Pakistan’s nuclear assets are often described as the “Islamic bomb.”
Given that no other Muslim-majority country has the bomb, is this
description something that you agree with?
The term “Islamic Bomb” was mischievously coined by the Western world
to frighten the rest of the world and to portray Muslims, and Pakistan,
as terrorists who should not possess an atom bomb. The Western world is
united in Muslim-bashing and ridiculing Islam and its golden values.
The U.N. has slapped sanctions on Iran—ostensibly as punishment for
the Islamic country’s pursuit of nuclear weapons. How do you see global
geopolitics shifting if Iran were to acquire nuclear weapons?
In Iran the same mischievous propaganda is at work to befool the rather
ignorant—or less knowledgeable—public that it poses a threat and is a
fanatic, terrorist country. Have we already forgotten that, despite the
repeated statements of no WMD in Iraq that were made by [former U.N.
weapons inspector] Hans Blix after IAEA [International Atomic Energy
Agency] inspectors made regular visits to that country, Bush and Blair
still attacked Iraq? In this process they killed thousands of people,
destroyed an ancient civilization, occupied the country, and put
stooges in place to play their part in the killing of their own people.
Iran, as everyone knows, is a member of the NPT [Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty] regime, that it is open to IAEA inspection of
all its sites, to which it is adhering, and that it cannot produce
nuclear weapons material or nuclear weapons. This is yet another
example of Western hypocrisy.
Most here take pride in the fact that Pakistan is a nuclear state
and believe this has served as a deterrent to conventional war with
India.
Yes, I fully agree. Our nuclear program has ensured our survival, our
security, and our sovereignty ... I am proud to have contributed to it
together with my patriotic and able colleagues.
Former ISI chief Javed Ashraf Qazi recently told Pakistan’s Dawn
News TV channel that CIA agents were caught in 1994–95 trying to buy
information on Pakistan’s nuclear program. The refrain that Pakistan’s
nuclear weapons are unsafe and can fall into the hands of radical
Islamic organizations is also often played up in the Western press. How
secure is the nuclear arsenal?
Nobody ever penetrated Kahuta [the site of Pakistan’s main nuclear
facility], nor could they do so. The Americans, contrary to their tall
claims, were totally in the dark about the status of our program.
Majors—or even generals, for that matter—had no access to sensitive and
classified information ... [Kahuta] or PAEC [Pakistan Atomic Energy
Commission] were never a department store where one could go and pick
up a bomb! The American and British intelligence agencies tried to
bribe and buy two of our scientists, who refused all sorts of
incentives and reported the matter to me.
Can nuclear weapons fall into the wrong hands?
This is again a Western myth and one of their phobias. A nuclear
weapon—good or dirty—is a highly complicated and sophisticated device.
A large number of parts are needed, and expertise is required to
assemble such a device. Even scientists and engineers without the
relevant experience are not able to do this, let alone to talk of
illiterate, untrained terrorists.
We have examples of countries, like South Africa and, to an extent,
Libya, that decided to give up on their nuclear ambitions. How
realistic is the possibility of a world with no nukes?
It is very convenient to give South Africa and Libya as examples of
self-deweaponization. However, let us look at the backgrounds first. In
South Africa the “whites” destroyed their nuclear weapons before
handing over power to the “blacks.” They could not accept the fact that
“black” people should—or could—possess them. The Libyans panicked after
the West attacked Iraq and eliminated Saddam Hussein by falsely
accusing that country of possessing nuclear weapons.
The U.S. was aware of Pakistan’s nuclear program but turned a blind
eye to it during the original Afghan jihad. As soon as the Soviets were
defeated, the U.S. Congress barred American military aid to Pakistan.
Has the world made an unfair distinction between Pakistan’s and India’s
pursuit of a nuclear program?
The Afghan War was a blessing for our nuclear program. It was not that
the Western countries actively supported it but that they were too
scared and occupied with the Russian invasion of Afghanistan and its
future consequences to actively oppose it. Neither the Americans nor
the British had a clue about the status of our program until 1990.
After the Afghan War they slapped sanctions on us to extract
concessions from [fomer Pakistani president] Benazir Bhutto’s
government, but [former president] Ghulam Ishaq Khan and [former Army
chief] Gen. Aslam Beg frustrated their nefarious designs.
There have been reports that the American Joint Special Operations Command wanted to assassinate you. How safe do you feel?
It is all pure humbug. Nobody ever tried to assassinate me. I traveled
all over the world at a time when everyone knew that I was the
architect of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons program. The fact is that Allah
Almighty had not yet fixed the time and place for my demise. I never
was, and never will be, afraid of so-called threats. When our
predetermined time comes, Hazrat Izrael [the angel of death] will find
us, no matter where we are hiding.
Have the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq made the world safer?
No, the world is not a safer place. Nationalists—call them
fundamentalists or extremists if you like—have obtained a mobilization
point with [the wars], have united, and are determined to negate the
plans and designs of the Western countries.
The CIA chief, Leon Panetta, said earlier this year that Pakistan is
now the headquarters of Al Qaeda. British leaders have declared
Pakistan the exporter of global terrorism. Is this accurate, and, if
so, what can Pakistan do to turn the tide?
The CIA chief—like his bosses and those before him—is a liar. There is
no headquarters of Al Qaeda in Pakistan. Yes, Pakistan has become very
unsafe due to foreign troops in Afghanistan. Our cohesion has been
shattered. The spineless political leaders have turned our country—a
nuclear and missile power with 175 million people—into a beggar state,
a third-rate country. If there had been any pride left in our leaders,
they would have responded appropriately and nobody would have dared to
say such things in the first place.
Despite your televised address more than six years ago, your
popularity among Pakistanis has largely remained intact. Did you ever
feel let down?
There is a saying that the common people are too clever to be fooled by
crooks. The nation as a whole is aware of the truth ... No, I do not
feel let down by the Pakistani people, but I do feel let down by the
Pakistani government.
Is Pakistan a threat to the world?
No, Pakistan is not a threat to any country. If Western troops withdraw
from this area we would once again have peace and tranquility here. I
still hope that someday we will find honest, God-fearing leaders to
turn this country into one of prosperity and peace.
There is also the popular theory that Pakistan is a nation with no
sustainable identity. The bomb, like cricket, is one of those things
that bind all Pakistanis in common pride and cause. Do you agree?
Pakistan was not an artificially created country. We, the Muslims in
India, were a separate nation with a distinct culture, history, social
order, and heritage. By any definition we were a nation. Unfortunately,
selfish, narrow-minded leaders broke it into ethnic groups, which led
to exploitation. Nuclear weapons made the nation walk with heads held
high.
SOURCE HERE
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