Friday, April 17, 2009

The Pakistani dilemma


Caroline Glick again spotlights a major threat to Western civilization when she rightly sees the need to immediatly have Pakistani nukes removed by Western powers for safe keeping. Not only do the actual nukes and missiles need to be removed, but also any other nuclear materials at power plants and weapons assembly locations, by any means nscessary, as soon as possible.

The Taliban/alQaeda in possession of nuclear weapons would create world wide chaos.

FROM JEWISHWORLDREVIEW.COM:

The Pakistani dilemma
By Caroline B. Glick

In the current era of ideological polarization, throughout the West, the Right and the Left diverge on almost every issue. One of the few convictions that still unifies national security strategists across the ideological spectrum is that it would be a global calamity of the first order if al Qaida gets its hands on nuclear weapons. Unfortunately, due to the rapid demise of nuclear-armed Pakistan as a coherent political unit, this nightmare scenario is looking more possible than ever. Indeed, if events continue to move in their current direction, it is more likely than not that in the near future, the Taliban and al Qaida will take possession of all or parts of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal.

This week has been yet another bad week in Pakistan. On Monday Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari officially surrendered the Swat Valley — an immense district in Northwest Pakistan that encompasses seven provinces — to the Taliban when he signed a regulation implementing Islamic Sharia law in the area. Following the government's capitulation in Swat, the Taliban now controls eighteen out of Pakistan's thirty provinces in its northwest and Federally Administered Tribal Areas that border Afghanistan. Only two provinces remain under full government control.

With its new territory, the Taliban now controls the lives of some 6.5 million Pakistanis. For their part, the civilians live in a state of constant terror. Since the Taliban took control of Swat in February, executions, public floggings, bombings of girls' schools, restaurants, video and music stores have become routine occurrences. As a merchant in Swat's main village of Mingora told the Wall Street Journal, "We are frightened by this brutality. No one can dare to challenge them."
And with just sixty miles now separating the Taliban from the capital city of Islamabad, the Taliban are well positioned to continue their march across the country. Indeed, the Taliban appear unstoppable.
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