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Pakistan… Lectures North Korea?

Posted in General, Pakistan, North Korea by Justin Michael Delabar on the October 9th, 2006

Hypocrisy alert:

“We had urged [North Korea] to desist from introducing nuclear weapons in the Korean peninsula,” Pakistani foreign office spokeswoman Tasnim Aslam said.

“It is regrettable that [North Korea] chose to ignore the advice by the international community not to conduct the test.”

Ms Aslam has also defended Pakistan’s own nuclear record.

“Pakistan did not initiate nuclear tests in the region. We were acting purely in self-defence,” she said.

Pakistan’s claims here are almost laughable considering its own involvement in North Korea’s nuclear program. Pakistani scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan’s nuclear network provided North Korean scientists detailed nuclear information in the 1990s which undoubtedly helped speed the global community into this current crisis. While Pakistani president Pervez Musharraf assures the international community that Khan remains under house arrest, he continues to disallow IAEA officials the luxury of questioning Khan about his nuclear dealings. The excuse Musharaff hides behind is that allowing Khan to become the center of international scrutiny would lead to massive upheaval and, perhaps, the collapse of the current, arguably secular Pakistani government. A more adequate explanation may be that high ranking Pakistani officials inside the military-governmental complex may be concerned with their own implication in any information attained from Khan.

Interesting friends the US keeps, to be sure. The sad part is the current governmental configuration in Islamabad may be the least damaging one for US interests at the current time. That’s not to say that it has not caused damage, but that’s another topic for another post when I have more time/energy.

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  • Pakistani Jihadism and Pipeline Politics

    Posted in General, Terrorism, Pakistan, Oil by Justin Michael Delabar on the April 18th, 2006

    Hussain Haqqani’s "Jihad and Jihadism" concerning Pakistan is rather ancient in blog terms (it was published on August 3), but I still find it timely considering my semi-recent discussions of Pakistan and terrorism. Haqqani focuses primarily on Musharraf kicking foreign students out of madrassas a few weeks back, which was obviously nothing more than an attempt to deflect further criticism following the London bombings:

    The Pakistani government’s decision to bar 1,400 foreigners from studying at the country’s madrasas is not the solution to terrorism. None of the terrorists involved in international attacks linked to Pakistan , even tenuously, over the last several years have been regular foreign madrasa students. Pakistan ’s real problem is the training camps established by Jihad ist groups in the country, which were tolerated by the Pakistani state for strategic reasons. Some of these camps operated under the cover of madrasas. By focusing on madrasas, and then only on foreigners within the madrasas, Pakistani officials are again missing the opportunity to move forward with a complete roll back of Jihad ism.

     

    Blaming foreigners has become a convenient excuse in Pakistan , and elsewhere in the Muslim world, to avoid condemning the extremist Jihadists’ ideology of hatred. It is not necessary for everyone in Europe or the Muslim world to agree with all aspects of US or British policy to acknowledge that many Muslims have been so consumed by hatred of the West that they have lost their moral compass. Terrorism is reprehensible. Extremist ideologies that feed, justify or condone terrorism deserve unequivocal condemnation. Instead, non-steps such as expulsion of foreign madrasa students continue to distract Gen Musharraf’s regime.

    For Pakistan ’s intelligentsia, too, this is a moment of truth. The perceived or real flaws of Europeans and Americans must not be used as the basis for shifting responsibility for Islamist terrorism from its ideology of hate to specific US policy decisions. The bulk of the recent victims of global terror have been Muslims, slaughtered by those claiming to speak in the name of a purer Islam. This slaughter is hardly a rational response to ‘‘occupation of Iraq , Afghanistan and Palestine ,'’ as some commentators describe terrorist attacks.

    A good column, definitely recommended in full.

    The Bush administration needs to start applying some sort of pressure to Musharraf over the madrassas themselves, as well as the established terrorist camps being kept around for a number of reasons, one of those being their strategic importance in a possible future conflict with India. One way I’d go about it is through utilizing the Pakistan-India-Iran natural gas pipeline project as leverage. Back in June the US threatened unilateral sanctions on Pakistan if it continued with the project, although that was meant primarily as a warning against closer Islamabad-Tehran ties. If the administration’s willing to go that far to affect Pakistani regional policy, I don’t see why it cannot link the pipeline to internal reform, as well. Of course, the US would have to consider the project as a carrot in such negotiations, or, perhaps, replace it with a push for increased bilateral economic relations, something very much desired by high level and influential Pakistanis including Foreign Minister Khurshid Mahmood Kasuri.

    As it stands currently, US sway in the region, particularly with India, is going to kill the pipeline, anyway, perhaps in lieu of a different, more US-friendly project based in Qatar (Chevron, Mobil, and Enron are all involved in Qatar’s energy industry.) It’s conceivable that one reason the US pledged civil nuclear support to India was to dismantle New Delhi’s need for the natural gas pipeline to begin with. Obviously, no one should pledge nuke cooperation with terrorist-harboring Pakistan, but alternatives are out there, ready to be utilized to modify Musharraf’s more dangerous behavior.

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