When Will Pakistan Learn from its Mistakes?

Pakistan is a strange country; the people who garner maximum news coverage are often shady.

If January was the month of Mumtaz Qadri, then February and March definitely belonged to Raymond Davis and the man who hogged all the headlines across the globe in May was Osama Bin Laden.

Last but not the least was Illyas Kashmiri who was killed in a drone strike in June.

It is even stranger that though all four of them were shady characters – murderers to be precise – the response of the popular media to their deeds, lives, and reasons have ranged from high praise to utter ridicule.  WhileDaviswas lynched by our media for killing two Pakistani men, Qadri was praised by a certain section of media as the saviour who, by shedding blood of another human being, has somehow restored balance in the universe and saved the religion, humanity and galaxy.

The kind of debate bin Laden and Kashmiri spark is the stuff of legends. People have called them terrorists, warriors, messiahs and everything in between depending on their ‘ideological’ and ‘idiological’ leanings.

But the strangest common factor in all the cases is that the popular media has developed the narrative and catered to the incidents surrounding these characters on the basis of religion. All the discussions and responses on the subject have been based, not on the news worthiness of the issue, but on the perceived religious reasons for the actions of the perpetrators and on the basis or lack of their religiosity.

Qadri was hailed as a hero because he was defending his faith. Even his critics were at pains to point out that he was mislead because the religion was not interpreted in its true spirit by who so ever was inspiring him. The only person, Sherry Rahman, who actually said that this law needed to be amended, had to stay cooped up in her house for the fear of her life. The fact that a man was killed was either ignored or the victim was blamed for his own death. The focus of the discussion stayed on religion and religion inspired laws and how essential they are to the survival of this society. The condemnation of that murder was subdued because vociferous denunciation would have challenged the religiosity of the narrative. Even before the death of the slain governor, one anchor decided to act as the prosecutor, jury and the judge and held a public trial of Governor Salman Taseer. With media pandering to the dictates of the overtly religious groups, presenting secular arguments in mainstream media is neither desired nor is considered safe.

Davis, an American guilty of the same crime homicide, was labelled the devil incarnate because he was an infidel who killed two Muslim men in the land of pure. The fact that it wasFederal Shariat Courtsupported Qisas and Diyat Law that saved him in the end was again ignored. No one either wrote or spoke against the law in the popular media. The fact that perpetrators of the same crime can have different punishments depending upon their social standing and the amount they are willing to shell out to stay out of the prison and that the law actually supports the criminal with a sizeable bank account are largely ignored by our esteemed media persons and anchors.

Apart from these cases, the television debates usually centre on the quest of making the country a “true’ Islamic state instead of a working state. How many times have we seen sanctimonious anchors and so called experts discussing whether a legislation or a verdict by the courts is religious enough or not. Hardly have we seen any debate on whether a course of action is workable or not, which basically gives sanction to bad governance.

There can be two probable reasons for such glaring omission of the secular content in any news debate inPakistan. The country was created on the basis of religion, when the raison d’être for a country is its official religion, then any ideology contesting it kind of gets lots in the narration. The other is that there are some secular voices but they either submit to the views of majority for the fear of retaliation or they think that their voice will get lost. In either case, secular voices end up ceding political space and jeopardising their own long term future.

This is not limited to the fourth estate. The other three pillars of the country – Legislators, executives and judiciary are as much to blame as the media for it. Last year, the Chief Justice of Pakistan expressed ‘concern’ about Parliament’sability to redraft the constitution in such a manner that it will makePakistan a secular republic. It was painful to note that the secularity of the constitution was seen as a threat by the man presiding over the most august court inPakistan. The chief Justice’s concerns were obviously unfounded because the parliament is housed with likes of Shiekh Waqas Akram, Maulana Fazlur Rehman and Rehman Malik who have repeatedly vowed to deal with anyone who dare speak against legislation based on theology.

In addition to them, the armed forces, perhaps the most powerful group in the country, owe their acceptance and popularity with the people on their stance as the defenders of not only the geographical boundaries of the country but also as the defenders of the faith. People are willing to forgive the armed forces for gobbling up the lion’s share of the resources in the country as long they stay vigilant against the threat of the infidel. That is why Pakistani nuclear capability is sold to its people as “Islamic atomic bomb” – a pan Islamic achievement rather than a national one.

Secularism cannot be pulled out of thin air like a genie. Just like fruitful discourse needs secular input, secularism cannot survive without debate, political space and social acceptance. It will not germinate in a vacuum but will arise out of liberal interpretation of theology and questioning the dogma which are not possible in current Pakistani milieu. Liberal research of the religion is virtually nonexistent. A few random liberal scholars like Dr Farooq Khan and Ghamdi were either killed or had to relocate to stay alive.  If the country has to survive as a viable entity in future, its political, judicial, military and bureaucratic leadership must realise that giving space to dissenting voices is as necessary as bowing down to the wishes of majority.

Religion, in whatever way, has always been part of the discourse. Apart from Madrassah students, Islamic studies have been an integral part of the syllabus everywhere inPakistan, from elementary school to degrees courses. The concept of secularism, on the other hand, has never been formally introduced in academia. We cannot move forward if this disparity is not addressed.

Tazeen Javed is a communications specialist, a blogger and a free lance writer.

Pakistan Pledge Three Dozen Visas to CIA Officers

Pakistan has pledged to grant more than three dozen visas to CIA officers as part of confidence-building measures following theUSraid killing Osama bin Laden.

An Associated Press report says that the visas are part of an agreement to rebuild counterterrorism efforts by forming what Pakistani officials call a joint intelligence team.

The agreement was reached after talks inIslamabadbetween ISI chief Lt Gen Ahmed Shuja Pasha and CIA officials, including Leon Panetta.

The visas will help replenish CIA staff on the ground, as some staffers were forced to leave when their visas were not renewed in the aftermath of the controversy over CIA contractor Raymond Davis.

There will also be some additional officers allowed in to join the joint intelligence effort to hunt high value al Qaeda targets.

Despite promises from Pakistani officials, the visas have yet to be issued, officials from both sides said. The Pakistanis say it’s simply a matter of time but would not say when they would be given.

Pakistan After Osama by Pervez Hoodbhoy

by Pervez Hoodbhoy

The killing of Osama bin Laden could providePakistanan opportunity to reverse its downward slide, though changing course will not be easy. The country must decide whether to decisively confront Islamist violence, or continue with the military’s current policy of supporting jihadi militants with one hand even as it slaps them with the other.

The most intensive manhunt in history ended on 2 May 2011 with the killing of Osama bin Laden. When an elite squad of helicopter-borne US Navy SEALs slipped intoPakistanfromAfghanistan, they returned with the body of al-Qaeda’s founder-king. To the relief of many around the world, the man who had attacked and physically eliminated all he perceived as enemies of Islam – Soviets and Americans, Iraqis and Pakistanis – was dispatched to his watery grave.

Initially, the Pakistani government claimed cooperation in the operation. But this was flatly rejected by those who had laid and executed the intricate plans. John Brennan, assistant to President Barack Obama for homeland security and counterterrorism, said, ‘We didn’t contact the Pakistanis until after all of our people, all of our aircraft were out of Pakistani airspace … we were watching and making sure that our people and our aircraft were able to get out of Pakistani airspace. And thankfully, there was no engagement with Pakistani forces.’ The director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), Leon Panetta, hinted atPakistan’s complicity with al-Qaeda when he said, ‘It was decided that any effort to work with the Pakistanis might jeopardise the mission: they might alert the targets.’ Significantly, President Obama did not thank Pakistan.

ForPakistanit was, as columnist Ayaz Amir put it, the mother of all embarrassments. For years, the country’s military and civilian leaders had flatly denied bin Laden’s presence in the country. Some had slyly suggested he might be inSudanorSomalia. Others confidently claimed that he had died from a kidney ailment, or perhaps was in some intractable area protected by nature and terrain, and thus outside of the effective control of the Pakistani state. But as it turned out, of course, the world’s most famous and recognisable terrorist’s abode was within walking distance of the famed Pakistan Military Academy at Kakul, a short distance from Abbottabad, where, just days earlier, General Ashfaq Parvez Kayani had declared that ‘The terrorist backbone has been broken and inshaallah we will soon prevail.’

Pakistanis, who think of their military as a fine fighting force, were angry and appalled that the American invaders got away with the raid scot-free. The military consumes a huge chunk ofPakistan’s national resources; it had just purchased sophisticated AWAC aircraft, continues receiving delivery of modernised US F-16s, and has a nuclear arsenal that could soon rivalBritain’s in size. But the hugely expensive system proved unable to detect, much less confront, the five slow-moving helicopters that flew in south from Jalalabad. Two of these landed and stayed for 40 minutes almost next to the brigade headquarters of the Second Division of the Northern Army Corps in Abbottabad. They left without engagement. It was only when the Americans had exited Pakistan’s airspace that air defences were scrambled.

For multiple reasons, bin Laden’s killing has become a bone stuck in the throat of Pakistan’s establishment, which despises the Americans but is formally aligned with them. This bone can neither be swallowed nor spat out. To approve of the Abbottabad operation would infuriate the Islamists, who are already fighting the state. To protest too loudly, however, would suggest thatPakistanhad willingly hosted the king of terrorists.

Subservient civilians

One clear consequence of the US operation was to put into stark relief the humble subservience of Pakistan’s civilians to their military masters. As the story broke on Pakistani news channels, the elected government quaked. It was too weak, corrupt and inept to take initiatives. Thus, there was no official Pakistani reaction for hours after President Obama had announced the success of the US mission. A stunned silence was finally broken when the Foreign Office declared that ‘Osama bin Laden’s death illustrates the resolve of the international community includingPakistanto fight and eliminate terrorism.’ Hours later, Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gillani described the killing as a ‘great victory’. Thereupon,Pakistan’s high commissioner to theUK, Wajid Shamsul Hasan, rushed to claim credit: ‘Pakistan’s government was cooperating with American intelligence throughout and they had been monitoring [bin Laden’s] activities with the Americans, and they kept track of him fromAfghanistan, Waziristan to Afghanistan and again toNorth Waziristan.’

This welcoming stance was reversed almost instantly. A stern look from the military, which had finally decided to condemn the raid, took a few hours in coming. Praising the killing of the world’s most wanted terrorist was now out of the question. In its moment of shame, the government furiously twisted and turned. Official spokespeople babbled on, becoming increasingly senseless and contradictory. Without referring to the statement he had made that very morning of 3 May, High Commissioner Hasan abruptly reversed his public position, now saying: ‘Nobody knew that Osama bin Laden was there – no security agency, no Pakistani authorities knew about it. Had we known it, we would have done it ourselves.’

