Sunday, May 17, 2009

Zardari Turns Down Uranium Deal

The following article was researched and written by a renowned journalist, Ahmed Quraishi. I am republishing this article with his permission.

The orignial article can be found at http://www.ahmedquraishi.com/article_detail.php?id=672

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.

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.

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.

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Zardari’s Foreign Trips

I have been trying to compile a list of all Zardari’s foreign trips for some time now as he has spent most of his time outside Pakistan, sharing drinks, than in Pakistan.

Following is a little break down of most of his trips since he assumed Presidency on September 9th 2008.

September 12 – 14 “Personal” visit to Dubai.
September 14 – 17 Three day visit to London to drop off his daughter, Bakhtawar, at Ediburgh University. He also manages to meet PM Gordon Brown.
September 21 - 30 Arrived in London on his to New York where he is scheduled to attend UN General Assembly session along with his entourage of 60 people. (wow!!)
----- Sept 25 Took time out from his busy schedule to hit on Republican nominee Sarah Palin. (Sorry..I had to add this to the list)
October 14 – 17 First “official” visit to China on the invitation of Chinese President Hu Jintao
November 4 – 5 Two day visit to Saudi Arabia with an entourage of 200 people. The aim was to seek an economic bailout to avoid an IMF loan. (yea Right!!).
Prime Minister later defended Zardari’s 200 men joy ride by claiming that the trip was personally paid by Zardari and not the Government.
November 11 – 15 4 day trip to United States to participate in the high-level session of UN General Assembly on 'Culture of Peace’
November 16 Arrived in London for an 'over-night’ stay on his way home.
November 24 – 25 Two day trip to UAE to ask for more money.
December 4 – 8 Arrives in Turkey for attend the second trilateral summit. Came back to offer Eid Prayer at Aiwan-e-Sadr on the 9th.
December 19 One day visit to neighboring Afghanistan.
Year 2009
January 6 Another visit to Afghanistan to discuss regional peace. He was received at the Kabul Airport by First Vice President Ahamad Zia Massoud (Why didn’t President Hamid Karzai received him?)
February 20 – 24 Arrived in China on a four day visit to sign bilateral pacts and memorandum of understanding.
The News reports that “[the] President Zardari has no meeting scheduled with his Chinese counterpart or the prime minister.”(more..)
March 10 – 12 Two day visit to Iran to hold talks with the Iranian leadership and to attend the 10th ECO Summit.
March 23 – 25 Leaves for Dubai on a two day “private” visit to spend some time with his family.
March 31 – April 3 Another visit to Turkey for a trilateral summit between Turkey, Afghanistan and Pakistan.
April 15 – 17 Three day visit to Japan to attend Friends of Democratic Pakistan and donor’s conference. (WTH?? more money..!?)
April 17 - 19 Arrived in China directly from Japan (did not get a chance to even stop home to change clothes..)
April 30 – May 3 Three day official state visit to Libya (Libya! seriously?.. to discuss what?.. how to sell nuclear assets to US..?)
May 4 Arrive in Great Britain on a private visit
May 5 - (whenever) “First official visit to US” (so the last one was paid for by Zardari???).
He arrived in New York today (May 10th) and I am not sure when will he be leaving.
   

Zardari took office on September 9th 2008 and in less than 8 months, he made over 20 foreign country tours. Why is he always running away from his beloved country?

May be he loves Pakistan so much that he wanted to experience his love away from it. Or may be he is bothered by constant load-shedding or the rising inflation. May be he got his cell-phone snatched while talking to Sarah Palin…and now he is afraid to stay in Pakistan… there can be many different possibilities.

Sources

I would like to thank my fellow blogger who started this list initially at http://fiverupees.blogspot.com/2008/12/asif-zardaris-many-foreign-trips.html

I have consulted many different sources to compile the list above, more sources that can be listed here. If anyone needs any information or source of the information listed above, please leave a comment and I’ll direct you to the appropriate source document.