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How the U.S. Has Secretly Backed Pakistan's Nuclear Program From Day One

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The Obama Adminstration is Helping to Upgrade Pakistan's Nuclear Weapons

By ANDREW COCKBURN

"If the worst, the unthinkable, were to happen,” Hillary Clinton recently told Fox News, “and this advancing Taliban encouraged and supported by Al Qaeda and other extremists were to essentially topple the government … then they would have keys to the nuclear arsenal of Pakistan.” Many will note that the extremists posing this unthinkable prospect were set up in business by the U.S. in the first place. Very well buried is the fact that the nuclear arsenal that must not be allowed to fall into the hands of our former allies has been itself the object of U.S. encouragement over the years and is to this very day in receipt of crucial U.S. financial assistance and technical support.

Back in 1979, Zbigniew Brzezinski, intent on his own jihad against the USSR, declared that the “Afghan resistance” should be supplied with money and arms. That, of course, required full Pakistani cooperation, which would, Brzezinski underlined, “require a review of our policy toward Pakistan, more guarantees to it, more arms aid, and, alas, a decision that our security policy toward Pakistan cannot be dictated by our nonproliferation policy.” In other words, Pakistan was free to get on with building a bomb so long as we could arm the people who have subsequently come back to haunt us. Asked for his views on Pakistan’s nuclear ambitions, Ronald Reagan replied “I just don’t think it’s any of our business.” During the years that the infamous A.Q. Khan was peddling his uranium enrichment technology around the place, his shipping manager was a CIA agent, whose masters seem to have had little problem with allowing the trade to go forward.

Now comes word from inside the Obama government that little has changed. “Most of the aid we’ve sent them over the past few years has been diverted into their nuclear program,” a senior national security official in the current administration recently told me. Most of this diverted aid -- $5.56 billion as of a year ago – was officially designated “Coalition Support Funds” for Pakistani military operations against the Taliban. It may be that this diversion came as a terrible shock to Washington, but the money has been routinely handed over essentially without accounting being required from the Pakistanis. The GAO has huffed at items such as the $30 million shelled out for non-existent roads, of the $1.5 million for “naval vehicles damaged in combat” but that was as far as public complaints went. In the meantime, as Joint Chiefs Chairman Admiral Mullen confirmed recently, the Pakistanis have been urgently increasing their nuclear weapons production.

A former national security official with knowledge of the policy explained this insouciance to me. “We want to get in there and manage [their nuclear program]. If we manage it, we can make sure they don’t start testing, or start a war.” In other words, the U.S. is helping the Pakistanis to modernize their nuclear arsenal in hopes that the U.S. will thereby gain a measure of control. The official aim of U.S. technical support, at an estimated cost of $100 million a year, is to render the Pakistani weapons safer, i.e., less likely to go off if dropped, and more “secure”, meaning out of the reach of our old friends the extremists.

However, in pursuit of this objective, it is inevitable that the U.S. is not only rendering the warheads more operationally reliable, we are also transferring the technology required to design more sophisticated warheads without having to test them, a system known as “stockpile stewardship.”

Conceived after the U.S. forswore live testing in 1993 as a means to “test” weapons through computer simulations, this vastly expensive program not only ensures the weapons’ reliability (at least in theory) but also the viability of new and improved designs. In reality, the stewardship program has been as much a boondoggle for the politically powerful nuclear laboratories at Livermore and Los Alamos as anything else, so outreach in the form of assistance to the Pakistanis in this area can only gratify our own weaponeers.

“If you’re not confident that weapons are safe to handle, you’re more likely to keep them in the basement,” says nuclear command and control expert Bruce Blair, President of the World Security Institute. “The military is always pressuring to deploy the weapons, which requires an increase in readiness.” In 2008 Blair himself was approached by the Pakistani military seeking advice on means to render their weapons more secure. Their aim, he says, was clearly to render their nuclear force “mature,” and “operational.” In the same way, says Blair, a few years ago an Indian military delegation turned up at the Russian Impulse Design Bureau in St. Petersburg, to ask for help on making their weapons safer to handle. “They said they wanted to be able to assure their political leadership that their weapons were safe enough to be deployed.”