Tongue-tied for 36 hours, president and PM awaited pointers from the army, following them dutifully after they were received. But simple obedience could not satisfy the army. Gen Kayani announced his unhappiness with the government: ‘Incomplete information and lack of technical details have resulted in speculations and misreporting. Public dismay and despondency has also been aggravated due to an insufficient formal response.’ The threat was barely veiled: the government must proactively defend the army and intelligence agencies, or else…

Thus prodded, a full eight days after the incident Prime Minister Gillani broke his silence. He absolved the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) and army of ‘either complicity or incompetence’. Before an incredulous world, he claimed in a statement that both suggestions were ‘absurd’. Attempting to spread the blame, he declared inParis, before his meeting with President Sarkozy, ‘This is an intelligence failure of the whole world, not Pakistan alone.’

 
 

Prime Minister Gillani, more loyal than the king, had somewhat overstretched himself. Even the head of the ISI, Lieutenant-General Ahmad Shuja Pasha, was not confident that he had done a good job. In appearing before an in-camera session of the Parliament, Pasha broke a long tradition of being unanswerable to civilian authorities, but it is said his offer was met with dead silence. Servitude to power runs thick in the blood ofIslamabad’s politicians, which is why they wrote, some decades ago, into the Pakistan Constitution that it is a crime to criticise the armed forces ofPakistanor to bring them into disaffection.

Though the incompetence of the civilian government is legendary, the responsibility for the present debacle lies squarely with the military. Except when the military has itself been the government,Pakistan’s strategic decision-making has been entirely invented and executed by generals who consider their interests to be synonymous with that of the country. Pakistanis have good reason to fear their army. Although it might not have won any war againstIndia, it has been victorious on all four occasions when it moved against civilian governments. It is unsurprising that on nuclear weapons,Kashmir,India,Afghanistan and Pakistan-US relations, the army alone makes the decisions.

Bin Laden’s killing presented a rare opportunity forPakistanto reclaim some of the powers snatched by its army. But the government chose the status quo instead. Over forty years ago, Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, who had before him a weakened army that he had rescued from ignominy, made the mistake of restoring the army’s former status, rather than make it respect the supremacy of the Parliament. Eventually that same army hanged him. As mere survivors, the Zardari/Gillani government has little interest in history or the future ofPakistan, content as they seem to be to whitewash the army and let it off the hook.

Untamed warriors

Why wasPakistan’s warrior class never tamed by civilian rule? The answer must be sought in the foundation of Pakistan and the state of confusion into which it was born. Beyond the simplistic notion that Hindus and Muslims were incapable of living together, the idea ofPakistanwas unclear from the outset. Although he made many speeches, Mohammad Ali Jinnah left no manifesto and authored no book before his untimely death. Critical questions were thus left unanswered: Would the new state be capitalist or socialist, liberal or theocratic, modern or tradition-based? On what basis would power be distributed between its different regions? How would defence, education, science, health, etc be prioritised?

With no clear answers, and lacking a clear basis for legitimacy or direction, the state quickly aligned with the powerful landed class: the army leadership and the economic elite joined forces to claim authority in a nation without definition or cohesion. TheKashmirdispute gave reason for the military to become powerful and to make the acquisition of modern weaponry an overriding priority. The Americans happily obliged, given the burgeoning cold war. A fatal attraction for guns steadily drewPakistaninto the US orbit.

Still, it is easy to blame the military forPakistan’s deepening failure as a state. But the responsibility must be shared with the wider ‘establishment’ that runsPakistan. Stephen P Cohen, a political scientist, calls this establishment a ‘moderate oligarchy’ and defines it as ‘an informal political system loosely bound together that ties together the senior ranks of the military, the civil service, key members of the judiciary, and other elites.’ Membership in this oligarchy, Cohen contends, requires adherence to a common set of core beliefs.

These beliefs can be easily enumerated. Members of ‘the establishment’ must believe that India has to be countered at every turn; that nuclear weapons have endowed Pakistan with security and status; that the fight for Kashmir is the unfinished business of Partition; that large-scale social reforms, such as land redistribution, are unacceptable; that the uneducated and illiterate masses deserve only contempt; that vociferous Muslim nationalism is desirable but the Sharia is not; and that Washington is to be despised but fully taken advantage of.

In such a situation, the absence of a blueprint meant thatPakistancould have gone in many different directions. The one actually chosen by history resulted in its becoming a client state of theUS. This trend became stronger after the 1958 coup by General Ayub Khan, when theUSwas keen to cultivate allies against communism during the Cold War. Pakistan was invited into the SEATO and CENTO alliances (covering Southeast and West Asia, respectively) and, to quote arch anti-communist John Foster Dulles, became America’s ‘most allied ally’. The embrace became tighter with the Soviet invasion ofAfghanistanin 1979. The American strategy for defeating the ‘Evil Empire’ required marshalling the forces of Islam from every part of the world. With General Zia-ul-Haq asAmerica’s foremost ally, andSaudi Arabiaas the principal source of funds, the CIA openly recruited Islamic holy warriors fromEgypt,Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Algeria.

Radical Islam went into overdrive as its superpower ally and mentor funnelled support to the mujahideen. The strategy worked. In 1988, Soviet troops withdrew unconditionally, and the US-Pakistan-Saudi-Egypt alliance emerged victorious. A chapter of history seemed complete, and hubris defined US policy for another two decades. But the true costs of this victory did not take long to surface. Even in the mid-1990s – long before the attacks of 11 September 2001 – it was clear that the victorious alliance had unwittingly created a new entity that had gone beyond its control.

This, in a nutshell, is the history of howPakistanbecame host to the current array of radical Islamist groups. These pathological social and religious formations have developed divergent goals. Some target the American empire, which is whyPakistanwas the country of choice for bin Laden. Other groups focus on the more limited goal of ‘liberating’Kashmir. Still others, such as Lashkar-i-Jhangvi and Sipah-e-Sahaba, are largely anti-Shia. Gradually,Pakistanmorphed into Jihadistan, attracting a multitude of Islamists from Europe to West and Central Asia toIndonesia. But Jihadistan is a messy place these days, a far cry from the simple bastion of anti-communism in the 1980s. Today the military must kill some of its former protégés and some radicals even as it secretly supports others.

Collective psychosis 

Twenty-five years ago, the Pakistani state pushed Islam on its people as a matter of ideology. Prayers were made compulsory in government departments, punishments were meted out to those civil servants who did not fast during Ramadan, selection for academic posts required that the candidate demonstrate knowledge of Islamic teachings, and jihad was propagated through schoolbooks. Today, government intervention is no longer needed because of the spontaneous groundswell of Islamic zeal that has been the result of the years of grooming. A generation of poisoned minds that holds the external world responsible for all the country’s ills has led the country into collective xenophobia and psychosis. Signs suggest that a fascist religious state may be just around the corner.

A necessary condition for fascism – a sense of victimhood, mass delusions and a disconnection with reality – has now been met. A majority of all Pakistanis believe that 9/11 was a Jewish conspiracy, think the dynamiting of schools and suicide attacks on shrines are the work of Blackwater (theUSdefence contractor now called Xe), seeIndia’s hand behindPakistan’s deepening instability and, refuse to acceptPakistan’s responsibility in the Mumbai attacks of November 2008. Many welcomed the murder of Punjab Governor Salman Taseer in January, despite the fact that his only ‘crime’ was to protect a poor peasant Christian woman against charges of blasphemy. Surveys also show that a majority believes that senior army officers do not support the Taliban, and think that peace will return to Pakistan once the US  leaves Afghanistan.

Those holding such distorted views of the world greeted the news of bin Laden’s killing with outright disbelief and denial.Pakistan’s capacity for self-deception should not be underestimated. An online survey conducted two days after the operation by a global opinion pollster revealed that a staggering 66 percent of Pakistanis thought the person who was killed by US Navy SEALs was not bin Laden. Participants in satirical TV shows burst into peals of laughter as they poured scorn onAmericaand its claims. The supposed killing of bin Laden was nothing but high drama, said popular TV anchors. General Mirza Aslam Beg, former army chief and the formulator of the notion of ‘strategic depth’ inAfghanistan, fully agreed. He wrote: ‘Osama’s look-alike prisoner from Bagram was picked-up and brought to Abbottabad and killed in cold blood, in front of his family members, who were living there. In fact, Osama had been killed inAfghanistansome time back and his body may still be lying in a mortuary inAfghanistan.’ Beg says it was all a ploy to defame the Pakistan government, the Pakistan armed forces and the ISI.

Rent-a-country 

Over decades,Pakistanhas adapted to its changing strategic circumstances by renting itself out to powerful states. Territory and men are part of the services provided. Payment comes not just from theUS, but Arab countries as well. For fear of public criticism, the arrangements have been kept hidden.Pakistan’s supposedly vibrant press has chosen to steer off such controversial issues. But post bin-Laden, the clatter of skeletons tumbling out ofPakistan’s strategic closet is forcing some secrets out into the open.

Questioning by angry Pakistani parliamentarians has been particularly revealing. They wanted to know from Air Chief Marshal Rao Qamar Suleman just how US helicopters had enteredPakistanand escaped without detection. Where didUSdrones fly from? Was it Shamsi air base in Balochistan, as some foreign newspapers had alleged? His answer left them stunned: Shamsi base was not under the control of the Pakistan Air Force but, instead, of theUnited Arab Emirates. Why would the UAE want the base? Ostensibly because wealthy Arabs have many land investments inPakistan, and often travel to the country in their own planes for purposes such as hunting expeditions. As for not detecting the incursion, the air chief conceded thatPakistan’s radar defence had not been jammed at the time of the Navy SEALs incursion. ‘I do not know from where the helicopters who participated in the Abbottabad operation that killed Osama bin Laden came,’ he said. In another country it is hard to see how an air chief could have kept his job.

The army’s indignation over the violation ofPakistan’s sovereignty by the bin Laden operation is phony; it is a dispute over the amount of rent, not over principle.USdrones have targets inside Pakistani territory and some take off from bases withinPakistan. But even as drone attacks are given a wink and a nod, the military simultaneously makes a formal protest to theUS. However, one does not hear expressions of indignation at the loss ofPakistan’s sovereignty to Arab fighters and the Taliban inWaziristan, Kurram, Parachinar and other tribal areas.

Post-bin Laden, stung by criticism from the general public and seeking to raise morale, Gen Kayani has been stumping the garrisons. Meanwhile, he has been asked why the invaders were not challenged and destroyed. Who sheltered bin Laden if we are actually fighting al-Qaeda? The Express Tribune quotes an unnamed young military officer who made a stinging comment before the army chief: ‘Sir, I am ashamed of what happened in Abbottabad.’ Replied Gen Kayani, ‘So am I.’ He promptly went on to hold the government responsible for allowingPakistanto get such bad press.

The golden goose

Osama bin Laden was found sheltered in the army’s backyard. Though caught red-handed, the army denied that it knew of his presence. A counter propaganda blitz followed, with street banners and pamphlets proclaiming that the army and ISI are the veritable pillars of Pakistan. Supporters and commentators were instructed to make the case that this was part of a great grand conspiracy againstPakistan, and to deny that bin Laden had been the army’s guest.

