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ISLAMIC BOMB
Priming An Old FusePakistani disclaimers apart, the N-tests have fuelled fears
that it may hawk the know-how to the Ummah.
By Manoj Joshi
A ripple of fear went across the world on
May 28 when Pakistan became the first Islamic nation to conduct a nuclear test. Through
the '70s and '80s, oil-rich Islamic nations had toyed with the idea of making nuclear
weapons but couldn't get far. Now, a poor country with little or no industrial capacity
had done them proud. "All over the world," declared Iranian Foreign Minister
Kamal Kharrazi, the first major leader to visit Islamabad, "Muslims are happy that
Pakistan had made the nuclear bomb." Congratulations also came from the radicals --
Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, the Hamas leader in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, and the Islamic
opposition in Jordan -- who declared that the "Islamic explosion" would end
"oppression and tyranny".
But where Pakistan saw its achievement as countering the
"Hindu" bomb, almost all those who felicitated Islamabad did so in the context
of their quarrel with Jewish Israel. Pakistan played up to the fears. On the night before
its tests, under instructions from Islamabad, Pakistani diplomats conducted a bizarre
campaign of disinformation. They contacted officials in capitals the world over and
charged that they were about to become victims of a joint Indo-Israeli military strike.
But with the tests over, Pakistan has gone out of its way to
deny that its capability was for sale. "Bombs," Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif told
India Today, "do not have any religion, caste or creed." Pakistani officials,
who fanned out around the world to contain the diplomatic damage, emphasised the
"Indo-centric" nature of their concerns.
Surprisingly,
Israeli analysts like Ephraim Kam, deputy director of the Jaffee Center of Strategic
Studies at Tel Aviv University, accepts that what was tested on May 28 was "not an
Islamic bomb but a Pakistani bomb". But experts like Kam and Barry Rubin at the Besa
Institute of Strategic Studies at Israel's Bar-Ilan University who study such programmes
closely, remain concerned that the example of the Indian and Pakistani tests may enthuse
"radical" Iran, which they perceive as their main long-term threat. "The
world could not detect the Indian test, how will they stop Iran and Iraq?" is Rubin's
poser.
The idea of N-weapons providing collective defence for the
entire ummah has been an attractive one. Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was the first to play on the
idea and, as he wrote from death row at his jail in Rawalpindi, "Christian, Jewish,
and Hindu civilisations have this capability. The communist powers also possess it. Only
the Islamic civilisation was without it ..." Within days of a crucial meeting in
Multan in January 1972, when Pakistan decided to make N-weapons, Bhutto toured the Arab
world pushing the idea as an Islamic quest. Not many bought his plan, but Steve Weismann
and Herbert Krosney, who made a BBC documentary and wrote a book, The Islamic Bomb, say
that in the '70s hundreds of millions of dollars poured into Pakistan from Saudi Arabia
and the Gulf Emirates. The quixotic Colonel Gaddhafi sent more than $100 million in cash
using special courier flights. But most of this activity came to an end when
Pakistani-Libyan relations soured following Bhutto's overthrow and execution.
In West Asia -- with the Egyptians, Libyans and Syrians no
longer in the race and the Iraqis knocked out -- Tel Aviv and Teheran have become the
poles of tension. Israel, which has fought the Arabs to a standstill and is believed to
have a secret arsenal of nuclear weapons, says it will never be the first to introduce
nuclear weapons into the region. Iran, a Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) signatory, denies
making nuclear weapons but if it is, it is probably driven by the nearly five lakh
casualties it suffered during the eight years it fought Iraq in the '80s, a conflict in
which Iraqi President Saddam Hussein was aided by western powers.
Saudi Arabia remains the joker in the pack. In the '80s, it
shocked the world by purchasing medium-range ballistic missiles from China. In 1994,
Mohammed Khilwei, a Saudi nuclear expert, defected to the US and spilled the beans on a
super-secret Saudi project to obtain n-weapons. The cash-rich Saudis initially bankrolled
the Pakistanis, but have, it is believed, switched their efforts to buy an off-the-shelf
product.
Saudi activities remain somewhat remote for Delhi and neither
is it too worried about an Iran-Pakistan axis. "It is no secret," says a
Ministry of External Affairs official, "that Iran and Pakistan do not have much in
common." They are rivals in Afghanistan and are also competing on rival schemes for
constructing gas pipelines out of central Asia. More significant are the sectarian
divisions between Iranian Shias and the Sunni majority of Pakistan, which persecutes its
Shias.
The Indo-Pakistani tests have affected all the players in the
Middle-East and may have the potential to change the balance of power in favour of
Pakistan. The wily Iranians are already taking note. Kharrazi may have welcomed the
Pakistan bomb in Islamabad, but Iran may now be veering towards calling on India and
Pakistan to sign the NPT and to promote a nuclear-free zone. Israel, too, is re-thinking
its option, concerned that the US does not have the ability to detect clandestine
programmes, leave alone halt them. Israel, says Mark Heller of the Jaffee Center, is
worried not so much about the export of technology, which is easy to detect, but about
transfer of know-how through scientists who have worked on the Pakistani programme.
Perhaps taken aback by its "achievement" or the
need to curry favour with the west to belabour India, the government in Islamabad is not
keen to capitalise on its nuclear status in the Muslim world. But, Pakistan remains for
its leaders an Islamic state where religion ought to tinge every aspect of life. Its
identity too remains locked in its historical quarrel with "Hindu" India which
also feeds the paranoia of its conspiracies with Jewish Israel. In expecting the bomb to
be a panacea for its troubles, Pakistan may well discover that it is a pandora's box that
has just been opened. |