Pakistan’s drive to build more nukes is an inevitable by-product of the 2008 nuclear cooperation deal with India that overturned U.S. law and gave the Indians access to US nuclear technology, not to mention massive arms sales, despite their ongoing bomb program.

The deal blew an enormous hole in the Non-Proliferation Treaty, but initial protests from congressional doves were soon smothered under human-wave assaults by arms company and nuclear industry lobbyists. The Israelis lent additional and potent assistance on Capital Hill. Not coincidentally, Israeli arms dealers, promised a significant slice of the action, have garnered at least $1.5 billion worth of orders from Delhi. (The respected Israeli daily Haaretz has highlighted Indian media reports that the bribes involved totaled $120 million.) Nuclear power’s handmaiden, the global warming lobby, was also a wellspring of ardent support, led by Rajendra Pachauri, the Indian railroad engineer who is Chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change which shared Al Gore’s Nobel prize.) Even the Dalai Lama was drafted in to use his influence with impressionable members of congress.

The consequent success in overturning a longstanding arms control treaty, which in turn has led to the U.S. extending a helping hand to India’s nuclear rivals in Pakistan, should only be seen as the wave of the future. Instead of foaming at the Iranian nuclear program, we should be standing at the ready to oversee their design of safer, more reliable nukes, and after that, who knows? North Korea’s bomb probably need work too.

Andrew Cockburn: How the U.S. Has Secretly Backed Pakistan's Nuclear Program From Day One
 
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Ridiculous! Absolute nonsense!

The US did everything they could to inhibit Pakistan's ability to acquire Nukes!

Here Zaid Hamid explains how Pakistan became a Nuclear power:

 
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The only thing I could say about Mr. andrew cockburn is that his **** must have been burned to ashes due to jealousy and success of Pakistan's neuclear program.
 
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Hi,

You kids need to do a little more research before you pass up a bitter judgement against the americans---more than half of pak scientists of 60's 70's and 80's were educated and trained in the u s---and not only nuclear scientists---some of our missile program is also based upon the help that we received from the americans.

Thankyou MBI for posting this article over here.
 
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Listen there was no official or intentional support from the US for Pakistan's nuclear program.

Why do you think the US hit Pakistan was heavy sanctions, or as Fmr. Sec. of Defense Colin Powell put it "Pakistan was sanctioned to the eye ball".

The US was vehemently against Pakistan's nuclear program since day one. The US wanted to pressure Pakistan about it's nuclear program during the 1980's but because Pakistan was an ally in Afghanistan against the United State's number 1 enemy, the Soviet Union; the United States had to turn a blind eye to the Pakistani Nuclear Program.


Read the works and comments of Zbigniew Brzezinski and Henry Kissinger, those two even admit the US turned a 'blind eye' to the covert Pakistani nuclear program. Once the Afghan-Soviet war ended, the sanctions hit Pakistan and hit hard. They even publicly blasted Pakistan for it's nuclear program.

I understand the article mentions the money they sent us during the Afghan-Soviet war was diverted for our Nuclear program ambitions, well that doesn't necessarily mean the US has offered any real support or made a effort to support a Pakistani Nuclear program.


The articles title and premise is considerably misleading and distorting history.
 
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Hi,

You kids need to do a little more research before you pass up a bitter judgement against the americans---more than half of pak scientists of 60's 70's and 80's were educated and trained in the u s---and not only nuclear scientists---some of our missile program is also based upon the help that we received from the americans.

Thankyou MBI for posting this article over here.