The results of the blitz have been mixed. Even the ferocious General Hamid Gul (retired), a self-proclaimed jihadi who advocates war on America, did not buy the army’s denial, remarking that bin Laden being in Abbottabad unknown to authorities ‘is a bit amazing’. Aside from the military, he said, ‘there is the local police, the Intelligence Bureau, Military Intelligence, the ISI – they all had a presence there.’

The army’s supporters, on the other hand, claim that there was no reason for it to harbour bin Laden. What would Pakistan gain? they ask. On the face of it, this seems like a strong rhetorical rebuttal. But years ago, Gen Pervez Musharraf had unwittingly provided a clear and cogent explanation. The back cover of his 2006 autobiography, In the Line of Fire: A Memoir, reads:

Since shortly after 9/11 – when many Al-Qaeda leaders fledAfghanistanand crossed the border into Pakistan– we have played multiple games of cat and mouse with them. The biggest of them all, Osama bin Laden, is still at large at the time of this writing but we have caught many, many others. We have captured 672 and handed over 369 to theUnited States. We have earned bounties totaling millions of dollars. Here, I will tell the story of just a few of the most significant manhunts.

Musharraf was army chief in 2005, when bin Laden’s specially fortified compound in Abbottabad was being constructed. At that time, political chatterers were wont to speculate about which al-Qaeda or Taliban leader would be miraculously captured or killed on the eve of some importantUSmilitary or political leader’s visit toPakistan. Indeed, like the proverbial rabbit pulled out of the magician’s hat, a high or middle-ranking leader was usually produced around that time. Important arrests included those of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the Kuwaiti-born senior al-Qaeda leader who was arrested in Rawalpindi, and Mullah Baradar, a Taliban leader arrested inKarachi. The Americans visitors generally took satisfaction as they departed.

This line of thought suggests that bin Laden was the army’s golden goose – the ultimate trophy to be traded in at the right time for the right price, whether in dollars or political concessions. I do not wish to insinuate that the army was in secret collusion with al-Qaeda. Indeed, this was scarcely possible, given the hostility al-Qaeda had expressed against Pakistan’s army leadership. Restricted to his hideout, bin Laden could not have been effective in directing operations. Without telephones or Internet in his house, and communications limited to the occasional courier, bin Laden was now the army’s virtual captive. At some point, the army started seeing him as their cash cow.

An examination of the computer drives seized from bin Laden’s lair will ultimately reveal the degree of the army’s involvement. Until then, to be rigorous, one must not foreclose the possibility that the army and ISI leadership were ignorant of bin Laden’s whereabouts. So let us momentarily accept that there had been a genuine intelligence failure, as stated by the ISI chief before the closed session of Parliament.

If true, this would say two things. First, that the intelligence failure was that of the ISI leadership but not necessarily that of the entire organisation. As in the case of the Mumbai attacks, where two lower-level ISI officers were disciplined for their involvement, information channels could have been deliberately designed so as to keep information away from the senior leadership, following a policy of ‘Don’t ask, don’t tell’. This would give the senior military leadership greater deniability. (In this instance one need not distinguish between ISI and army, even though the ISI formally reports to the prime minister rather than the army chief.) Second, it says that the ISI and military are playing high-stakes Russian roulette. In seeking to destroy the enemy, they are using a weapon that fires equally often forward and backward. This was revealed with stunning clarity when the army headquarters in Rawalpindi was attacked in 2009, and the ISI headquarters in three cities were destroyed by suicide bombers. All attacks were traced to insider involvement.

Rent-a-jihad?

WhilePakistan’s military rulers are said to have some attraction to wads of money, those who are out to kill Pakistani soldiers and generals in the name of religion appear to have no less. This is suggested by the bizarre absence of jihadist reaction to bin

Laden’s killing. 

Of course, this is not wholly true. A suicide bombing in Charsadda on 13 May, eleven days after the bin Laden operation, killed 69 Frontier Constabulary paramilitary soldiers and responsibility was claimed by the Tehreek-i-TalibanPakistan(TTP) as revenge for bin Laden’s death. But it is unclear whether this was indeed a revenge attack, or if it was instead intended as punishment for the ongoing army operations in the district of Mohmand Agency and elsewhere in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA). In any case, in a country where suicide attacks are near-daily occurrences and Frontier Constabulary personnel are considered to be cannon fodder, the matter disappeared from public attention after just a day or two.

One expected far more protest.Pakistan, after all, is a country where bin Laden t-shirts and posters were sold on street corners before and after 9/11. But the demonstrations shown on TV were uncharacteristically thin. The largest reported was of about 4000 people who turned up at a rally organised by Hafiz Saeed, the head of the banned Jamaat-ud-Dawa (JuD). Noticeably absent were Maulana Fazlur Rehman, the Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam chief who lays claim to be the father of the Taliban, and Maulana Fazlur Rehman Khalil, head of the banned Harkatul Mujahideen. They did not offer funeral prayers for bin Laden. Even mainstream Urdu papers referred to the halakat (killing) of bin Laden rather than hisshahadat (martyrdom). Shockingly, in referring to its former hero, the Islamist right-wing newspaper Nawa-i-Waqt used the disrespectful word uss (he) rather than the respectful unn.

What on earth had happened? Why did the acclaimed hero of jihadism die virtually un-mourned? And what makes some extreme right wing commentators describe bin Laden’s mission as that of spreading fasaad (internal strife) rather than jihad, holy war?

Bushels of Saudi riyals did the job. Mainstream Sunni jihadist groups inPakistanare now increasingly projecting themselves as praetorian guards of the Saudi regime, which in turn finances them. When a radicalised bin Laden turned violently against the country of his birth,Saudi Arabia, he initiated a deep rift between al-Qaeda and some Pakistani jihadist groups. Amir Rana, a noted terrorism expert, remarks that publications of the Jamat-ud-Dawa, whose affiliate carried out the 2008 attacks in Mumbai, now sing praises of the Saudi kingdom. The JuD is actively working to defuse the anti-Saudi campaign by pro-Shia elements in Pakistan who had launched rallies and demonstrations against Saudi Arabia’s recent military intervention inBahrain. More recently, a pro-Saudi demonstration inKarachiturned into an armed clash.

Pro- and anti-Saudi divisions have become so deep that Saudi interests in Pakistan are now open targets. There is a deep split between the TTP, which fully uses suicide bombings as a tactic, and the pro-Saudi Lashkar-e-Toiba, which disapproves of their use against Muslim targets (although they are allowed against others). Until a while ago, these two groups had been allies. But within days of the bin Laden operation, grenades were being lobbed over the walls of the Saudi embassy inKarachi. Subsequently, the Pakistani Taliban expressed its ‘full support’ for the shooting death of a Saudi diplomat inKarachion 16 May this year, the second attack against Saudi officials in the city in less than two weeks. Like Western diplomats, who had moved their families out o f Pakistan many years ago, the Saudis are relocating their families back home. Jihadistan is no longer safe, even for the funders of jihad.

The un-mourned passing of Osama bin Laden has merely confirmed the old adage: He who pays the piper calls the tune. Saudi money has weaned support away from al-Qaeda, and towards those groups that are both pro-Saudi and pro-Pakistan. Indeed, the Saudi and Pakistani establishments have much in common. They agree on the definition of ‘good’ versus ‘bad’ jihadis; both are formal US allies with a strictly transactional master-client relationship with Washington DC; both use extra-state actors in pursuing their foreign-policy goals; both are anti-Shia and strongly pro-Wahhabi; and both are relieved that al-Qaeda has been decimated.

A prognosis

At this point, my cracked crystal ball suggests the following five points:

First,Pakistan’s generals will remain in thrall of their own irrational logic of selectively encouraging militancy. They are red-faced today, but their high-stakes game is not over. In the past they survived the adventure of secretly sending militants and soldiers across the Line of Control in Kargil, profited from A Q Khan’s sale of nuclear wares in the open market, and gave tacit permission to the Lashkar-e-Toiba’s military preparations and the Mumbai operation. While damaging, these revelations did not prove fatal.

Second, the status quo will reign onPakistan’s eastern border. Abbottabad could well inspire some Indians to dream about doing an operation in Muridke orBahawalpuragainst the Jaish-e-Mohammed or Lashkar-e-Toiba. But the Indians know that, should their forces engage in a similar SEALs-type mission, the Pakistani response would be different and disproportionate. In a situation where nuclear-tipped missiles are poised for flight across contiguous borders, it is wise to avoid fatally foolish fantasies. The failure of Operation Parakaram,India’s response to the attack on the Indian Parliament on December 2001, represented a 10-month-long mobilisation of nearly half a million soldiers and deployment of troops along the border. When Parakaram fizzled out,Pakistanclaimed victory and India was left licking its wounds. For this,Indiashould blame no one but itself. Having aggressively initiated the nuclearisation of Southasia, it inadvertently levelled the playing field and madePakistanthe winner.

Third, US military and economic aid toPakistanwill continue. Until theUSfully or largely withdraws fromAfghanistan, it will remain dependent upon Pakistan both for allowing NATO supplies to be trucked across its territory, as well as for limiting the operation of the Haqqani network inNorth Waziristan. The chorus of voices in the US Congress against continuing aid to Pakistan will die down, while conditionalities on aid will escalate. Zalmay Khalilzad, former US ambassador toIraqandAfghanistan, has written an article that gives a preview of these potential conditionalities:

First, we should formally present any information about Pakistani complicity in shielding Bin Laden to Pakistan’s leaders. Then we should follow up with demands that Pakistan break the backbone of Al-Qaeda in Pakistan by moving against figures like Ayman al-Zawahiri; remove limits on the Predator drone campaign; uproot insurgent sanctuaries and shut down factories that produce bombs for use against American and Afghan soldiers; and support a reasonable political settlement in Afghanistan.

Pakistanwill continue to play its current game – and suffer periodic embarrassments as with the recent WikiLeaks revelations – because it cannot afford a total break with theUS. For all the current bluster of ‘breaking the chains’, its economy is dependent upon US largesse. Pakistan will therefore keep running with jihadi hares while hunting with the American hounds. Furthermore,Islamabadsenses that strategic depth in Afghanistan now lies within the realm of possibilities. But this requires US acquiescence, or at least that there be no active opposition. All things considered, neither side feels it can afford to upset the applecart. The working military-to-military relationship will therefore not end.

   
   

Fourth, Pakistan-China relations will grow warmer. Upon his arrival in Shanghai two weeks after the bin Laden raid, PM Gillani declared China his country’s ‘best and most trusted friend’. The hope in Pakistan is that, as and when relations with theUSsour, it will have another major power to which to turn.Chinahad already conveyed to the US that it does not condone theUS’s violation ofPakistan’s airspace to attack bin Laden. The 5 May editorial of the Urdu newspaper Jang complemented China ‘for daring to stand against the Western forces’, and stated that ‘Chinais the only hope for countries likePakistan.’ Yet whileChinais often referred to in Pakistan as an ‘all-weather friend’, this friendship does come at a price: the Pakistani market has been flooded by cheap Chinese goods that have driven small local industries out of business. Its trade with China is largely one-sided, with Pakistani exports being of raw materials and foodstuffs. It is said thatChinahas hugely benefited from opaque mining deals in resource-rich Balochistan. Still, Pakistan-China trade stands at only USD 8 billion, and is minuscule compared to India-China trade of about USD 70 million at present.

