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Pakistan's 'Islamic Bomb' Has Stretched Its Nuclear Shadow As Far As The Sea Of Japan.


*** Observers Warn That, If The US-Led Offensive Goes Nowhere, Japan Could Go Nuclear *** Pakistan Is Providing A Link Between What Will Happen To Saddam And To Kim Jong Il Kim Jong Il
 or Kim Chong Il

(born Feb. 16, 1941, Siberia, Russia, U.S.S.R.) Son of Kim Il-sung. He was designated his father's successor in 1980 and became North Korea's de facto leader on his father's death in 1994.
 *** North Korean Warnings To The US Of War If Sanctions Are Imposed, Shows It Is Going To Play Tough; The US Cannot Afford To Respond In The Same Way Until The Iraq Campaign Ends

NICOSIA - The North Korean power game with the US, coming as Americans prepare for a final showdown with Saddam Hussein's regime, has brought Pakistan's nuclear capability under sharp focus. APS learns that, in nudging Beijing and Moscow to play a role as decisive as that of the US in denuclearising North Korea, Washington is quietly giving the nod to the possibility of Taiwan going nuclear. In parallel, meanwhile, Japan and the US are sending signals to Pyongyang that they would be willing to fund North Korean economic revival in return for denuclearisation. A highly placed APS source says if this approach proves successful, the next target of this two-pronged offensive is to denuclearise Pakistan and fund its economic revival. Before this two-pronged offensive gets anywhere, however, Pakistani ruler Gen. Pervez Musharraf General Pervez Musharraf (Urdu: پرويز مشرف) (born August 11 1943) is President of Pakistan and the Chief of Army Staff of the Pakistan Army who came to power in wake of a coup d'etat.  will have to shave off his path all the acutely fanatic Islamists, and the implications for him will not be easily overcome in view of the following factors:

1. The prospect for the future spread of nuclear technology from Pakistan is increasing as the political power balance shifts towards Islamist parties. President Musharraf and his spokesman Lt. Gen. Rashid Qureshi have stated that Pakistan would never proliferate such technology; Musharraf has personally given a 400% non-proliferation guarantee to US Secretary of State Colin Powell Noun 1. Colin Powell - United States general who was the first African American to serve as chief of staff; later served as Secretary of State under President George W. Bush (born 1937)
Colin luther Powell, Powell
 and a 500% assurance to the Japanese government. Yet over the past decade, Pakistan has transferred nuclear technology and/or know-how to all three countries listed in US President George Bush's "axis of evil" - Iraq, North Korea and Iran. Some Pakistani scientists are currently under detention on suspicion of supplying information on how to build nuclear weapons to Al Qaida and the Taliban, while others are reported to have fled to Burma (another "rogue" state), or simply "disappeared" to unknown destinations.

The most extensive transfer of nuclear technology from Pakistan has been to North Korea, however. It began with the initiation of contacts in 1992. The last reported transfer was an airlift of nuclear materials to Pyongyang in July 2002. Ironically, all this was being done during a decade when Pakistan's biggest aid donor was Japan. The man regarded as the father of Pakistan's nuclear programme, Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan
Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan, NI & BAR, HI (Urdu: عبدالقدیر خان) (born April 1, 1936 in Bhopal, British India) is a Pakistani Scientist and metallurgical engineer widely regarded as the founder of
, started the contact in 1992 and is known to have visited North Korea at least 13 times. Khan, now a presidential advisor, was also the man behind Pakistan's proliferation of nuclear know-how to Iran, beginning with a nuclear cooperation agreement signed in 1986. Subsequently, links included training for Iranian nuclear scientists in Pakistan in 1988, but such interaction eased after 1993 as Tehran and Islamabad became rivals for influence in Afghanistan.

