The Government has turned down a deal to acquire nuclear fuel.
Zardari Govt. Turns Down Uranium Deal For Pakistan
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan—After cutting down funding for Pakistan’s
strategic and nuclear programs by more than a third, the government of
President Asif Ali Zardari has refused to sanction the purchase of fuel
for nuclear plants, turning down a rare opportunity to buy uranium from
the international market.
Pakistani
officials won’t confirm the report, which is being made public here for
the first time. But sometime around late 2008, interlocutors from Pakistan and Kazakhstan apparently reached an agreement under which uranium-rich Kazakhstan agreed to sell nuclear fuel to Pakistan.
A
government source referred to a Central Asian nation without naming it
during an off-the-record conversation. She was most probably referring
to Kazakhstan.
Kazakhstan has the world’s largest reservoirs of uranium and will soon become its biggest producer. Pakistan is the world’s seventh declared nuclear power and has an ambitious civilian nuclear energy program meant to help fuel Pakistan’s economic growth. The country’s biggest stock exchange at Karachi has been one of the best performing markets in Asia for the most part of this decade, fetching high profit margins for Pakistani and foreign investors. Pakistan cannot continue growth without more energy.
The deal apparently preceded the agreement India signed with Kazakhstan in January 2009 in which New Delhi reportedly agreed to buy up to 2,500 tons of uranium.
The Pak-Kazakh deal was expected to move forward without problems, the only exception being the usual opposition from U.S. and Britain, and Australia.
Pakistan
is not a signatory to Nuclear non-Proliferation Treaty. This means that
the Pak-Kazakh deal would not have violated international laws that had
governed uranium transfers in the past decades. Washington had lobbied to exempt India from those restrictions despite New Delhi’s refusal to endorse NPT but refused the same for Pakistan on spurious grounds. India is being groomed by Washington as counterweight to China and a possible supplier of cheap ground troops to stabilize the faltering American occupation of Afghanistan.
This was Pakistan’s opportunity to break this fake embargo imposed by the U.S. But President Zardari refused to authorize the release of funds for the deal citing budgetary constraints.
While
the excuse seems plausible, a pattern is emerging where the Zardari
government appears to have entered into a series of silent agreements
with Washington regarding Pakistan’s nuclear program in exchange for financial aid.
The Pakistani English-language daily newspaper The News International broke the news
that Mr. Zardari has cut 35% of the budget of the country’s classified
strategic weaponization programs, while the nonclassified part has also
been indirectly frozen with the blocking of 84% of its approved budget.
Freezing
almost 90% of an approved budget for parts of the Pakistani nuclear and
strategic industry by a Pakistani government is unprecedented and
unheard of.
No government official is ready to confirm or deny the story on record.
The
cuts indicate an unannounced freeze on the Pakistani nuclear program,
according to a scientist quoted by the newspaper’s chief investigative
reporter Ansar Abbasi.
“Senior
nuclear scientists and those holding key positions in the country’s
nuclear program apparatus were extremely upset with the situation and
fear that the cut would badly damage the nuclear program and would
tantamount to a quiet unannounced rollback,” an unnamed scientist was quoted as saying.
Reports
suggest that Mr. Zardari and his aides have accepted secret conditions
by Washington and the IMF in exchange for aid. The conditions
apparently include freezing funding for the country’s advanced
strategic programs. The government is yet to share these conditions
with the federal Pakistani parliament or with the Pakistani public
opinion. Washington pressed Mr. Zardari to accept IMF conditions last year. Ironically, the Pakistani embassy in Washington lobbied its own government to accept the deal and a close associate of Mr. Haqqani who runs a PR firm wrote in Pakistani newspapers lobbying on behalf of the IMF package.
There
are other indications that something fishy is going on in Islamabad,
where a government brought to power through an American-style
regime-change is cooperating in what appears to be at least a freeze on
Pakistani nuclear capabilities if not an outright rollback.
For example, while President Zardari was in the U.S. last week, U.S.
officials leaked to the Boston Globe that Mr. Zardari’s aides are
secretly negotiating the transfer of enriched Pakistani uranium to the U.S. for disposal. Pakistani newspaper The Nation described the leak as Nuclear Surrender in an editorial on May 7.
Last year Mr. Zardari, without consulting anyone in Pakistan, single-handedly altered Pakistan’s stated nuclear policy by saying Islamabad won’t be the first to use nuclear weapons in case of war, which effectively ends the balance of power with India, a country that invaded Pakistan without provocation during an internal Pakistani political crisis in 1971, and can repeat it.
However, Mr. Zardari’s refusal to pay for uranium from Kazakhstan could possibly prove to be a blunder that Pakistan might regret in the future.
It is a price Pakistan has to pay for accepting a U.S.
puppet government under the guise of American democracy, woven together
through intricate secret deals, the simplest of which is that Mr.
Zardari gets back the millions of dollars in illegal wealth frozen in
foreign banks in exchange for promoting the U.S. agenda in Islamabad. And he’s doing a good job at it.
Mr.
Quraishi reported on this exclusive story. Pakistani media outlets are
encouraged to quote this report to enlighten the Pakistani public
opinion.
© 2007-2009. All rights reserved. AhmedQuraishi.com & PakNationalists
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May 15th, 2009 at 1:43 pm
Zardari Malik Ghadar Ghadar Ghadar Ghadar Ghadar, the offsprings of Mir Jaffer n Mir Sadiq. they are out to Sold us when are we going to wake up.
June 22nd, 2009 at 3:15 pm
I have been observing the news items of the late, which obviously suggest some fishy and dirty dealings going on around on our nuclear & missile programs. I don’t want to believe them, but you never know as long as some certified corrupt person is at the helm of affairs in Pakistan. We must be clean at the top, it is pre-requisite otherwise we can compromise on any thing (in order to stay in power) only to escape exposure (By CIA or Mossad/RAW) of our dirty deals of past.
There can be only one way to avoid any misadventure on our Nuclear Assets by USA or any other aggressor, whosoever tries to take out our nuclear assets we hit India and Israel with Atomic Bombs come what may (It should be programmed and be made public where it concerns). I say this because We firmly believe that death will be the custodian of life till the time of death. So India & Israel will be preventing any misadventure by anyone. And this we must do. Just to ensure Peace.