Buying Pakistan's Nukes?

An interesting article in WSJ. A little while ago, Great Zaradri, the President of Pakistan, asked for 100 billion dollars. At that time some people were suggesting that could be the hidden way of saying that is the price for Pakistan’s nukes. The highlighted paragraphs below shows that others are thinking of using the 100 billion dollars as a way to get Pakistan to eliminate its Nuclear Weapons..

There is a well known saying that everything has a price. Would the Pakistani government ever set a price for getting rid of its Nuclear Weapons?

Bret Stephens: Let’s Buy Pakistan’s Nukes - WSJ.com

Let’s Buy Pakistan’s Nukes

Every visitor to Pakistan has seen them: 20-foot tall roadside replicas of a remote mountain where, a decade ago, Pakistan conducted its first overt nuclear tests. This is what the country’s leaders – military, secular, Islamist – consider their greatest achievement.

So here’s a modest proposal: Let’s buy their arsenal.

A.Q. Khan, father of Pakistan’s nuclear program (and midwife to a few others), likes to point out what a feat it was that a country “where we can’t even make a bicycle chain” could succeed at such an immense technological task. He exaggerates somewhat: Pakistan got its bomb largely through a combination of industrial theft, systematic violation of Western export controls, and a blueprint of a weapon courtesy of Beijing.

Still, give Mr. Khan this: Thanks partly to his efforts, a country that has impoverished the great mass of its own people, corruptly enriched a tiny handful of elites, served as a base of terrorism against its neighbors, lost control of its intelligence services, radicalized untold numbers of Muslims in its madrassas, handed the presidency to a man known as Mr. 10%, and proliferated nuclear technology to Libya and Iran (among others) has, nevertheless, made itself a power to be reckoned with. Congratulations.
But if Pakistanis thought a bomb would be a net national asset, they miscalculated. Yes, Islamabad gained parity with its adversaries in New Delhi, gained prestige in the Muslim world, and gained a day of national pride, celebrated every May 28.

What Pakistan didn’t gain was greater security. “The most significant reality was that the bomb promoted a culture of violence which . . . acquired the form of a monster with innumerable heads of terror,” wrote Pakistani nuclear physicist Pervez Hoodbhoy earlier this year. “Because of this bomb, we can definitely destroy India and be destroyed in its response. But its function is limited to this.”

In 2007, some 1,500 Pakistani civilians were killed in terrorist attacks. None of those attacks were perpetrated by India or any other country against which Pakistan’s warheads could be targeted, unless it aimed at itself. But Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal has made it an inviting target for the jihadists who blew up Islamabad’s Marriott hotel in September and would gladly blow up the rest of the capital as a prelude to taking it over.

The day that happens may not be so very far off. President Asif Ali Zardari was recently in the U.S. asking for $100 billion to stave off economic collapse. So far, the international community has ponied up about $15 billion. That puts Mr. Zardari $85 billion shy of his fund-raising target. Meantime, the average Taliban foot soldier brings home monthly wages that are 30% higher than uniformed Pakistani security personnel.

Preventing the disintegration of Pakistan, perhaps in the wake of a war with India (how much restraint will New Delhi show after the next Mumbai-style atrocity?), will be the Obama administration’s most urgent foreign-policy challenge. Since Mr. Obama has already committed a trillion or so in new domestic spending, what’s $100 billion in the cause of saving the world?

This is the deal I have in mind. The government of Pakistan would verifiably eliminate its entire nuclear stockpile and the industrial base that sustains it. In exchange, the U.S. and other Western donors would agree to a $100 billion economic package, administered by an independent authority and disbursed over 10 years, on condition that Pakistan remain a democratic and secular state (no military rulers; no Sharia law). It would supplement that package with military aid similar to what the U.S. provides Israel: F-35 fighters, M-1 tanks, Apache helicopters. The U.S. would also extend its nuclear umbrella to Pakistan, just as Hillary Clinton now proposes to do for Israel.

** A pipe dream? Not necessarily. People forget that the world has subtracted more nuclear powers over the past two decades than it has added:
Kazakhstan, Belarus, Ukraine and South Africa all voluntarily relinquished their stockpiles in the 1990s. Libya did away with its program in 2003 when Moammar Gadhafi concluded that a bomb would be a net liability, and that he had more to gain by coming to terms with the West.**

There’s no compelling reason Mr. Zardari and his military brass shouldn’t reach the same conclusion, assuming excellent terms and desperate circumstances. Sure, a large segment of Pakistanis will never agree. Others, who have subsisted on a diet of leaves and grass so Pakistan could have its bomb, might take a more pragmatic view.

