation did not stop.

Four years on, Khan is still under house arrest, and Musharraf is still in
power. In a further exercise in "realpolitik", another political deal is
being stitched together to keep him in the presidency as America's best hope
of maintaining stability in this geopolitically vital but desperately
unstable country.

Musharraf's term of office comes to an end in November. Under the
constitution he cannot win another term if he remains chief of army staff.
Urged on by Washington, he has been discussing a power-sharing agreement
with Benazir Bhutto, the former prime minister.

He intends, however, to keep hold of foreign affairs, the armed forces,
internal and external security portfolios, the nuclear deterrent and the WMD
(weapons of mass destruction) programme, according to Pakistani sources.

America's reason for sustaining Musharraf in power is that the alternative
is even less appealing. The upper reaches of the army, and the retired
military elite, are rife with Islamists - a legacy of General Zia ul-Haq,
the zealot who both ramped up the nuclear programme and gave the military a
religious mission when he was president from 1978-88.

The tragedy is that America's gamble on Musharraf has not paid off.
Washington's nightmare is a nuclear Pakistan controlled by fundamentalists.
Yet Musharraf presides over a country that is not only still a nuclear
proliferator but the real source of the Islamist terrorism menacing the
West.

Al-Qaeda has merged with Pakistan's home-grown terrorists, spawning new
camps, new graduates and new missions abroad - including the July attacks in
London in 2005.

At least 17 of the worst Sunni terror groups banned by the US and the UN
have been allowed to operate openly and launch recruitment drives, using
flimsy cover-names, most of them operating within sight of the Pakistan
military.

The Taliban reformed after Musharraf signed a secret pact with its
supporters in Waziristan - the tribal region of northwest Pakistan - in
2004, and again in 2006, leading to what Nato commanders in Afghanistan
complained of as a 300% increase in attacks on UK and Afghan forces.

US intelligence sources have accused elements of Pakistan's intelligence
establishment and army - including General Mo-hammad Aziz Khan, who until
October 2004 was Musharraf's chairman of the joint chiefs of staff - of
coaching and sheltering the neo-Taliban.

Pakistan today stands on the failed states index at position 12, just below
Haiti, in worse shape than North Korea and Burma. Yet Musharraf's government
has been rewarded with a 45,000% increase in US aid since 2001, taking
assistance levels to more than $10 billion, five times more than received by
any other country (including Israel).

On his only visit to Pakistan, in March 2006, Bush flew in at night,
unannounced, without lights. As the US knew only too well, America's enemies
had access to US-supplied Stinger missiles that Pakistan's former army
chiefs had declined to help the CIA claw back after the Afghan war.

Bush never got near to the people of Pakistan. A heavy security blanket
enveloped Islamabad, which was patrolled by thousands of riot police and
para-troopers while US Black Hawks buzzed the skies which were empty of any
commercial traffic.

After Bush's visit, Eliza Manningham-Buller, then the director of MI5, made
an unusual outing in public to warn that "resilient networks" of terror in
Britain and elsewhere in Europe were being "directed by al-Qaeda in
Pakistan".

Pakistan's unsecured nuclear arsenal is increasingly vulnerable as
terrorists gain new footholds in Islamabad. According to a recent poll of
100 US foreign policy experts by the Centre for American Progress and the
Carnegie Endowment, both in Washington, Pakistan poses today's greatest
nuclear threat to the world.

Robert Gallucci, who as a young US diplomat tracked its nuclear programme
from inception in 1972 and ended his career as Bush's adviser on WMD,
describes Pakistan as "the number one threat to the world at this moment in
time".

He warns: "If it all goes off, a nuclear bomb in a US or European city, I'm
sure we will find ourselves looking in Pakistan's direction."

Furthermore, disturbing new intelligence suggests that proliferation has not
stopped. Last year, a 55-page highly classified "early warning" assessment
was produced by Germany's Federal Intelligence Service, the BND, taking in
the pooled knowledge of British, French and Belgian spies.

Its authors found that a range of materials and components were still being
procured by Pakistan that "clearly exceeds" what Islamabad needed for its
domestic nuclear programme. One of the report's authors said: "They were
buying to sell, and it could no longer be hived off as rogue scientists
doing the deed."