And fifth, the bin Laden episode is sure to harden Pakistan’s nuclear stance. For the world, the fact that its most-wanted fugitive was hidden in an army town puts the safety and security ofPakistan’s nuclear weapons into doubt. Logically speaking, there are only two possibilities. If the military was actually unaware of the world’s most-wanted terrorist being virtually under its nose, then its claims about Pakistani nuclear weapons being unassailable become questionable. On the other hand, if it was playing a game using bin Laden as a pawn, then it is not to be trusted with nuclear weapons. Suggesting either possibility infuriatesPakistan’s security establishment. The Strategic Plans Division, which has custody of Pakistani nuclear weapons, dismisses the chance of a mutiny in nuclear quarters and chooses to ignore the numerous insider attacks upon the military and ISI.

Stung by such suggestions in the aftermath of bin Laden’s killing, the army released an emphatic statement: ‘As regards the possibility of similar hostile action against our strategic assets, the forum reaffirmed that unlike an undefended civilian compound, our strategic assets are well protected and an elaborate defensive mechanism is in place.’ Like nuclear North Korea,Pakistanfeels secure. It knows that international financial donors are compelled to keep pumping in funds. Otherwise, a collapsing Pakistan would be unable to prevent its hundred-plus Hiroshima-sized nukes from disappearing into the darkness. For this purpose, more nukes are better.

Where does Pakistan go from here as a country? With bin Laden gone, the military has two remaining major strategic assets:America’s weakness in Afghanistan, and Pakistani nuclear weapons. It will surely move these chess pieces around adroitly to extract the maximum advantage. But this will not assure the peace and prosperity that Pakistanis so desperately crave. These will not give security to Pakistan, solve the country’s mounting electricity and water crises, move its citizens out of dire economic straits, give them justice and opportunity, or protect them from suicide bombers. Until the military sorts out its own internal matters, and the conviction comes about thatPakistanwill deal with terrorists as terrorists should be dealt with, the country will not be at peace with itself or with the world.

Pervez Hoodbhoy is a professor of physics who teaches in Islamabad and Lahore. 

 

 

Pakistan’s Nuclear Program

Nuclear weapons 

Policy

Pakistan acceded to the Geneva Protocol on 15 April 1960, the Biological Weapons Convention in 1974 and the Chemical Weapons Convention on 28 October 1997.In 1999 Pakistan signed the Lahore Accords with India, agreeing on a bilateral moratorium on nuclear testing. However, Pakistan, like India and Israel, is not a signatory of the Non Proliferation Treaty and, consequently, not bound by any of its provisions.

Protection

US Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton informed that Pakistan has dispersed its nuclear weapons throughout the country, increasing the Security so that they could not fall into terrorist hands. Her comments came as new satellite images released by the ISIS suggested Pakistan is increasing its capacity to produce plutonium, a fuel for atomic bombs. The institute has also claimed that Pakistan has built two more nuclear reactors at Khoshab increasing the number of plutonium producing reactors to three.

 Infrastructure

Pakistan’s nuclear weapons development program is based, primarily, on highly-enriched uranium (HEU), which is produced at the Kahuta Research Laboratories at Kahuta, a Zippe centrifuge -based uranium-enrichment facility. The Kahuta facility has been in use since the early 1980s. By the early 1990s, Kahuta had an estimated 3,000 centifuges in operation, and Pakistan has continued its pursuit of expanded uranium-enrichment capabilities.

In the mid 1980s, Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission began to pursue Plutonium production capabilities. Consequently Pakistan built the 40-50 MW (megawatt, thermal) Khushab Research Reactor at Joharabad, and in April 1998, Pakistan announced that the nuclear reactor was operational. The Khushab reactor project was initiated in 1986 by PAEC chairman Munir Ahmad Khan, who informed the world that the reactor was totally indigenous, i.e. that it was designed and built by Pakistani scientists and engineers. Various Pakistani industrys contributed in 82% of the reactor’s construction. The Project-Director for this project was Sultan Bashiruddin Mahmood. According to public statements made by the US Government officials, this heavy water reactor can produce up to 8 to 10 kg of plutonium per year with increase in the production by the development of newer facilities, sufficient for at least one nuclear weapon. The reactor could also produce tririum if it were loaded with lithium – 6, although this is unnecessary for the purposes of nuclear weapons, because modern nuclear weapon designs use Li directly. According to J. Cirincione of Carnefie Endowment for International Peace, Khushab’s Plutonium production capacity has allowed Pakistan to develop lighter nuclear warheads that would be easier to deliver to any place in the range of the ballistic missiles.

Plutonium separation takes place at the New Labs Reprocessing Plant, which was completed by 1981 by PAEC and is next to the Pakistan Institute of Nuclear Science and Technology (PINSTECH) near Islamabad, which is not subject to IAEA inspections and safeguards.

In late 2006, the US Institute for Science and International Security released intelligence reports and imagery showing the construction of a new plutonium reactor at the Khushab nuclear site. The reactor is deemed to be large enough to produce enough plutonium to facilitate the creation of as much as “40 to 50 nuclear weapons a year.” The New York Times carried the story with the insight that this would be Pakistan’s third plutonium reactor, signalling a shift to dual-stream development, with Plutonium-based devices supplementing the nation’s existing HEU stream to atomic warheads.

 Arsenal

In 2000, US Military intelligence estimated that Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal may be as large as 100 warheads. The actual size is hard for experts to gauge owing to the extreme secrecy which surrounds the program in Pakistan. In recent developments, retired Brig. General Feroz Khan, previously second in command at the Strategic Arms Division of Pakistans’ Military told a Pakistani newspaper the nation has “about 80 to 120 genuine warheads,” and also revealed that Pakistan has decoy or dummy warheads to complicate any designs by aggressors.

Pakistan tested plutonium capability in the sixth nuclear test of 30 May 1998 at Kharan. In this test, the latest and most sophisticated bomb design made to be carried by missiles was tested. Compactness is also an issue with F-16s and other fighter-bomber aircraft of the same class, unless the platform happens to be a dedicated strategic bomber. F-16s have limits to the size and weight of the bombs they can carry. But as the plutonium bombs are much lighter than the uranium bombs it is much easier for Pakistan to fit plutonium bombs on the F-16s and the latest fourth generation fighter jet JF-17 which has started serial production in Pakistan in January, 2008.

The critical mass of a bare mass sphere of 90% enriched uranium-235 is 52 kg. Correspondingly, the critical mass of a bare mass sphere of plutonium-239 is 8–10 kg. The bomb that destroyed Hiroshima used 60 kg of U-235 while the Nagasaki Pu bomb used only 6 kg of Pu-239. Since all Pakistani bomb designs are implosion-type weapons, they will typically use between 15–25 kg of U-235 for their cores. Reducing the amount of U-235 in cores from 60 kg in gun-type devices to 25 kg in implosion devices is only possible by using good neutron reflector/tamper material such as beryllium metal, which increases the weight of the bomb. And the uranium, like plutonium, is only usable in the core of a bomb in metallic form. Add about 50 or so chemical high-explosive lenses, triggering circuits, and outer aluminium casing, all this adds to the overall weight of the device. Therefore if a bomb has to use only U-235, that will impose serious restrictions on the amount of U-235 that can be used, and the size of the bomb itself, thus restricting its explosive yield. True PAEC did develop bomb designs that could be carried by all PAF aircraft, but after years of effort and R&D, and then too, there were serious limitations on the further extent of miniaturization of the bombs. If uranium is used as bomb fuel, it cannot be miniaturized beyond a certain point.

However, only 2–4 kg of plutonium is needed for the same device that would need 20–25 kg of U-235. Additionally, a few grams of tritium (a by-product of plutonium production reactors and thermonuclear fuel) can increase the overall yield of the bombs by a factor of three to four. “The sixth Pakistani nuclear test (May 30, 1998) at Kharan was a successful test of a sophisticated, compact, but powerful bomb designed to be carried by missiles. The Pakistanis are believed to be spiking their plutonium based nuclear weapons with tritium. Only a few grams of tritium can result in an increase of the explosive yield by 300% to 400%.”

A whole range and variety of weapons using Pu-239 can be easily built, both for aircraft delivery and especially for missiles (in which U-235 cannot be used). So if Pakistan wants to be a nuclear power with an operational deterrent capability, both first and second strike, based on assured strike platforms like ballistic and cruise missiles (unlike aircraft), the only solution is with plutonium, which has been the first choice of every country that built a nuclear arsenal.

As for Pakistan’s plutonium capability, it has always been there, from the early 1980s onwards. There were only two problems. One was that Pakistan did not want to be an irresponsible state and so did not divert spent fuel from the safeguarded KANUPP for reprocessing at New Labs. This was enough to build a whole arsenal of nuclear weapons straight away. So PAEC built its own plutonium and tritium production reactor at Khushab, beginning in 1985. The second one was allocation of resources.

Ultra-centrifugation for obtaining U-235 cannot be done simply by putting natural uranium through the centrifuges. It requires the complete mastery over the front end of the nuclear fuel cycle, beginning at uranium mining and refining, production of uranium ore or yellow cake, conversion of ore into uranium dioxide UO2 (which is used to make nuclear fuel for natural uranium reactors like Khushab and KANUPP), conversion of UO2 into uranium tetrafluoride UF4 and then into the feedstock for enrichment (UF6).

The complete mastery of fluorine chemistry and production of highly toxic and corrosive hydrofluoric acid and other fluorine compounds is required. The UF6 is pumped into the centrifuges for enrichment. The process is then repeated in reverse until UF4 is produced, leading to the production of uranium metal, the form in which U-235 is used in a bomb.

It is estimated that there are approximately 10,000 centrifuges in Kahuta. This means that with P2 machines, they would be producing between 75–100 kg of HEU since 1986, when full production of weapons-grade HEU began. Also the production of HEU was voluntarily capped by Pakistan between 1991 and 1997, and the five nuclear tests of 28 May 1998 also consumed HEU. So it is safe to assume that between 1986 and 2005 (prior to the 2005 earthquake), KRL produced 1500 kg of HEU. Accounting for losses in the production of weapons, it can be assumed that each weapon would need 20 kg of HEU; sufficient for 75 bombs as in 2005.

Pakistan’s first nuclear tests were made in May 1998, when six warheads were tested. It is reported that the yields from these tests were 12kt, 30 to 35kt and four low-yield (below 1 kt) tests. From these tests Pakistan can be estimated to have developed operational warheads of 20 to 25kt and 150kt in the shape of low weight compact designs and may have 300–500kt large-size warheads. The low-yield weapons are probably in nuclear bombs carried on F-16 Fighting Falcon and the JF-17 Thunder aircraft and fitted to Pakistan’s short-range ballistic missiles, while the higher-yield warheads are probably fitted to the Shaheen series and Ghauri series ballistic missiles.