The UN has documented that in October 1990, i.e. just two months before the US-led Operation Desert Storm Noun 1. Operation Desert Storm - the United States and its allies defeated Iraq in a ground war that lasted 100 hours (1991)
Gulf War, Persian Gulf War - a war fought between Iraq and a coalition led by the United States that freed Kuwait from Iraqi invaders;
 to expel Iraqi forces from Kuwait, Dr. Khan allegedly offered Iraq through an unnamed intermediary the technology to "manufacture a nuclear weapon". Baghdad said it rejected the offer fearing an American trap, and Pakistan denied the offer as a fraud. But the International Atomic Energy Agency International Atomic Energy Agency: see Atomic Energy Agency, International.
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)

International organization officially founded in 1957 to promote the peaceful use of nuclear energy.
 (IAEA IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency. ) listed it as a key unresolved issue in a 1999 report to the UN on Iraqi arms programmes. In light of the potential for further radicalisation in Pakistan - and especially after the experience of after Sept. 11, 2001 - the US will want to become physically involved in the safekeeping Safekeeping

The storage of assets or other items of value in a protected area.

Notes:
Individuals may use self-directed methods of safekeeping or the services of a bank or brokerage firm.
 of Pakistani nuclear weapons; reports suggest it may already have some kind of guardianship role. If acknowledged, any such development could have a devastating dev·as·tate  
tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates
1. To lay waste; destroy.

2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark.
 effect on Musharraf's credibility.

2. The Inter Services Intelligence (ISI ISI International Sensitivity Index, see there ), regarded as a state within the state, is connected both to Pakistan's proliferation activities and to radical Islamist groups. Its former Director General, Mehmood Ahmed Mehmood Ahmed (born January 1, 1978) is a Pakistani-born Greek cricketer. He has played with Greece since 2005.

He first represented his adopted country at the ECC Notts Sports Affiliates Championship in 2005, making his debut, as an opening batsman, against Portugal,
, was replaced in late 2001 by Musharraf after it was revealed that he had authorised the transfer of $100,000 to the WTC WTC World Trade Center, see there  attackers by Shaikh Omar Saeed, a Briton of Pakistani origin who is also the chief suspect in the murder of Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl

For other people named Daniel Pearl, see Daniel Pearl (disambiguation).


Daniel Pearl (October 10, 1963 – February 1, 2002) was an American journalist who was kidnapped and murdered in Karachi, Pakistan.
. Earlier directors general like Lt. Gen. Hameed Gul gul  
n.
A stylized octagonal motif in Oriental rugs.



[Persian, rose; see julep.]
, Lt. Gen. Javed Nasir Lieutenant General Javed Nasir was the former head of Inter-Services Intelligence from 1991 till May 1993. He was instrumental in uniting the warring Afghan factions after the Soviet retreat, and installing the first Mujahideen government in Afghanistan.  and Lt. Gen. Asad Durrani are pro-Taliban. They, along with others like former Army Chief Gen. Aslam Beg, form a "brain trust" with intimate knowledge of US military methods and tactics, due to their co-operation during the anti-Soviet jihad. They are believed to be helping Taliban and Al Qaida leaders to avoid capture.

Washington is aware that the ISI has been playing a double game since Islamabad abandoned the Taliban after the WTC attacks, but suspects it may be doing so at Musharraf's behest in view of the fact that current Director General Ehsan ul Haq General Ehsan ul Haq (born September 22, 1949) is the current Chairman Joint Chiefs of Staff of the Pakistan Military. After the military coup of 1999 in which General Pervez Musharraf came to power, General Ehsan was given some of the most important posts in the Pakistan Army  is a close friend. The ISI has split up its operational desk for Afghanistan into two units - one for handling the Taliban/Al Qaida remnants, and another for dealing with the US military. Such moves have made the relationship between the US military and Pakistani forces on the Afghan-Pakistan border uncomfortable. Observers say that, eventually, for peace to materialise in Afghanistan and for Pakistan to stabilise internally, the ISI would have to be dismantled completely. But this may not happen without considerable pressure from the US. The way in which the US publicised its secret agreement with Musharraf to pursue terrorists into Pakistani territory is an indication that a tougher approach is beginning to materialise.

