http://netindia123.com/showdetails.asp?id=71744&cat=India&head=Bhutto+got+missile+blueprints+for+Pakistan

Bhutto got missile blueprints for Pakistan

Pakistan's former prime minister Benazir Bhutto said that she personally
brought the blueprints from North Korea for her country's missile
programme, reports UPI.

In February 2004, when Abdul Qadeer Khan, father of the Pakistan's
nuclear bomb, confessed to selling nuclear technology to Iran, Libya and
North Korea, there were media reports suggesting that nuclear technology
was given by Pakistan to North Korea in return for missiles from the
communist state.

Talking to a group of Pakistani journalists in Washington, Bhutto said
Pakistan paid "cash" for these blueprints. But Pakistani authorities
might have exchanged nuclear technology for missiles later, after the US
and other world powers slapped strict economic sanctions on Islamabad
following the 1998 nuclear tests by India and Pakistan, she said. 

Bhutto's political rival, Nawaz Sharif, was in power then. "It is quite
possible that in 1998, when we were facing a financial crunch because of
our nuclear tests, this (exchange of nuclear technology for missiles)
might have happened, but not by us.

"I was out of the government by then, but I have read press reports
saying that this has been done. Rather, this has been indirectly
admitted in Khan's confession," said Bhutto referring to Khan's
televised confession Feb 6, 2004.

A state department official when asked for her statement said that
Bhutto's "remarks were interesting", but declined to comment further.

The former Pakistani prime minister said that in 1989 her government
formed a missile technology board, which produced only short-range
missiles that did not violate the international restrictions on the
technology.

Bhutto said in 1993, when she was going to North Korea as Pakistan's
prime minister, Pakistani scientists working on the country's nuclear
and missile programmes asked her to bring blueprints of North Korean
missiles that had a longer range than those Pakistan already had.

"These were not nuclear missiles but had the capability to carry nuclear
weapons," she said.

These were blueprints for short- and medium- range missiles, which
Pakistan's archrival, India, did not have at that stage. 

Initially she was reluctant to ask North Koreans for the blueprints of
the missiles.

"I told them, our policy is to have parity with India. Unless India
tests those missiles, we should not. But I was told that we would not
make these missiles. We will only make preparations," said Bhutto.

The former prime minister, whose father was hanged by military ruler,
Gen. Zia ul Huq, and who herself is prevented from returning to Pakistan
by another military ruler, Gen. Pervez Musharraf, said there was a time
when the Pakistani military depended on her for defence purchases.

"I was told, 'only you can bring these blueprints; only you can bring
F-16s from the US; only you can bring Mirage aircraft from France. Look
what they have done to me now," said Bhutto, referring to the Pervez
Musharraf government's policy that she could be arrested and tried for
corruption if she returned home.

"I told the North Koreans, 'give us missile technology'. We should be
prepared for (any threat). It was a cash transaction, no exchange of
nuclear technology. Exchanging nuclear technology for missiles was never
even discussed during my visit."

Bhutto recalled that her father, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, started Pakistan's
nuclear programme after the first nuclear test by India in 1974 and
brought Khan from Holland to work on a project to make a nuclear bomb
for his country.

She has urged the Pakistani government to order an independent inquiry
into the allegations against Khan because many in Pakistan still believe
that he is a national hero who has been unfairly treated.

Bhutto said that Khan played a key role in Pakistan's nuclear programme
for which the entire nation respected him.

"But it is a matter of great shame and disappointment that he appeared
on the national television and confessed to selling Pakistan's nuclear
secret in the black market."

Bhutto said there were people in Pakistan who believed that Khan was
made a scapegoat and that it is "possible that he was ordered to do
whatever he did".

"If this is true, then the people should know about it. This ambiguity
can be cleared by holding an independent inquiry," said Bhutto, hoping
that the current government will hold such an inquiry.

"If some people believe a national hero has been wrongly accused of what
he has not done, they have a right to know the truth. If he has done
what he is accused of doing, then he is wrong."

Although in the past, Bhutto had said she was kept in the dark on
Pakistan's nuclear programme, she has now changed her stance.

Referring to a book written by a former Pakistani official with the
Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) military spy agency who claimed the
former prime minister was given "fake briefings" on nuclear programme,
she said: "ISI and Tirmizi had nothing to do with the nuclear programme.
The ISI was kept out of it both in the Bhutto and Zia governments."

She said she was not briefed by the ISI. "I called our scientists and
asked for a briefing, and they briefed me. The ISI men were not the
chief executive of Pakistan; I was. And Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was the
founder and father of Pakistan's nuclear bomb."

"I am silent because of national interests. Otherwise, I know a lot.
Perhaps even today's rulers do not know as much about our nuclear
programme as I do," she added.

-- 
Liberty means responsibility. That is why most men dread it.
-- George Bernard Shaw



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