 Doctrine

Pakistan’s motive, as stated by its former President Muhammad Zia ul Haq in 1985, for pursuing a nuclear weapons development program is to counter the threat posed by its principal rival, India.

Pakistan has not signed the Non Proliferation Treaty (NPT) or the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT). According to the US Defence Department report cited above, “Pakistan remains steadfast in its refusal to sign the NPT, stating that it would do so only after India joined the Treaty. Consequently, not all of Pakistan’s nuclear facilities are under IAEA safeguards. Pakistani officials have stated that signature of the CTBT is in Pakistan’s best interest, but that Pakistan will do so only after developing a domestic consensus on the issue, and have disavowed any connection with India’s decision.”

The organization authorized to make decisions about Pakistan’s nuclear posturing is the NCA. It was established in February 2000. The NCA is composed of two committees that advise the present President of Pakistan, on the development and deployment of nuclear weapons; it is also responsible for war-time command and control. In 2001, Pakistan further consolidated its nuclear weapons infrastructure by placing the Khan Research Laboratories and the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission under the control of one Nuclear Defense Complex.

It has been recently reported by the Pakistani Press namely Jang that Pakistan has the ability to MIRV its missiles. This has been seen as possibly one of the greatest achievement to date for Pakistan. It has also been reported that Pakistan would likely MIRV its Shaheen – II and Ghauri – II missiles.

Nuclear Weapons

Pakistan began focusing on nuclear development in January 1972 under the leadership of Prime Minister Zulifqar Ali Bhutto. Pakistan’s Nuclear Weapons development program was in response to neighboring India’s development of nuclear weapons. Bhutto called a meeting of senior scientists and engineers on 20 January 1972, in Multan. It was here that Bhutto rallied Pakistan’s scientists to build the atomic bomb for national survival. At the Multan meeting, Bhutto also appointed Pakistani nuclear scientist, Munir Ahmad Khan (a U.S trained scientist), as chairman of Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC), who till then had been working as Director of Nuclear Power and Reactor Division at the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), in Vienna, Austria. This marked the beginning of Pakistan’s pursuit of nuclear capability.

Consequently, Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan, a metallurgical engineer, working at the Dutch research firm URENCO, also joined Pakistan’s nuclear weapons – grade Uranium enrichment program. The Uranium enrichment program had been launched in 1974 by PAEC chairman Munir Ahmad Khan as Project – 706. A.Q. Khan joined the project in the spring of 1976 and was made Project-Director in July 1976 after taking over from another nuclear scientist, Sultan Bashiruddin Mahmood.. In 1983, Khan was accused of the theft of the blueprints, though the false allegation was overturned on a legal technicality.

Through the late 1970s, Pakistan’s program acquired sensitive uranium enrichment technology and expertise. The 1975 arrival of Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan considerably advanced these efforts. Dr. Khan is a German-trained metallurgist who brought with him knowledge of gas centrifuge technologies that he had through his position at the classified URENCO uranium enrichment plant in the Netherlands. He was put in charge of building, equipping and operating Pakistan’s Kahuta facility, which was established in 1976. Under Khan’s direction, Pakistan employed an extensive clandestine network in order to obtain the necessary materials and technology for its developing uranium enrichment capabilities.

On 28 May 1998, a few weeks after India’s second nuclear test (Operation Shakti), Pakistan detonated five nuclear devices in the Chagai Hills in the Chaghai district, Balochistan. This operation was named Chagai – I by Pakistan, the base having been long-constructed by provincial Martial Law Administrator Rahimuddin Khan during the 1980s. Pakistan’s fissle material production takes place at Kahuta and Khushab / Jauharabad, where weapons-grade plutonium is made by the scientists.

Pakistan’s Nuclear Weapons Program was established in 1974 when the Directorate of Technical Development (DTD) was set up in PAEC by chairman Munir Ahmad Khan. Khan was credited as the one of the pioneers of Pakistan’s atomic bomb by a recent study from the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), London’s dossier on Pakistan’s nuclear program. DTD was assigned the task of developing the implosion design, trigger mechanism, physics calculations, high-speed electronics, high-precision chemical and mechanical components, high explosive lenses for Pakistan’s nuclear weapons. The DTD had come up with its first implosion design of a nuclear weapon by 1978 which was then improved and later tested on 11 March 1983 when PAEC carried out Pakistan’s first successful cold test of a nuclear device. Between 1983 and 1990, PAEC carried out 24 more cold tests of various nuclear weapon designs. DTD had also developed a miniaturized weapon design by 1987 that could be delivered by all Pakistan Air Force aircraft.

Pakistan is increasing its capacity to produce plutonium at its Khushab nuclear facility, a Washington-based science think tank has reported. Estimated Pakistani nuclear weapons is probably in the neighborhood of more than 200 by the end of 2008. “The sixth Pakistani nuclear test (May 30, 1998) at Kharan was a successful test of a sophisticated, compact, but powerful bomb designed to be carried by missiles. The Pakistanis are believed to be spiking their plutonium based nuclear weapons with tritium. Only a few grams of tritium can result in an increase of the explosive yield by 300% to 400%.”. Citing new satellite images of the facility, the Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS) said the imagery suggests construction of the second Khushab reactor is “likely finished and that the roof beams are being placed on top of the third Khushab reactor hall”. According to one Western official close to the matter, regardless of international efforts to apply crippling economic sanctions to Pakistan, “it is now pretty clear that Pakistan is going to go ahead with its weapons program and that the logic dictates that they will use the plutonium” generated by Khushab.

Aircraft delivery

There are two units operating the Chinese-built A – 5 (No. 16 Sqn and No. 26 Sqn), an aircraft believed to be a leading candidate for the aerial delivery of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons. The others are the Mirage IIIOs, Mirage IIIODs and Mirage IIIEs. The Pakistan Air Force, currently, operates some 156 Mirage (III & V) aircraft. The allocation of 90 of these aircraft is not, currently, known. Pakistan also has 46 F – 16 Fighter aircraft—all block 15s. As of now, it recently received 2 block 15OCUs through Peace Gate 3/4 as a good-will gesture from the US Government in November 2006. All of these F-16s are capable of delivering nuclear warheads, they are split into 2 squadrons, both stationed at PAF Sargodha. It is rumoured that the 34 current PAF F-16s have been modified for nuclear weapons delivery by PAC, Kamra. Also, in the 1990s, the PAF F-16s have practiced toss-bombing which is a method to deliver nuclear weapons. Pakistan prefers to use ballistic missiles and cruise missiles to deliver nuclear warheads because they have a much longer range than aircraft and do not need the airspace to be cleared of aircraft and SAMS.

In an attempt to modernize its Air Force, Pakistan has recently signed a deal for the purchase of 26 F-16 block 15OCUs that were under Peace Gate 3/4 and 60 MLU kits for block 15s, AMRAAMs, LGBs, and various other missiles and bombs and other items, the purchase of 18 F-16 block 50/52+ with an option of 18 more. If all options are exercised, this deal will cost US$5 billion. All of these F-16s will be capable of nuclear weapons delivery.

Also, by early 2007, the first 8 JF – 17 Thunder aircraft (FC-1s) have entered into the PAF service. These are pre-production aircraft and more JF-17 Thunder aircraft will follow. These, too, will be capable of nuclear weapons delivery. Pakistan Air Force to modernize its fleet has also ordered 36 Chinese J-10s for its airforce for a cost of $1.4 billion.

Pakistan has also recently tested its indegious Babur Cruise Missile having a range of 700 km. Its design appears to be influenced by the Tomahawk Cruise Missile of the US in terms of its appearance and its advanced specifications. However Pakistan Firmly stands by its claims of an indigenous design of the Babur. It is a ground-launched version capable of evading radar detection. The air-Launch version Ra’ad Air Launched Cruise Missile (ALCM) with a range of 350KM have also been successfully test fired from various Aircrafts, and is being manufactured for the Pakistan Air Force and Pakistan Navy. According to the Pakistan Military sources the Submarine-Launched Version is in advance stages of Testing. One Western official specifically asserted that the missile could penetrate both the Patriot and Arrow II Theater missile defense systems with relative ease. Pakistan’s development of a modern cruise missile marks yet another milestone in the country’s conventional military buildup, and presents a new state of challenges for both Indian and American policymakers.

Naval Delivery

Naval Delivery: PNS Hamza has just been commissioned last year in August, This submarine is an Augosta 90B and, with a number of modifications, will be able to fire ballistic missiles. These modifications may be happening soon. It is the first submarine in the world to be equipped with the special MESMA Air Independent Propulsion system. This increases diving duration compared to conventional submarines, and gives the Pakistan navy a tactical advantage. It can also fire Babur Cruise Missiles. Soon, other ships and submarines will be retrofitted to fire ballistic missiles and cruise missiles.

Missiles Delivery

Pakistan’s Nuclear Capable Missiles
Name/Designation Class Range: Max Range with Min Payload Payload Status
Hatf – 1 SRBM 100 Km 500 Kg Operational with Pakistan’s Armed Forces
Abdali SRBM 180 Km 500 Kg Operational with Pakistan’s Armed Forces
Ghaznavi SRBM 290 Km 500 Kg Operational with Pakistan’s Armed Forces
M – 11 SRBM 300 Km 500 Kg Operational with Pakistan’s Armed Forces
Shaheen – I SRBM 750 Km 850 Kg Operational with Pakistan’s Armed Forces
Ghauri – I MRBM 1500 Km 750 Kg Operational with Pakistan’s Armed Forces
Ghauri – II MRBM 1800-2300 Km 750-1200 Kg Operational with Pakistan’s Armed Forces
Shaheen – II MRBM 2000-3500 Km 500-2500 Kg Operational with Pakistan’s Armed Forces
Ghauri – III IRBM 4000+ Km 1200+ Kg Under Development
Shaheen – III IRBM 4500+ Km 1200+ Kg Under Development
Tipu IRBM 5000+Km 2000+Kg Under Development
Babur Land Attack Cruise Missile 700 Km 500 Kg Operational with Pakistan’s Armed Forces
Ra’ad Air Launched Cruise Missile 350 Km 500 Kg Operational with Pakistan’s Armed Forces

 

Time Line of Pakistani Nuclear Program from 1981 to 1998

1981- PAEC completes the Pilot Reprocessing Plant “New Labs” at PINSTECH.

1981- Reagan Administration lifts economic and military sanctions and embargoes against Pakistan.

1981- May 1, ERL renamed Dr. AQ Khan Research Laboratories by General Zia-ul-Haq.

1983- March 11, PAEC’s Directorate of Technical Development, successfully conducts the first “cold” test of a nuclear device. A second cold test is conducted shortly afterwards and is witnessed by Vice Chief of Army Staff, General KM Arif, Ghulam Ishaq Khan and Munir Ahmad Khan. From 1983-1992, DTD carries out 24 cold tests of different designs of nuclear weapons.

1983- March 11, following the first successful cold test of a working nuclear device, PAEC chairman informs the President of Pakistan, General Zia-ul-Haq that now Pakistan is ready to make an atomic bomb whenever it wants.