The tragedy of Pakistan is that it remains a country that can’t do the basics, like make a bicycle chain. If what its leaders want is prestige, prosperity and lasting security, they could start by creating an economy that can make one – while unlearning how to make the bomb.

Re: Buying Pakistan's Nukes?

^^ Nice dreams, you can't even find a single Pakistani in this whole messed up world who will sell Pakistan's Nuclear capabilities for 1000$ billion rather then 100$ billion !

Re: Buying Pakistan's Nukes?

hmmm, all the world is scared of our nukes, lol
every one can have them. . . . except a muslim nation, double standards

It is a national pride, whoever cries over it is simply jealous. Not every nation "invented" nuclear bomb, they "bought" the technology or stole it one way or the other, so why whine? Its not like we spent all our energies building a nuke and ignored everything else. Nuke was much desired war deterrent. Other mentioned problems do not have any relationship with nuke-building but shmucks can use'em for character assassination as usual.

Pervez is a moron. Terrorist outfits were long supported when we didn't have nukes. US supported terrorist outfits to suit its agenda and never cared about wrapping them up until 9/11.

How about US spent $100billion to withdraw all its armed forces from Afghanistan, no covert operation, no support for growing opium, no drug trade, no support for dictators around the world, no drone attacks etc.

A very prejudiced view

And this is an absolute lie. Most bicycles are now manufatured in Pakistan....remember *Suhrab *anyone

Pakistan may not be very industrialised but we do make excellent world-class sports goods and wear (someone should tell these fools that the footballs used in ITALIA 90 were all manufactured in Pakistan), shoes, carpets, furniture, shawls, garments, tanks etc.

Re: Buying Pakistan's Nukes?

because pakistan is muslim country and an azaad country of 160m, whos inhabitants have personality and pride, merely taking the nukes away will not be enough to satisfy those opposed to pk's N arsenal.

because pakistan is a muslim country it will still be pushed into splitting ino smaller pieces and economically poorer smaller states to take away any ability to 'come back' later in the 21st century

Re: Buying Pakistan's Nukes?

By far the best idea I've heard in a long time. Trade in the nukes for money, security guarantee and some civilan power gen reactors.

Re: Buying Pakistan's Nukes?

Only a retard can write such stuff. lol

Re: Buying Pakistan's Nukes?

I am sure the writer was proper drunk when he wrote this story.....What the hell on earth was he thinking???? Pakistan aint selling their nukes.....even if get all the money in ths world, we still wont sell them........

Might as well wrap the country with a ribbon, put in a platter and handover.

Re: Buying Pakistan’s Nukes?

We can sell 50% of our nukes for 50 billion dollars.

And use some of that $ to make up for the sold nukes. Remember, there is no agreement that we will not make more nukes.

:hehe:

Re: Buying Pakistan's Nukes?

What a silly, prejudiced and narrow minded article. More like yellow journalism. "no Sharia law"...Bo...lol

Got this interesting information from the net.

Bret Louis Stephens is a writer and news commentator for the Wall Street Journal. He was editor-in-chief of the Jerusalem Post in 2002-2004.[1]](Bret Stephens - Wikipedia)

Source: Bret Stephens - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Need I say more???

No need to get angry. WSJ is simply responding to Prez AAZ's request for $100 billion help. WSG is not an NYT or wash compost leftie rag so lets' go easy on it.

Let's assume that Prez AAZ is correct in his estimate for $100 billion. Then ----

If you don't like WSJ proposal, go ahead suggest something else that would allow Pakistan to make $100 billion. Will ya?

Re: Buying Pakistan's Nukes?

What if Pakistan not sell their nukes for all the money in the world and all haters can go to hell. :-)

There's a reason why just a random country can't attack Pakistan whenever like Israel attacking Lebanon, Syria. And that reason is the nuclear weapons.

Just for a quick check here.

Before we had nukes!

Did we allow Pakistan to become a safe house of terrorism against others (like Lebanon and Syria do)?

And if we did, was any country attacking us "randomly" just because we didn't have nukes.

No jokes please!

Looks like someone forgot about Taliban, LeT? "surgical strikes", "attack as result of terrorism/support of terrorist" phenomena didn't start until 9/11. What do you think?

Bro! Did you read the quoted material, or read your own stuff before posting. The question was:

**
was any country attacking us "randomly" just because we didn't have nukes. **

This was just a basic logic question. You keep all the conditions same except nukes and then compare.

Anyways the question was directed towards a1kashur. Are you two the same person?