The report said that KRL labs, Khan's old facility, had continued to
coordinate the Pakistani sales programme and now ran a network of front
companies in Europe, the Gulf and southeast Asia which deployed all the old
tricks: disguising end-user certificates by shielding the ultimate
destinations from sellers, and lying on customs manifests.

The Pakistan-North Korean relationship was still very much alive, the report
stated. Islamabad had hooked Pyongyang into its nuclear procurement network
in western Europe, buying raw materials and machinery for production lines
in North Korea that were churning out cheap centrifuge components. Pakistan
was one of the key customers, selling the parts on to other clients.

Most alarming was the finding that hundreds of thousands of components
amassed by Khan had vanished since he had been put out of operation. In
other words, Pakistan has continued to sell nuclear weapons technology (to
clients known and unknown) even as Musharraf denies it - which means either
that the sales are being carried out with his secret blessing or that he is
no more in control of Pakistan's nuclear programme than he is of the bands
of jihadis in his country.

Some of Pakistan's generals are gleeful and even unguarded about the trade,
seeing it as proof of their apparently untouchable status as a prime ally in
the US war on terror, but also as evidence of their rapid industrialisation.


Pakistan has learnt to manufacture the restricted components and materials,
electronic equipment and super-strong metals needed for a ready-made nuclear
weapons facility which they were selling to anyone who could come up with
the cash.

General Khalid Mahmud Arif, formerly in charge of the nuclear programme and
still an influen-tial figure in military circles, said: "Once we skulked
around. Now we have a new generation of men and the technology. We have labs
and the industry to rival the West."

He said Pakistan was producing super-strength maraging (low carbon) steel
which is primarily used for making centrifuges with which Pakistan enriched
uranium to weapons grade. It was also making high-frequency inverters which
regulate power to the centrifuges.

"They used to come from the UK and now we are selling them ourselves," he
said. "Maraging steel too - once we struggled but now, finally, we are
manufacturing it at the People's Steel Mill and exporting it. It is better
than you can get outside."

For many years the US and Europe have barred the export of both items to
Pakistan.

Musharraf has consistently hidden bad news from his American backers. Two
particularly worrying incidents were recently disclosed by sources close to
those involved.

In 2001, Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), Pakistan's powerful intelligence
agency, had proof that Osama Bin Laden had received in person two retired
Pakistani nuclear scientists at his secret HQ in Afghanistan. Both had
become Islamist radicals in retirement.

According to the son of one of them, Bin Laden told them he had succeeded in
acquiring highly enriched uranium from the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan
and he wanted their help to turn it into a bomb. Amazed, they explained that
while they could help with the science of fissile materials, they were not
weapons designers.

Soon afterwards, a secret army audit discovered evidence that 40 canisters
of highly enriched uranium (HEU), the feedstuff for a nuclear bomb, were
missing from the Kahuta enrichment labs outside Islamabad after A Q Khan
retired.

Dr Muhammad Shafiq ur-Rehman, an insider who is the son of one of Khan's
former key aides, revealed: "They could only account for 80 out of a
supposed 120 canisters."

The ISI reasoned that some of the drums had probably gone to North Korea,
and some to Iran and probably Libya, according to a former ISI officer.

Enough highly enriched uranium remained at large to fuel 1,000 dirty bombs
or a sizable nuclear device. All it would take for a doomsday scenario is
100lb of HEU - a mass the size of a sugar bag as the material is heavier
than lead - to get into the hands of terrorists with the right expertise.

Split into two loads to prevent accidental fission, it could be machined
into semi-spheres, loaded into a cannon-style device, and driven in the back
of a van to a western target.

Behind this desperately worrying state of affairs lies a grand deception.
For three decades, consecutive US administrations, Republican and Democrat,
as well as governments in Britain and other European countries, allowed
Pakistan to acquire highly restricted nuclear technology. Key US agencies
were then misdirected and countermanded in order to disguise how Pakistan
had sold it on.

Intelligence gathering in the US was blunted while the departments of state
and defence were corralled into backing the White House agenda and forced to
side-step Congress and break federal laws. Officials who tried to stop the
charade were purged.

The deceit began under President Jimmy Carter; but it burgeoned under Ronald
Reagan, who used Pakistan as a springboard for American aid to the
antiSoviet jihad in Afghanistan.