1983-A Computer Training Centre set up in PAEC.

1984- Dr. AQ Khan gives interviews in which he talks of Pakistan’s ability to successfully enrich uranium to any level required.

1985 – Pressler Amendment [section 620E(e) of the Foreign Assistance Act] requires a total cut-off of U.S. aid to Islamabad unless the president can certify that Pakistan does not possess a nuclear weapon, and that continued US aid will significantly decrease the probability of its developing one in the future.

1985- Plutonium Production Heavy Water Reactor at KHUSHAB started by PAEC.

1986- Commenting on Pakistan’s nuclear capability, General Zia, President of Pakistan, tells interviewer, `It is our right to obtain the technology. And when we acquire this technology,’

1986-KRL starts producing weapons-grade highly enriched uranium.

1986-Pakistan and China sign a historic civilian nuclear cooperation agreement. This agreement is signed by Foreign Ministers of the two countries in the presence of PAEC chairman and his Chinese counterparts in Beijing.

1987- Pakistan proposed to India an agreement on a bilateral or regional nuclear test ban treaty

1987- DTD develops a nuclear weapon design small enough to be carried by all PAF aircraft.

1987- Hot tests conducted by PAEC at the New Labs reprocessing plant.

1987- PAEC begins work on the heavy water production plant at Khushab and also on the Heavy Mechanical Complex-3 project.

1987- PAEC acquires a tritium purification and production plant from West Germany.

1987-PAEC reportedly receives a solid-fuel propellant plant from China.

1988- President Zia tells Carnegie Endowment delegation in interview that Pakistan has attained a nuclear capability `that is good enough to create an impression of deterrence.’

1989- PAEC Chairman Mr. Munir Ahmad Khan and Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan receive the Hilal-i-Imtiaz award from the Govt. of Pakistan

1989- November 2, PARR-2 achieves critical stage

1989-November, Pakistan and China reach an agreement for the supply of a 325 MW Chashma-1 Nuclear Power Plant (CHASNUPP-1). PAEC chairman says that this deal has broken an international embargo on Pakistan for the supply of nuclear power reactors. 

1990-PAEC completes loading of all Pakistani nuclear fuel bundles in KANUPP.

1990-Dr. Samar Mubarakmand, appointed Director of the National Development Complex project.

1990- October ; President Bush announced that he could no longer provide Congress with Pressler Amendment certification that Pakistan does not possess a nuclear weapon. Economic and military aid was duly terminated, though the Bush administration continued to permit a limited number of commercial military sales to Pakistan. Pakistan handled the cutoff with little public rancor and committed itself to freezing the nuclear program in an attempt to placate the United States. The transfer of 71 F-16 A/B, P-3 Orion, Harpoon SSM, M-198 Towed-artillery, and other military equipment shipment is halted even though Pakistan paid for these items

1991-Pakistan proposed to India commencement of a multilateral conference on the nuclear proliferation in south Asia

1991- India and Pakistan enter agreement prohibiting attacks on each other’s nuclear installations.

1991-PAEC completes the up-gradation of the 5 MW PARR-1 to 10 MW and coverts it from HEU to LEU fuel through indigenous efforts.

1991- April; Dr. Ishfaq Ahmad takes over as PAEC Chairman as Mr.Munir Ahmad Khan retires after 19 years.

1991-December; PAEC and China National Nuclear Corporation sign contract for the construction of the 325 MW CHASNUPP-1 project.

1992- PAEC cold tests its latest nuclear weapon design.

1992- Pakistani foreign secretary publicly discusses Pakistan’s possession of `cores’ of nuclear devices

1992- December; The US Government asked Pakistan to return eight US Navy frigates and a supply ship that had been leased to the Pakistan Navy, which accounted for more than half of Pakistan’s major surface combatants because of sanctions.

1993- Pakistan proposed to India creation of a missile-free zone in South Asia

1993- National Development Complex completed and Dr. Samar Mubarakmand assumes charge as it’s Director-General.

1993- The Clinton Administration, citing what it considered to be asymmetrical treatment accorded to Pakistan and India over their respective nuclear programs, proposed revising the Pressler Amendment and certain “country-specific” sections of the Foreign Assistance Act. The administration argued that by the time nuclear nonproliferation provisions had been added to the Foreign Assistance Act, India had already acquired the capability to build nuclear weapons and thus Pakistan had borne the brunt of most United States sanctions.

1994- The Clinton Administration withdrew its proposal to revise the amendment because of strong criticism from a number of influential members of Congress, including Senator Pressler himself.

1994- April; Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott visits Islamabad to propose a one-time sale of F-16 fighter aircraft to Pakistan. Delivery of the planes would be contingent on specific commitments from Pakistan regarding its nuclear program, including a verifiable cap on the production of fissile materials. Talbott states that there is “broad agreement” between the United States and Pakistan on the goal of “first capping, then reducing, and eventually eliminating weapons of mass destruction and ballistic missiles from South Asia.”

1995 – September; The Clinton Administration proposes revisions to the Pressler Amendment, citing the Amendment’s roadblocks to cooperation with Pakistan’s Government in areas such as combating terrorism and furthering US commercial interests in Pakistan. Under the Brown Amendment, the US would not deliver the controversial F-16 aircraft or resume an official military supply relationship with Pakistan, but the President decided to sell the F-16 aircraft to other countries and return the proceeds to Pakistan

1995- PAEC begins work on the solid-fuelled Shaheen missile system in NDC under the direction of Dr. Samar Mubarakmand. 

1996- January 1st; India and Pakistan exchange lists of atomic installations which each side has pledged not to attack under an over seven-year-old confidence-building agreement

1996- January 23rd; The Brown amendment was signed into law to relieve some of the pressures created by the Pressler sanctions, which had crippled parts of the Pakistani military, particularly the Air Force. The Brown amendment allowed nearly $370 million of previously embargoed arms and spare parts to be delivered to Pakistan. It also permitted limited military assistance for the purposes of counter-terrorism, peacekeeping, anti-narcotics efforts, and some military training

1996- October 3rd, former PM Benazir Bhutto called for the convening of a South Asia security conference that would deal with, among other things, Kashmir and the nuclear arms issue

1996- Former PM Nawaz Sharif while addressing a political rally said “Let me tell you that we [Pakistan] have atomic bombs… Pakistan’s nuclear capability is now an established fact. Whatever we have, we have a right to keep it….”

1996- PAEC completes Pakistan’s first indigenous 50 MW Khushab plutonium production reactor which was begun in 1985-86.

1997- The Centre for Nuclear Studies attains the status of a University and it is renamed the Pakistan Institute of Engineering and Applied Sciences

1997- The Khushab plutonium production reactor goes critical.

1998- April, KRL tests the liquid-fuelled IRBM, Ghauri, to a range of 1,100 kms. 

1998 April; PAEC “commissions” the 50 MW Khushab plutonium production reactor which becomes operational.

1998- May 11 and 13. India carries out five underground nuclear tests in Pokhran.

1998-May 28, PAEC’s Directorate of Technical Development carries out five nuclear tests at the Chaghi nuclear test site. Pakistan’s Foreign Office terms it as “Pakistan’s Finest Hour”. 

1998-May 30, PAEC carries out one more nuclear test at the Kharan desert test site, 150 kms away from Chaghi. This is the most advanced and compact of all nuclear weapon designs tested by Pakistan.

 

What Was MF Hussain’s Fault When Hindus Worship Erect Penises?

by Bala Krishna (balakr2@gmail.com).

Mahalinga means erect penis that the entire Hindu faith fools worship!

I suggest my readers to visit Orissa capital Bhubaneshwar where there are hundreds of old temples.

One of them is called Linga Raja temple. In this more than 1600 year old temple a granite Linga as high as more than a metre, stands on a yoni, female genital as they remain inseparable, has around it carved out 1000 mini mahalingas. It is guarded by a hooded cobra of stone.
Even today people go there to smear sandal  and vermillion paste around it before placing on fresh red flowers as worship of veneration!

I ask my own Hindu Hooligans to visit Ellora´s single rock temple. There you can see obscene hanging like six o´clock  penis every where carved out. In other temples there are wood carvings depicting birth of Rama and his three half brothers.

Elsewhere, I have a photograph of a masturbating Hanuman in wood carving.

In Pashupathi Nath temple Kathmandu, the sole Hindu kingdom of yesterday there is a eight feet high Bhairava statue showing almost two feet long bronze penis pipe.

Hindu women come there to smear sandal and vermillion paste around it seeking the grace of a baby as if bronze penis ejaculates sperm!

I write this to ask do you have no shame Hindu faith fools to indulge in these farce devotion and then condemn my old friend the late Maqbool Fida Hussain born at the Hindu pilgrimage centre Phandarapur in Maharashtra on September 17, 1915.

Do you know once he visited the SitaladeviTempleat Mahim with me, which is not far away from the Mahim Causeway where Muslims sell Bambu polls. I had also visited a mosque with him around Bandra patronized mostly by butchers.

What the hell is wrong? Do you know Shirdi Saibaba was an immigrant Muslim?

Today most of his followers are Hindu. The late Puttaparthi Raju renamed himself as Satya Saibaba sprouting hair upwards. Did your faith fool sentiments hurt then?

There is no imaginable absurdities and obscenities kept unobserved religiously by faith fool Hindu Hooligans,HH.They go to pilgrimage to Haji Malang Hill, close to Kalyan, beyond the borders of megalopolis Bombay hoping the grace of the sufi saint buried there will bring enormous wealth.Come on where are your sentiments. You go in Rajasthan at Karni temple to feed rats as elephant headed Ganesha´s vehicle.

Now about the special tormentors of Maqbool Fida Hussain during his very old age, last leg of the journey in this world as a born Muslim not out of his own choice.

These have named themselves Bajranga, meaning diamond penis,rape penis Dal,brigade. I would like to tell you more about your king of gods, Indra. Do you worship him praising as one sporting 1000 yonis, female genitals all over the body. He got these Chinese eye like yonis as punishment from sage Gauthama for seducing his wife Ahalya by deception as a sweet cat.

You worship the same infidel Ahalya as the first of the five virgins,worthy of  worship. The next virgin for you is polyandrous Draupadi who married in all five brothers sharing them in a cycle of two ito five ten years. She had confessed she would have loved to sleep with a sixth one, hinting that her mother-in-law Pritha had nursed a son even before she got married,later she mated males of her own choice not the married herbend.Even after marriage the mother of her herbands had all her sons by infidelity.

The third is Sita,the sole wife of Sri Rama of Ayodhya,an exceptional woman. The fourth virgin was monkey queen Tara, the mother of Angada, shared by Monkey King siblings Vali and Sugreeva alternatively.

Finally the fifth is architect Maya´s daughter Mandodari, who gave birth to Brahman monster ten headed Ravana´s son Meghanada.

These five women of old,all mothers, who had their full share of sufferings and are considered great virgins worthy of worship to get rid of the worst of sins!