The News dated 25 May published an account of Brig retired Imtiaz. He disclosed that strenuous efforts were made by CIA from 1978 onwards to disable our nuclear program in its crib. By stroke of luck he found out about a gang of Pakistani scientists and engineers working in Kahuta and other nuclear plants working on the payroll of CIA to sabotage our nuclear sites. They were caught and sentenced and their foreign handlers deported. It indicates the frenzy of USA to denuclearize Pakistan through covert means at a time when Islamabad used to repeatedly assert that its nuclear program was not nuclear tipped but meant for peaceful purposes only. It has not given up and is still working with full zeal to achieve its mission. If the CIA had succeeded in cultivating so many well-paid and pampered scientists in 1978, what is the guarantee that it has not made a breakthrough now particularly after it was allowed unlimited freedom of action to operate in Pakistan after 2001 and still no restrictions have been imposed on it. Another disclosure has been made by Advisor to PM that Petroleum and Natural Resources Ministry has certain elements bought over by USA who are bent upon scuttling Iran-Pakistan gas pipeline project.

http://www.defence.pk/forums/wmd-missiles/28663-pakistan-nuclear-program-under-constant-assault.html
 
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"How the U.S. Has Secretly Backed Pakistan's Nuclear Program From Day One"




LMAO!!!

What's next?

"How the Grinch Stole Christmas"

:rofl::rofl::rofl:
 
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Cheetah,

Agreed to what you stated----but the bottomline is that without any education in america and britain and working at the nuclear reactors in america, pak scientists didnot have much to go on. Even today all this superiority of pak engineers that we brag about has its basis in being educated and trained abroad in europe and america.

There is one side of america that gives you---unlike pakistan---it is not connected to the other side that wants to take it back from you. Just because in pakistan the one who giveth is the same as the one who taketh away----we start believing that in america, same practise is being enforced----which is not so---.

So---let me repeat it again---in the 60's 70's 80's and parts of 90's pak students and scientists could be trained and educated in nuclear physics in the u s of a. Private business could also hire nuclear scientists of pak origin openly---so where does the cia come into the picture over here---nowhere---it was an outside the nation agency---before 9/11---nobody would accept cia when it wanted to interfere in the internal policies of the u s---as a matter of fact cia dare not interfere in what happened on the mainland u s of a ----due to the turf wars between it and the fbi---.

So, if the agency wanted to sabotage in pakistan---then the onus falls upon our agencies to counter it and protect our assets---that is the job of our security agencies----as long as we can get help from abroad, we will accept it---but then we should never let our guards down and watch of our assets and borders.
 
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Story in my opinion is true to a great extent . US, when it wants, will look the other way if it serves its purpose. We have witnessed that time and again.

We do not have just this example but another. US was fully aware of our nuclear and missile program. Back in early 80s, US supplied Zirconium, fully knowing its use that the only place it could be used was in nuclear bomb as well as in missile exhaust system.

US also knew about the BCCI activities. Bank was doing a great service for US to funnel money to South America. US allowed it to acquire a major US bank even though it was against US regulations.

But once, Soviets lost and marched out of Afghanistan, and US aims achieved, it turned on both the Pakistani nuclear program and destroying BCCI and leaving its allies in lurch.

These are exactly the issues because of which US has lost face and its credibility in Pakistan. They are now admitting their follies as stated by Hillary Clinton recently.
 
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Hi,

Even today, the u s is open arms with pakistan. The u s never brought up the issues of pak nuclear program or nukes falling into the wrong hands for the longest time---we did it. We the pakistanis brought up this misery upon ourselves.

We created a situation---where our enemies took advantage of our incompetence and lack of understanding of the threat posed by the taliban / al qaeda insurgency---we sat in our bungalows talking about our islamic bhais ( muslim brother )---whereas they killed us, our family members, our women and children, cut the throats and skinned alive our soldiers and we told a sob story to the world----oh we can't have muslim fighting the muslims---it is not our own---a muslim cannot do that---.

Americans had failed miserably in afghanistan---a total lack of committment on the part of the u s millitary in afghanistan---somerone has to take the blame---american millitary cannot be put to shame in front of the american public----the incompetence of the millitary heirarchy may not be challenged anywhere---so guess what---somebody had to take the fall---.

Our neighbour and arch rival took advantage of the oppurtune moment and shoved the stake right through our heart---by lambasting pakistan on the american media---it made a pariah nation of pakistan.

Now, do I blame india for doing that---heck no----if we had intellect and intelligence and that kind of oppurtunity, I would say that pakistan to do the same----stab 'em where it hurts the most.

