From: Sandeep Vaidya <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: Fwd: FW: PAKISTAN MILITARY WARNS OF NUCLEAR CONFLICT WITH INDIA

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>                "a small little incident can result in a chain
>                 reaction which nobody will be able to control...
>                 [and] become really horrific for the entire world."
>                                       Brigadier General Mohammad Yaqub
>
>MID-EAST REALITIES - www.MiddleEast.Org - Washington - 12/25/2001:   As in
>Palestine, the Kashmir conflict originally resulted from Western policies
>in the last century.  Now both conflicts threaten to explode into wars of
>mass destruction in this century.
>     It is now only a few years since both India and Pakistan first tested
> their nuclear weapons and long-range missiles.  Israel and India have a
> long-time still mostly secret military connection and unsuccessfully
> attempted in the 1980s and early 1990s to undermine and destroy the
> Pakistani nuclear program -- the "Muslim bomb" project.  The Israelis --
> themselves with a military capability said to be many times greater than
> that of all the Arab countries combined -- have made no secret of their
> desire to destroy the advanced weapons programs in Iran, Iraq, Libya and
> Pakistan; the Syrians are said to be arming with chemical and biological
> weapons to deter the Israelis; and the Egyptian military is also
> preparing.  Meanwhile Israel has also secretly outfitted three
> submarines, acquired in recent years from Germany after firm assurances
> they would not be used in this way, with nuclear weapons in a kind of
> doomsday nuclear deterrent scenario.
>      Within this vortex of world events, the Americans, continually
> prodded by the infamous Israeli/Jewish lobby, are themselves now turning
> the events of 911 and the pursuit of Bin Laden/Al Queida into a worldwide
> war against all opposition to their imperial "new world order".  Using
> the simplistic slogan of a "war against terrorism", one who origins and
> concepts are clearly with the Israelis, covert and military U.S. actions
> can be expected against many countries in the year ahead.  Palestinian
> opposition to Israeli occupation, along with Pakistani opposition to
> terribly brutal Indian policies in Kashmir, have all been lumped together
> by the Americans with no sense or concern it appears for the very nature
> of these complex conflicts.   In the new world of "you are either with us
> or against us" a few purposefully or mistaken sparks could in fact ignite
> an entire region, even the entire world.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>      PAKISTAN MILITARY WARNS OF NUCLEAR CONFLICT WITH INDIA
>                                 By Raja Asghar
>
>CHAKOTHI, Pakistan (Reuters - 25 December ) - A senior Pakistani army
>officer said on Monday continued border clashes with India could spark an
>uncontrollable flareup involving nuclear weapons.
>
>The two neighbours have reinforced positions on either side of their
>disputed border in Kashmir since a December 13 suicide attack on the
>Indian parliament which killed 14 people. New Delhi blamed two militant
>groups based in Muslim Pakistan.
>
>Local sources said on Monday that Pakistan's army had deployed
>anti-aircraft guns and moved most troops from the eastern garrison town of
>Sialkot to the border with India.
>
>Pakistani and Indian troops only watched each other with distrust from
>bunkers on either side of a broken bridge at Chakothi in the west of
>disputed Kashmir when a group of journalists visited the Pakistani side of
>the front line.
>
>But both sides reported exchanges of fresh mortar and heavy machinegun
>fire elsewhere in Kashmir and New Delhi expelled a Pakistani diplomat,
>raising tensions between the nuclear-armed adversaries ever higher.
>
>Pakistani Brigadier Mohammad Yaqub said the situation was "highly
>explosive".   "Because in that situation, that tension, even a small
>little incident can result in a chain reaction which nobody will be able
>to control," he told Reuters Television at
>Muzaffarabad, capital of the Pakistani-held part of Kashmir.
>
>He said an all-out war between the two nations could "become really
>horrific for the entire world".
>
>Asked if nuclear weapons could be used, Yaqub, giving what he called his
>personal view, said:
>
>"But if there is a war between the two countries and if any country feels
>that it comes to its own survival, probably there won't be any hesitation
>to use nuclear weapons."
>
>A brief statement from the military's public relations department said the
>top-brass of Pakistan's armed forces met in the garrison town of
>Rawalpindi and "discussed matters relating to defence, national security
>and professional aspects".
>
>A source in Sialkot, just a few miles from the border in Pakistan's
>eastern Punjab province, said most of the troops had left the cantonment.
>
>"The movement of troops to and from the border has increased. It is more
>than in routine times," he said.
>
>Artillery exchanges have increased recently in the Sharkargarh-Zafarwal
>sector of the working boundary, a 220-km (136-mile) stretch of border
>between the line of control dividing mountainous Kashmir, and the frontier
>that runs down the plains in an eastward direction up to the Arabian Sea.
>
>A senior local official in Sialkot said the army movements to and from the
>border had "not been very obvious," but declined to go into detail.
>
>New Delhi accuses Pakistan of fomenting a decade-old revolt in
>Muslim-majority Kashmir. Pakistan denies sponsoring the rebellion, saying
>it only provides moral and diplomatic support to the Kashmiri struggle for
>self-determination.
>
>Kashmir's main separatist alliance, the All Parties Hurriyat (Freedom)
>Conference, asked the two nations to exercise restraint in the region,
>which has triggered two of the three wars they have fought since
>independence from Britain in 1947.
>
>
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>                       --------------------------
>         MiD-EasT RealitieS  - http://www.MiddleEast.Org
>                               Phone:   (202) 362-5266
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