With such a record of hypocrisy all around you Hindu Hooligan sons and daughters of Mahalingas´ go crazy to torment an old man for his creative works of 35 years old or even older. I remember Maqbool Fida made a Haj during the sixties. No one addressed him Haji Hussain. On his return he painted Ramayana.

Writing a review of that exhibition of his I  gave it the headline “Ramayana by Haji”, then not even my enemy friend Balya Thackery, the Meinduck complained against it.

I know the reason why Hindu Hooligans went after Maqbool Fida Hussain in this century. It was because  a Hindu Vishva Parishad Marwari signed an agreement to buy his 200 paintings a year at ten million rupees a piece.He wanted to get the paintings at revised reduced rates.Hussain did not care since his paintings were in demand all over.

As for Hussain, he was normal all human. Full of humour and good taste. No airs. In the beginning he suffered the same way as did the late friend Krishnaji Hovlaji Ara, who wrote nudes as well tore a canvass to insert a thick coconut yarn rope through it giving
a title Mahadeva, meaning gawd of Erect penis! No one dared to condemn it.They enjoyed the humour!

In today´s India Hindu Hooligans want the artists confine themselves to being sentimental.Where then goes Indian ancient tradition of creativity in literature and visuals carvings, sculptures or paintings on the walls of caves or precincts of temples. Would they dare to destroy Ellora, Konarak, khajuraho, Belur, Halebeed inheritance ?

Raja Ravi Varma, whom the Hindu Hooligans approve dressed early Bollywood actresses or Parel Tamasha theatre heroines.They were all given gawd´s and gawdesses´ identities. I remember Prof. Bendre explaining me the significance of Ravi Varma paintings as I invited him through friend Ara to see if the finds at the Ghatkopar Graphic Press ruins where indeed genuine Ravi Varma originals. He had then said it was Ravi Varma painting for stage and silver screen who created the identities for all  Hindu deities.

Indian art today is getting recognition world wide. Indians have cash and pay for creativity. But such individuals with taste are not among the Hindu Hooligans, who want to take overIndia as the Pakistani jihadi terrorists want to sinkPakistan in theArabian sea close to Osama Bin Laden´s body.

Maqbool Fida Husain, (17 September, 1915 – 9 June, 2011) popularly known as MF, was an artist of Indian origin, passed away in exile in London. Husain, the artist who earned fame and controversy over his paintings, died in a Royal Brompton hospital in Londonat 2.30 am on Thursday, June 9, 2011 following a cardiac arrest..

According to Forbes magazine, he has been called the “Picasso of India”.In 1996 controversy arose over paintings originally painted in the 1970s which were interpreted as anti-Hindu. After legal cases and death threats in his home country, he was on a self imposed exile from 2006. In January, 2010, he was offered the citizenship of Qatar, which he accepted. As of now, he has not responded to summons from an Indian district court in Haridwar, his properties in India are therefore attached as per court orders and a bailable warrant is issued against him in the said court.

MF Husain first became well-known as an artist in the late 1940s. In 1947, he joined the Progressive Artists’ Group, founded by Francis Newton Souza. This was a clique of young artists who wished to break with the nationalist traditions established by the Bengal school of art and to encourage an Indian avant-garde, engaged at an international level. In 1952, his first solo exhibition was held at Zürich and over the next few years, his work was widely seen in Europe and the U.S. In 1955, he was awarded the prestigious Padma Shree prize by the Government of India.

In 1967, he made his first film, Through the Eyes of a Painter. It was shown at the Berlin Film Festival and won a Golden Bear.M. F. Husain was a special invitee along with Pablo Picasso at the Sao Paulo Biennial in 1971. He has been awarded the Padma Bhushan in 1973 and was nominated to the Rajya Sabha in 1986. He was awarded the Padma Vibhushan in 1991.

MF Husain went on to become the highest paid painter in India. His single canvases have fetched up to $2 million at a recent Christie’s auction. He has also worked (produced & directed) on few movies, including Gaja Gamini (with his muse Madhuri Dixit who was the subject of a series of his paintings which he signed Fida). The film was intended as a tribute to Ms. Dixit herself. In this film she can be seen portraying various forms and manifestations of womanhood including the muse of Kalidasa, the Mona Lisa, a rebel, and musical euphoria. He went on to make Meenaxi: A Tale of Three Cities (with Tabu). His autobiography is being made into a movie tentatively titled The Making of the Painter, starring Shreyas Talpade as the young Husain.

The Peabody Essex Museum (PEM) (USA, Massachusetts) showed a solo exhibition from 4 November 2006 to 3 June 2007. It exhibited Husain’s paintings inspired by the Hindu epic, Mahabharata. At the age of 92 Husain was to be given the prestigious Raja Ravi Varma award by the government of Kerala. The announcement led to controversy in Kerala and some cultural organisations campaigned against the granting of the award and petitioned the Kerala courts. Sabarimala spokesperson, Rahul Easwar, went to Kerala High Court and it granted an interim order to stay the granting of the award until the petition had been disposed of.
In early 2008, Husain’s Battle of Ganga and Jamuna: Mahabharata 12, a large diptych, from the Hindu epic, fetched $1.6 million, setting a world record at Christie’s South Asian Modern and Contemporary Art sale.
His name has also been included in the list of the 500 Most Influential Muslims in the World issued by the Royal Islamic Strategic Studies Center in Amman, Jordan.

Of late sale is showing a decline. In may artists MF Husain went unsold at the Sotheby’s auction, many feel that they may have run their course. Artist Pranava Prakash said, “Artists such as Husain and Raza sell because of their PR machinery, not because of their artistic merit.”
Husain died of heart attack on the 9th of June, 2011 at London, United Kingdom.

Controversies

In the 1990s some of Husain’s works became controversial because of their portrayal of Hindu deities in the nude or in an allegedly sexual manner. The paintings in question were created in 1970, but did not become an issue until 1996, when they were printed in Vichar Mimansa, a Hindi monthly magazine, which published them in an article headlined “M.F. Husain: A Painter or Butcher”.

In response, eight criminal complaints were filed against Husain. In 2004, Delhi High Court dismissed these complaints of “promoting enmity between different groups … by painting Hindu goddesses — Durga and Sarswati, that was later compromised by Hindu’s. “.

In 1998 Husain’s house was attacked by Hindu groups like Bajrang Dal and art works were vandalised. The leadership of Shiv Sena endorsed the attack. Twenty-six Bajrang Dal activists were arrested by the police. Protests against Husain also led to the closure of an exhibition in London, England.

In February 2006, Husain was charged with hurting sentiments of people because of his nude portraits of Hindu gods and goddesses.
A series of cases were brought against him and a court case related to the alleged obscene depiction of Hindu goddesses in his paintings resulted in issuing a non-bailable warrant against Husain after he failed to respond to summons. There were also reportedly death threats. The artist left the country stating that “matters are so legally complicated that I have been advised not to return home”. Now living in Dubai and London, he continues to stay away from India, but has expressed a strong desire to return, despite fears that he may be arrested in connection with these cases.

A recent Supreme Court order has suspended an arrest warrant for Husain. The law ministry has examined half-a-dozen works by Husain and told the government that prosecutors would have a strong case against him if they sued him for deliberately hurting religious feelings.

Mother India

In the February 6, 2006 issue, India Today, a national English weekly published an advertisement titled “Art For Mission Kashmir”. This advertisement contains a painting of Bharatmata (Mother India) as a nude woman posed across a map of India with the names of Indian States on various parts of her body. The exhibition was organised by Nafisa Ali of Action India (NGO) and Apparao Art Gallery. Organizations like Hindu Jagruti Samiti and Vishva Hindu Parishad (VHP) have protested persistently against Husain displaying the painting on the websites and even in exhibitions in north Europe. As a result, on February 7, 2006 Husain apologised and promised to withdraw the painting from an auction. The painting later appeared on Husain’s official website.
Husain’s film was pulled out of movie theatres a day after some Muslim organisations raised objections to one of the songs in it. The All-India Ulema Council complained that the Qawwali song Noor-un-Ala-Noor was blasphemous. It argued that the song contained words directly taken from the Quran. The council was supported by Muslim organisations like the Milli Council, All-India Muslim Council, Raza Academy, Jamiat-ul-Ulema-e-Hind and Jamat-e-Islami. Husain’s son stated that the words were a phrase referring to divine beauty that were being sung by the central character played by Tabu. He said there was no intention to offend. Following the wave of protests the enraged artist pulled off his movie from the theaters. The movie was well received by the critics, however, and went on to win various awards.
The artistic community has been supportive as well as critical. Krishan Khanna, one of Husain’s contemporaries, stated that “It’s not just Husain’s but the entire artist community’s lives which are at stake. Anybody and everybody can file a case against us now. Anyone can infringe upon our lives”. Others who have expressed anger at the “vicious campaigns” against Husain, include filmmaker Saeed Mirza, social activist Nafisa Ali, theatre personality M. K. Raina and a host of other artistes, art critics and art gallery owners. Salil Tripathi, writing in the International Herald Tribune, notes that Hindu goddesses have regularly been portrayed in the nude by Hindu artists. Tripathi asserts that, “”"”It is hypocritical to place curbs on Husain’s artistic freedom. What’s more shameful is that a government that claims to be the secular alternative to Hindu nationalists is threatening to prosecute Husain. This does not do India proud; it adds to India’s disgrace.”"”

Indian Muslims Launch Peace Party

A new party called the Peace Party has been launched in Delhi.

It convenor, Dr. Ayub said that the issues before the nation today are corruption, un-employment, equity and justice, which are slowing down the economic growth and increasing the urban rural and rich poor divide. He said that in the changing global scenario and increasing youth population in the country, are our Governments serious enough to address their growing aspirations? We will be inviting trouble if do not address to the needs of youth and poor. He also lamented the total neglect of Muslim community in the last 63 years, irrespective of the party in power. The socio-economic and educational condition of muslims, as found out by Justice Sacchar Committee, should have been an eye opener for the Government and the civil society, but instead of implementing Justice Mishra Commission report, the UPA Government is even avoiding any discussion on that. Peace Party will have no truck with any party in power, till it declares implementation of Mishra Commission report and firm plan on bringing black money to the nation. Dr. Ayub termed Congress and Samajwadi as opportunistic and made it clear that it takes them on the same plate-form as BJP as far as secularism is considered. Dr. Ayub ruled out any alliance with Samajwadi Party, Shiv Sena and BJP in the forth coming UP elections.

Peace Party has created waves with its spectacular performance in Uttar Pradesh Assembly bi-elections in 2010 and before that in the 2009 Parliamentary Elections.