US officials converged on Islamabad carrying cash and the message that
America would ignore the growing nuclear programme - while Reagan publicly
insisted that nonproliferation remained a primary policy.

A flavour of the duplicity comes from Robert Gallucci, who was director of
the bureau of near eastern and south Asian

affairs at the State Department in 1982 at a time when the Reagan
administration was desperately struggling to suppress evidence that Khan was
designing a bomb.

After British intelligence caught the Khan network shopping in the UK for
reflective shields made from beryllium, which could boost the power of a
nuclear device, Reagan sent General Vernon Walters, a former CIA deputy
director, to see President Zia in Islamabad.

Gallucci, who accompanied him, remembers: "Our evidence was
incontrovertible. 'This is what your experts have been up to', we said, as
politely as we could, giving Zia a get-out.

"However, the president rejected our briefing, saying our information had
come from the Indians."

Gallucci was not privy to a secret agenda. Walters confided to a senior
State Department colleague on his return that, far from demanding a rollback
in nuclear trading, he had been asked to warn the Pakistanis to do it more
discreetly.

"He came in looking miserable," the colleague recalled. "He said, 'I was
told [by the White House] to tell Zia to get that nuclear problem off our
radar'.

"I was shocked. It was the antithesis of what we were supposed to be doing.
Instead of giving it to them with both barrels, Walters had told the
Pakistanis they had better hide their bomb programme, lest it humiliate
Reagan."

But Zia did not heed the warning and, as the months passed, the intelligence
mounted. It was augmented by a US data-collect-ing operation made possible
by a high-tech surveillance device secreted in the arid area surrounding the
heavily guarded Kahuta hills outside Islamabad, where the nuclear
installation had been built.

The device, a resin "boulder", was capable of transmitting intelligence
through an array of recording and air-sampling technology hidden inside.

A freak accident exposed the operation. Somebody fell on the "rock",
exposing the whirring and blinking components.

While knowing what was going on, Washington pursued a deception that bloomed
into a complex conspiracy. Evidence was destroyed, criminal files were
diverted, and Congress was repeatedly lied to.

The obfuscation concealed from the world Pakistan's "cold-testing" of a
nuclear bomb in laboratory conditions in 1983 and the intelligence that it
had "hot-tested" - exploded - one in 1984 with the help of China.

By the time Reagan's presidency came to an end in 1989, Pakistan possessed a
deployable and tested nuclear device. Much of the programme had been funded
using hundreds of millions of dollars in US aid diverted by the Pakistan
military.

The bomb could be mated to a missile or dropped from Ameri-can-supplied F-16
fighter jets, also given by Reagan in the mid1980s, and the nuclear weapons
programme had become a shop window for the world's most unstable powers.

The US deceit lapsed in the 1990s when President George Bush Sr cut Pakistan
adrift after the fall of the Soviet Union; but this increased Islamabad's
need to develop and sell nuclear technology in place of aid.

Under Bill Clinton an ever more detailed picture was pieced together of
Pakistan's dangerous liaisons: Iran in 1987, Iraq in 1990, North Korea in
1993, and by 1997 Libya, too. In 1998 both India and Pakistan held publicly
announced nuclear tests.

By the time George W Bush became president in 2001, there was a mountain of
precise intelligence portraying Pakistan as the epicentre of global
instability: a host of and patron for Islamist terrorism, ruled by a
military clique that was raising capital and political influence by selling
WMD.

Yet even when American spy satellites photographed missile components being
loaded into a Pakistani C-130 outside Pyong-yang, the North Korean capital -
and intelligence analysts concluded that the cargo was a direct exchange for
Pakistani nuclear technology - Washington did not react.

It was in this dangerous condition that Pakistan was clutched back into the
American bosom after the attacks on New York and Washington on September 11,
2001. And the deception continued.


-- 
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A single death is a tragedy, a million deaths is a statistic.
- Joseph Stalin

To send men to the firing squad, judicial proof is unnecessary.
These procedures are an archaic bourgeois detail. This is a
revolution! And a revolutionary must become a cold killing
machine motivated by pure hate. We must create the pedagogy
of the paredon (The Wall)!
- Che Guevara
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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