But anyway---there is always oppurtunity available in an un-oppurtune moment---how so---the picture is playing right in front of us on the live screen---. The job that has been started in swat has to be carried through in N waziristan etc etc etc till the end.

This seemingly is the last chance to get out of the mess that we have gotten ourselves into. Isn't it amazing how we pakistanis cornered ourselves into a position of death, defeat and humiliation in front of the world. Isn't it tragicaaly funny that how often we find ourselves into that spot after evry few years---and then we want to bash america for that as well.
 
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US helping modernise Pakistan’s N-arsenal
By Anwar Iqbal
Monday, 29 Jun, 2009 | 06:28 AM PST |


WASHINGTON: The United States is helping Pakistan modernise its nuclear arsenal in hopes to make them safer, says a report released on Sunday.

Andrew Cockburn, a renowned author who has written several books on security issues, says that the official aim of US technical support, at an estimated cost of $100 million a year, is to prevent accidents and to ensure that they are out of the extremists’ reach.

But in pursuit of this objective, ‘it is inevitable that the US is not only rendering the warheads more operationally reliable, we are also transferring the technology required to design more sophisticated warheads without having to test them’, the report adds.

The author quotes a former national security official as saying that if the US is involved, ‘we can make sure they don’t start testing, or start a war’.

This system known as ‘stockpile stewardship’ was conceived after the US forswore live testing in 1993. It allows scientists to ‘test’ weapons through computer simulations. This vastly expensive programme not only ensures the weapons’ reliability but also the viability of new and improved designs.

The report says that in 2008, the Pakistan military approached Bruce Blair, president of a Washington-based World Security Institute, seeking advice on means to render their weapons more secure.

‘Their aim was clearly to render their nuclear force mature and operational,’ says Mr Blair. In the same way, says Mr Blair, a few years ago an Indian military delegation turned up at the Russian Impulse Design Bureau in St. Petersburg, to ask for help on making their weapons safer to handle. ‘They said they wanted to be able to assure their political leadership that their weapons were safe enough to be deployed.’

The author argues that the United States has allowed Pakistan’s nuclear programme to continue because it needs Islamabad’s help in other issues.

In 1979, Zbigniew Brzezinski, a former US national security adviser, underlined that to get full Pakistani cooperation against the Soviets in Afghanistan, the US required ‘a review of our policy toward Pakistan, more guarantees to it, more arms aid, and, alas, a decision that our security policy toward Pakistan cannot be dictated by our non-proliferation policy’.

The author also recalls that when President Reagan was asked for his views on Pakistan’s nuclear ambitions, he replied ‘I just don’t think it’s any of our business.’

The author claims that ‘during the years Dr A. Q. Khan was peddling his uranium enrichment technology around the place, his shipping manager was a CIA agent, whose masters seem to have had little problem with allowing the trade to go forward’.

The Obama administration also has not changed this policy of tolerance towards Pakistan’s nuclear programme.

‘Most of the aid we’ve sent them over the past few years has been diverted into their nuclear programme,’ a senior national security official in the current administration recently told the author.

Most of this diverted aid -- $5.56 billion as of a year ago –was officially designated ‘Coalition Support Funds’ for Pakistani military operations against the Taliban.

The author also quotes US Joint Chiefs Chairman Admiral Mullen as saying recently that the Pakistanis have been urgently increasing their nuclear weapons production.

‘Pakistan’s drive to build more nukes is an inevitable by-product of the 2008 nuclear cooperation deal with India that overturned US law and gave the Indians access to US nuclear technology … despite their ongoing bomb programme,’ the author notes.

The Indo-US deal, the author argues, blew an enormous hole in the Non-Proliferation Treaty.
 
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The US also helped develop India's nuclear program under the 'atoms for peace' initiative.

IIRC, the US actually blocked the purchase of a reprocessing plant from France (that was all set to go ahead) because it suspected Pakistan was developing the bomb.

That setback eventually forced Pakistan to go the more complicated enriched uranium, instead of plutonium, route for its weapons.
 
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