Its President Dr. Ayub, a world renowned surgeon, has been rated the most powerful Muslim politician in India by India Today 14 April 2011 issue. The Party has primarily organized Muslims and most backward communities (MBCs) and has gained the power of over 70% Muslims vote transferability, which the media and political analysts rate as greater strength than even BSP. The party is targeting to win 125 – 140 seats in UP 2012 elections. Peace Party is leading a seven party coalition in UP and has formed an alliance with Ajit Singh led Rashtriya Lok Dal. Peace Party is coming toDelhion 14th June, first time outside UP. Delhi has large number of migrants from UP and party will primarily target UP, Bihar migrants and minority population in the State, which makes up approx 34% of the State. Party will seriously contest about 100 Corporation seats and 25 Assembly seats inDelhi, and will be benefited in UP by its strength inDelhiand Vice Versa.

Speaking on the occasion, ex Additional DGP of UP and National Vice President of Peace Party, Sh. Bijender Singh said that till the goal of social justice is achieved, which is possible only by implementing Proportionate Representation in letter and spirit. Dr. MJ Khan, General Secretary of Peace Party said that both the State and central Governments are pursuing anti Kisan (farmer) and anti Musalman policies. The need is to ensure justice and development for all. Large number of peace Party workers fromDelhiparticipated in the launch function.

Dr. MJ Khan
09868506668

 

Indian Census Figures

POPULATION OF INDIA (2011 CENSUS – PROVISIONAL FIGURES)

 

FM/ML: Female/Male Ratio.

 

Density: Persons/Sq Km.

 

% +: Percentage Growth: 2001 to 2011     

 

Sr

STATE

POPULATION

MALES

FEMALES

FM/ML

Density

% +

00 INDIA

1,21,01,93,422

62,37,24,248

58,64,69,174

940

382

17.64

01 Andaman & Nicobar

3,79,944

2,02,330

1,77,614

878

46

6.68

02 Andhra Pradesh

8,46,65,533

4,25,09,881

4,21,55,652

992

308

11.10

03 Arunachal Pradesh

13,82,611

7,20,232

6,62,379

920

17

25.92

04 Assam

3,11,69,272

1,59,54,927

1,52,14,345

954

397

16.93

05 Bihar

10,38,04,637

5,41,85,347

4,96,19,290

916

1,102

25.07

06 Chandigarh

10,54,686

5,80,282

4,74,404

818

9,252

17.10

07 Chhattisgarh

2,55,40,196

1,28,27,915

1,27,12,281

991

189

22.59

08 Dadra&Nagar Haveli

3,42,853

1,93,178

1,49,675

775

698

55.50

09 Daman & Diu

2,42,911

1,50,100

92,811

618

2,169

53.54

10 Goa

14,57,723

7,40,711

7,17,012

968

394

8.17

11 Gujarat

6,03,83,628

3,14,82,282

2,89,01,346

918

308

19.17

12 Haryana

2,53,53,081

1,35,05,130

1,18,47,951

877

573

19.90

13 Himachal Pradesh

68,56,509

34,73,892

33,82,617

974

123

12.81

14 Jammu & Kashmir

1,25,48,926

66,65,561

58,83,365

883

124

23.71

15 Jharkhand

3,29,66,238

1,69,31,688

1,60,34,550

947

414

22.34

16 Karnataka

6,11,30,704

3,10,57,742

3,00,72,962

968

319

15.67

17 Kerala

3,33,87,677

1,60,21,290

1,73,66,387

1,084

859

4.86

18 Lakshadweep

64,429

33,106

31,323

946

2,013

6.23

19 Madhya Pradesh

7,25,97,565

3,76,12,920

3,49,84,645

930

236

20.30

20 Maharashtra

11,23,72,972

5,83,61,397

5,40,11,575

925

365

15.99

21 Manipur

27,21,756

13,69,764

13,51,992

987

122

18.65

22 Meghalaya

29,64,007

14,92,668

14,71,339

986

132

27.82

23 Mizoram

10,91,014

5,52,339

5,38,675

975

52

22.78

24 Nagaland

19,80,602

10,25,707

9,54,895

931

119

-0.47

25 NCT of Delhi

1,67,53,235

89,76,410

77,76,825

866

11,297

20.96

26 Orissa

4,19,47,358

2,12,01,678

2,07,45,680

978

269

13.97

27 Puducherry

12,44,464

6,10,485

6,33,979

1,038

2,598

27.72

28 Punjab

2,77,04,236

1,46,34,819

1,30,69,417

893

550

13.73

29 Rajasthan

6,86,21,012

3,56,20,086

3,30,00,926

926

201

21.44

30 Sikkim

6,07,688

3,21,661

2,86,027

889

86

12.36

31 Tamil Nadu

7,21,38,958

3,61,58,871

3,59,80,087

995

555

15.60

32 Tripura

36,71,032

18,71,867

17,99,165

961

350

14.75

33 Uttar Pradesh

19,95,81,477

10,45,96,415

9,49,85,062

908

828

20.09

34 Uttarakhand

1,01,16,752

51,54,178

49,62,574

963

189

19.17

35 West Bengal

9,13,47,736

4,69,27,389

4,44,20,347

947

1,029

13.93

 

 

 

ANP’s Afrasiab Khattak Opens His Heart to the Americans & CIA

In a meeting with an American diplomat in July 2009, ANP leader Senator Afrasiab Khattak, with all his children studying in India, claimed that the Haqqani network, a militant group the US holds responsible for multiple attacks against coalition forces in Afghanistan, was being protected by the Pakistan military.

The report is one of a number of American diplomatic cables obtained by Dawn that reveal a deep mistrust among the leadership of the ANP,  the party responsible for governance in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, about the military’s intentions regarding various militant groups in KP and FATA.

“Khattak described the Pakistani military as treating the Haqqanis ‘separately’ … from other militants,” reported Lynne Tracy, the Principal Officer at the US Consulate inPeshawar. “The Haqqani family, [Khattak] observed, has already moved out ofNorth Waziristan.

“Part of the family, he said, is living in a rented house on theKohat Roadon the southern side ofPeshawar. The other half is living in a house owned by the Haqqani family in theRawalpindicantonment.”

Americahas unsuccessfully been pressuringPakistanto pursue the Haqqani network, which it considers one of its deadliest opponents inAfghanistan. This month the US State Department added one of Jalaluddin Haqqani’s sons toAmerica’s list of global terrorists, on which the leader and two other sons are already listed.

In the July 2009 meeting Mr Khattak also criticised “a purported ISI plan to release Tehrik-i-Nifaz-i-Shariat-i-Mohammadi (TNSM) leader Sufi Mohammad” as the second Swat operation was winding down.

“Khattak told PO July 3 that ISI is intensifying pressure on NWFP Chief Minister Haider Hoti to place TNSM leader Sufi Mohammad in ‘provincial protective custody’ as part of an ISI plan to engineer the surrender of senior Tehrik-i-Taliban Swat leadership, including Mullah Fazlullah and spokesman Muslim Khan,” Ms Tracy reported.

“ISI-proposed terms … of ‘provincial custody,’ Khattak said, envisioned allowing the TNSM leader greater freedom of movement. In return, Sufi Mohammad would declare implementation of the Nizam-i-Adl regulation in Swat acceptable.” If he did so, according to Khattak’s description of the alleged ISI plan, TTP-Swat senior leadership would surrender.

In an indication of the civilian-military disconnect in the province, “Khattak declared flatly that the provincial government wanted nothing to do with this plan. Operations in Swat, he said, should come to a ‘logical conclusion’ – killing or capturing militant leadership.

“ANP leader Asfandyar Wali Khan … was also suspicious, Khattak commented, because ISI Director General Pasha had said nothing during a recent meeting about taking custody of Sufi Mohammad.”

In its comment on the meeting the Peshawar Consulate took note of the mistrust between the military and the provincial leadership and offered its own analysis about the military’s intentions: “While Khattak and other ANP leaders continue to voice respect for senior military leaders in Islamabad and Peshawar, there is tremendous suspicion of ISI and the role it is playing in the NWFP and FATA.

“Khattak commented at one point that ‘ISI’s strategy is to save the Taliban from defeat.’ ISI’s motives and activities are more complicated than that statement suggests. However, the ISI-brokered deal now being described would likely undermine any progress the military has made in reversing the public perception that the military and local Taliban are essentially the same entity.”

Suspicions about the military’s alliances can be seen at least as far back as cables written in 2006. In a meeting with the Peshawar Principal Officer in March that year, ANP chief and then Senator Asfandyar Wali Khan spoke about his plan for political reform in FATA.

One item involved “controlling ISI and the Afghan desk of the Pakistan Army in the FATA. … Operatives oftentimes support long-standing relationships with Taliban and Al Qaeda leaders that undermine the policy initiatives of senior GOP leaders.”

Later that month, Mr Khan “recommended the immediate transfer of all ISI agents from FATA that had previously worked with the Taliban and mujahideen.”

It is once the ANP is in power in KP that the relationship appears to become more interdependent. “Khan said that Kayani had so far played a ‘positive role’ when he took over ISI,” said an April 2008 cable, “closing six militant training camps identified by his party and removing ISI officers who had remained in the FATA too long.”

At the same time, however, Khan was extremely wary of the peace agreement withSouth Waziristan’s tribal elders being devised in April 2008. He “made clear that the agreement was drafted by Pakistan’s military, not its ruling political parties … going so far as to turn on a television to mask our conversation, perhaps reflecting ANP reservations over a deal that appears to have been largely brokered by the military rather than political forces.”

Some Features of Pakistan’s National Budget

Some features of Pakistan’s national budget presented by Abdul Hafiz Sheikh, the finance minister for the year 2010 to 2011:

A staggering 37.4 percent of the budget is allocated for debt servicing. A total of 1,034 Billion Rupees ($12.16 Billion), 21 percent increase over the last years allocation is been suggested in this budget. Majority of this amount is for internal debt servicing.  This is the largest portion of the national budget for any item.

17.9 percent of the total budget is suggested for defense this year, 12 percent more than last year. Over 501.85 Billion Rupees ($ 5.90 billion) is reserved for this category.  

This year budget include a total of 55.3 percent of total budget is been reserved for these two, defense and debt servicing alone.

While less than 16 percent of the total budget will be spent on development.

The budget of Higher Education Commission (HEC) is been reduced by two billion to 12 billion Rupees in total.

Less than 6 percent of the total budget will be spent on subsidies. The government has slashed the subsidies on essential food items and electricity. Last year, the overall amount of subsidies-direct and indirect- was 395 billions. This has now been reduced to 166.44 for this year. The Utility Stores subsidies is been slashed by 76.64 percent and only four billion Rupees is been allocated now, thus bringing all subsidized food items on Utility stores to almost nill, a precondition for the privatization of the utility stores. Over 50 percent cut in subsidies for electricity is also been announced.

It seems that a whole sale privatization of electric companies, utility stores and other public sector institution is on the card.

This is an IMF budget in real terms of the definition. Until we do some thing about the so called defense and debt servicing, there cannot be any significant change in the living standards of the masses.

The PPP government has made the lives of the ordinary people of Pakistan a living hell. Only 15 percent wage increase is been proposed for public sector workers, that is only after a lot of demonstrations by the trade unions across Pakistan.

We demand an end of foreign debt servicing (almost 300 billion Rupees), reduce the military budget by at least 10 percent.

 

 

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