http://www.thebulletin.org/columns/hugh-gusterson/20080205.html

A Pakistani view of U.S. nuclear weapons
By Hugh Gusterson | 5 February 2008

ISLAMABAD, PAKISTAN, JANUARY 25--At a press conference in Islamabad today, 
Pakistani Brig. Gen. Atta M. Iqhman expressed concern about U.S. procedures 
for handling nuclear weapons. Iqhman, who oversees the safety and security of 
the Pakistani nuclear force, said that U.S. protocols for storing and 
handling nuclear weapons are inadequate. "In Pakistan, we store nuclear 
warheads separately from their delivery systems, and a nuclear warhead can 
only be activated if three separate officers agree," Iqhman said. "In the 
United States, almost 20 years after the end of the Cold War, nuclear weapons 
still sit atop missiles, on hair-trigger alert, and it only takes two 
launch-control officers to activate a nuclear weapon. The U.S. government has 
persistently ignored arms control experts around the world who have said they 
should at least de-alert their weapons."

Iqhman also questioned the adequacy of U.S. procedures for handling nuclear 
weapons. He expressed particular concern about the August 29, 2007, incident 
in which six nuclear weapons were accidentally loaded under the wing of a 
B-52 by workers who did not observe routine inspection procedures and thought 
they were attaching conventional weapons to the B-52. The flight navigator 
should have caught their mistake, but he neglected to inspect the weapons as 
required. For several hours the nuclear weapons were in the air without 
anyone's knowledge. "The United States needs to develop new protocols for 
storing and loading nuclear weapons, and it needs to do a better job of 
recruiting and training the personnel who handle them," Iqhman said.
Iqhman added the Pakistani government would be willing to offer technical 
advice and assistance to the United States on improving its nuclear weapons 
handling procedures. Speaking anonymously because of the issue's sensitivity, 
senior Pentagon officials said it is Washington's role to give, not receive, 
advice on nuclear weapons safety and surety issues.

Iqhman pointed out that the August 29 event was not an isolated incident; 
there have been at least 24 accidents involving nuclear weapons on U.S. 
planes. He mentioned a 1966 incident in which four nuclear weapons fell to 
the ground when two planes collided over Spain, as well as a 1968 fire that 
caused a plane to crash in Greenland with four hydrogen bombs aboard. In 
1980, a Titan II missile in Arkansas exploded during maintenance, sending a 
nuclear warhead flying 600 feet through the air. In a remark that visibly 
annoyed a U.S. official present at the briefing, Iqhman described the U.S. 
nuclear arsenal as "an accident waiting to happen."

Jay Keuse of MSNBC News asked Iqhman if Pakistan was in any position to be 
lecturing other countries given Pakistani scientist A. Q. Khan's record of 
selling nuclear technology to other countries. "All nuclear weapons states 
profess to oppose proliferation while helping select allies acquire nuclear 
weapons technology," Iqhman replied. "The United States helped Britain and 
France obtain the bomb; France helped the Israelis; and Russia helped China. 
And China," he added coyly, "is said by Western media sources to have helped 
Pakistan. So why can't Pakistan behave like everyone else?"

Iqhman's deputy, Col. Bom Zhalot also expressed concern about the temperament 
of the U.S. public, asking whether they had the maturity and self-restraint 
to be trusted with the ultimate weapon. "Their leaders lecture us on the 
sanctity of life, and their president believes that every embryo is sacred, 
but they are the only country to have used these terrible weapons--not just 
once, but twice. Paul Tibbets, the pilot of the plane that bombed Hiroshima, 
said he never lost a night's sleep over killing 100,000 people, many of them 
women and children. That's scarcely human."

While Iqhman glared reproachfully at Zhalot for this rhetorical outburst, 
Zhalot continued: "We also worry that the U.S. commander-in-chief has 
confessed to having been an alcoholic. Here in Pakistan, alcohol is 'haram,' 
so this isn't a problem for us. Studies have also found that one-fifth of 
U.S. military personnel are heavy drinkers. How many of those have 
responsibility for nuclear weapons?"

John G. Libb of the Washington Times asked if Americans were wrong to be 
concerned about Pakistan's nuclear stockpile given the rise of Islamic 
fundamentalism in Pakistan. Colonel Zhalot replied: "Millions of Americans 
believe that these are the last days and that they will be raptured to heaven 
at the end of the world. You have a president who describes Jesus as his 
favorite philosopher, and one of the last remaining candidates in your 
presidential primaries is a preacher who doesn't believe in evolution. Many 
Pakistanis worry that the United States is being taken over by religious 
extremists who believe that a nuclear holocaust will just put the true 
believers on a fast track to heaven. We worry about a nutcase U.S. president 
destroying the world to save it."

U.S. diplomats in Pakistan declined comment.

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