Eating grass
K. IQBAL
Well
timed with Iran’s constructive engagement with the international community in
Geneva, last week a smear campaign was triggered by BBC Newsnight to add
confusion and create pressures. This time an imaginative Saudi-Pakistan nuclear
nexus has been thrown up to add a new colour to Pakistan’s nuclear bashing.
Though officials had expressed optimism about progress achieved during the
Geneva talks on November 07, comments from Secretary of State John Kerry
indicated that some obstacles remain in the way of any agreement on sanctions’ reduction
in exchange for nuclear concessions. Kerry arrived in Geneva from Tel Aviv
where he tried to defuse Israeli concerns about these talks. Israel is critical
of any deal that even slightly lifts sanctions unless Iran is decisively
deprived of technology that can make nuclear arms. “I understand the Iranians
are walking around very satisfied in Geneva as well, they should because they
got everything and paid nothing,” Prime Minister Netanyahu told reporters
before meeting Kerry. “The United States and Israel are in complete agreement
about the need to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.” Kerry
responded.
Mark
Urban of BBC Newsnight under the bizarre title “Saudi nuclear weapons ‘on
order’ from Pakistan” argues that Saudi Arabia has invested in Pakistani
nuclear weapons projects, and believes it could obtain atomic bombs from
Pakistan at will – at the time of its choosing. Reacting to the story, the
spokesperson of Pakistan’s ministry of foreign affairs has characterized the
story as “entirely baseless and mischievous”. Saudi Arabia’s embassy in London
has also rejected the mischievous report. Mark Urban has strived to skilfully
embroil three brotherly Islamic countries in a speculative controversy. Saudi
Arabia’s quest for nuclear weapons has often been projected in the backdrop of
countering Iran’s atomic programme.
Pakistan
is a responsible nuclear weapons state with robust command and control
structure and comprehensive export controls. Pakistan supports objectives of
non-proliferation as well as nuclear safety and security. Pakistan is fully
aware of its responsibilities. Pakistan’s nuclear programme is purely for its
own legitimate self defence. Pakistan does not subscribe to nuclear arms race
or trade and adheres to its oft reiterated position about maintenance of a
limited arsenal compatible with its compulsions of minimum credible deterrence.
After the recent Nawaz-Obama summit, Prime Minister Sharif reaffirmed
Pakistan’s support for the universal objectives of non-proliferation and disarmament.
President Obama reiterated his confidence in Pakistan’s commitment and
dedication to nuclear security and acknowledged that Pakistan is fully engaged
with the international community on nuclear safety and security issues. Post
summit joint statement, issued on 24 October 2013, referred to President
Obama’s appreciation of Pakistan’s constructive engagement with the Nuclear
Security Summit process and its cooperation with the International Atomic
Energy Agency and other international forums. At the same time, President Obama
also accredited Pakistan’s efforts to improve its strategic trade controls and
enhance its engagement with multilateral export regimes.
The BBC
story tries to portray that the Saudis might be able to deploy such devices
more quickly than Iran. While attributing a piece of information to an unnamed
senior NATO decision maker, the story teller says that the official had seen
intelligence reporting that nuclear weapons made in Pakistan on behalf of Saudi
Arabia are now sitting ready for delivery. He goes on to bring-in evidence from
Israeli sources to carry forth the story: “Last month Amos Yadlin, a former
head of Israeli military intelligence, told a conference in Sweden that if Iran
got the bomb, ‘the Saudis will not wait one month. They already paid for the
bomb, they will go to Pakistan and bring what they need to bring.’
Gary
Samore, President Barack Obama’s counter-proliferation adviser until March
2013, told Newsnight: “I do think that the Saudis believe that they have some
understanding with Pakistan that, in extremis, they would have claim to acquire
nuclear weapons from Pakistan.”
Story’s
construct is based on another flawed assumption that for many years Saudi
Arabia has given generous financial assistance to Pakistan’s defence sector.
Visits by the then Saudi defence minister Prince Sultan bin Abdulaziz al Saud
to the Pakistani nuclear research centre in 1999 and 2002 are being projected
as circumstantial evidence to underline the closeness of the defence
relationship.
No
nuclear maligning story is complete without reference to the so called ‘Khan
Network’. So how could Mark Urban miss that piece from his nuclear nonsense? He
says; “The Pakistani scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan was accused by western
intelligence agencies of selling atomic know-how and Uranium enrichment
centrifuges to Libya and North Korea. AQ Khan is also believed to have passed
the Chinese nuclear weapon design to those countries. This blueprint was for a
device engineered to fit on the CSS-2 missile, i.e. the type sold to Saudi
Arabia”. Dead horse of ‘Khan Network’ is used as a magic wand to make all sorts
of fictional nuclear narratives stick. Some of the points that need scrutiny
are: If there was any such global network, then has any other member of this
network, from any other country, been brought to justice and meaningfully
punished? North Korea’s nuclear programme is Plutonium based, whereas that of
Pakistan is Uranium based, so where is the common ground? Was North Korea
trying to produce a Plutonium weapon by employing Uranium reprocessing
technology? Did Libya end up in making a weapon out of what presumably Dr Khan
had provided to it?
Allegations
of a Saudi-Pakistani nuclear deal started to circulate as early as the 1990s,
but have repeatedly been denied by Saudi officials as well. Saudi Arabia has
time and again reiterated that their country had signed the Non-Proliferation
Treaty, and called for a nuclear-free Middle East, pointing to Israel’s
possession of such weapons. To give credence to his story, Mark also quoted
from “Eating Grass: The Making of the Pakistani Bomb”, by Feroze Hassan Khan
that Prince Sultan’s visits to Pakistan’s atomic labs were not proof of an
agreement between the two countries. But he acknowledged, “Saudi Arabia
provided generous financial support to Pakistan that enabled the nuclear
program to continue.”
Mark
goes on to quote Gary Samore that Whatever understandings did or did not exist
between the two countries in the 1990s, it was around 2003 that the kingdom
started serious strategic thinking about its changing security environment and
the prospect of nuclear proliferation, a paper leaked that year by senior Saudi
officials mapped out three possible responses: to acquire their own nuclear
weapons; to enter into an arrangement with another nuclear power to protect the
Kingdom; or to rely on the establishment of a nuclear-free zone in the Middle
East.
Of late
Saudi Arabia has started taking independent position on various important
international issues. Recently, Saudi Arabia has publically shown its
disappointment on the way Syrian crisis and Egyptian coup were handled by the
US. In a bold step, it has also declined to accept the rotary membership of
UNSC, declaring the forum as undemocratic and non-productive. While Iran is
engaged in serious negotiations to resolve the nuclear impasse, and Pakistan is
striving to mobilize financial support from the IMF and World Bank for its
budgetary support and development projects. BBC News night's story is certainly
well timed to malign three Islamic countries. Mark, any way ‘forgot’ to mention
Israel’s nuclear weapons and their fallout on nuclear proliferation in the
Middle East.
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