3. Pressure on Pakistan is building up as a result of the military establishment's unwillingness to cut itself off from the radical Islamist elements. In recent months, three leading Islamists - Hafiz Hafiz (häfēz`) [Arab.,=one who has memorized the Qur'an], 1319–1389?, Persian lyric poet, b. Shiraz. His original name was Shams al-Din Muhammad. He acquired the surname from having memorized the Qur'an at an early age.  Mohammed Saeed, chief of the Lashkar-e-Toiba; Maulana Azam Tariq The mullah ("maulana") Azam Tariq (Urdu: اعظم طارق) (March 1962 - October 4, 2003) was chief of the anti-Shi'a political machine Sipah-e-Sahaba Pakistan ("warriors of the Prophet's companions in Pakistan"), and was one of , head of the fanatical Sunni sectarian group Sipah-e-Sahaba, and Maulana Mahmood Azhar, head of the Jaish-e-Mohammed - were released from prison. All are leaders of groups labelled as terrorist by the US. Although Saeed and Azhar in particular have called for violence against Americans, Islamabad says these leaders have not been charged with any crime and therefore it is unable to keep them in detention. Washington has noted that such judicial procedures have not been observed in the case of jailed politicians from the mainstream political parties, as in the case of the husband of the former prime minister, Benazir Bhutto Benazir Bhutto (Urdu: بینظیر بھٹو, IPA: [bɛnɜziɽ botɔ] .

American special forces and regular units fighting Al Qaida and Taliban remnants in Afghanistan are becoming increasingly frustrated by the way in which these elements are using sanctuaries in Pakistan's North West Frontier Province - controlled by an alliance of six Islamist groups called the Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA) (Urdu: متحدہ مجلس عمل ) (United Council of Action) is a coalition between religious-political parties in Pakistan.  (MMA (Microcomputer Managers Association, Inc.) A membership organization with chapters throughout the U.S. that was devoted to educating personnel responsible for personal computers. It disbanded in 1996.

Mma - A fast Mathematica-like system, in Allegro CL by R. Fateman, 1991.
) - to launch attacks on US soldiers. Minor successes in killing or wounding Americans enhances the prestige of Al Qaida and the Taliban in these areas, while US retaliatory strikes breeds further hatred against the West. In fact, the secret hot pursuit understanding with Pakistan recently became public when the US Air Force dropped a bomb on a makeshift Pakistani madrassa in retaliation for an attack on its troops by a Pakistani soldier. This has further damaged the image of Musharraf, who is derided as "Busharraf" by his opponents.

The Chinese Angle: In the 1980s China transferred the key technologies required to give Pakistan the capability to build an "Islamic Bomb". The US has been applying pressure through the 1990s to stop the proliferation without much success. The North Korean connection was formalised Adj. 1. formalised - concerned with or characterized by rigorous adherence to recognized forms (especially in religion or art); "highly formalized plays like `Waiting for Godot'"
formalistic, formalized
 in 1993 when military officers travelling with the entourage of then Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto reached a deal for the exchange of Pakistani nuclear technology in return for missile technology from North Korea. In this process, the practice of "plausible deniability Plausible deniability is the term given to the creation of loose and informal chains of command in governments and other large organizations. In the case that assassinations, false flag or black ops or any other illegal or otherwise disreputable and unpopular activities become " was perfected by China, Pakistan and North Korea. China, when accused of proliferation, admitted at most that certain companies in its defence industrial complex had acted outside the authority of the central government. Pakistan simply denied the transfer of such technologies from China, but when it was caught proliferating itself has always said these were done on the "personal" initiative of key nuclear scientists. With both Pakistan and North Korea having gone nuclear, these arguments are no longer convincing to the US which is keen to see such transfers discontinued. Staff of several US agencies are posted in Pakistan, while five of the country's airbases have been taken over by the US military.

Islamabad still calls Beijing its "all weather friend" but its Islamic Bomb has cast a shadow indirectly over China as well. Most observers concur that Beijing made a major strategic mistake by proliferating nuclear and missile technologies to Pakistan, with the intention of containing India, and to North Korea with the objective of constraining Japan. In choosing these client states, Beijing strategists appear to have overlooked the possibility that they might seek to implement their independent agendas once they became nuclear capable, agendas that might threaten the country's own interest by generating instability beyond Chinese control. China now faces a nuclear India to its south-west, a potentially nuclear Japan and South Korea to its east, and a Taiwan ready to go nuclear to its south - apart from the Russian arsenal to the north, and an American capability everywhere. Arizona Sen. John McCain, an influential Republican, said on Jan. 5 that the best way to make it in China's interests to persuade North Korean leader Kim Jong Il to change his mind on nuclear weapons would be "to remove our objections to Japan developing nuclear weapons".
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Publication:APS Diplomat News Service
Geographic Code:90ASI
Date:Jan 13, 2003
Words:1603
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