Nothing to worry about. The recently deceased Pakistani Taliban leader, Mr. Mehsud, was the guy who was planning to capture a warhead and set it off in downtown Washington D.C. I'm quite sure that no one else has the idea or the capability. No worries.
Printed from The Times of India
Jihadis thrice attacked Pakistan nuclear
sites
Chidanand Rajghatta, TNN 11 August 2009
WASHINGTON: Pakistan's nuclear facilities have already been attacked at least
thrice by its home-grown extremists and terrorists in little reported incidents
over the last two years, even as the world remains divided over the safety and
security of the nuclear weapons in the troubled country, according to western
analysts. ( Watch )
The incidents, tracked by Shaun Gregory, a professor at Bradford University in
UK, include an attack on the nuclear missile storage facility at Sargodha on
November 1, 2007, an attack on Pakistan's nuclear airbase at Kamra by a suicide
bomber on December 10, 2007, and perhaps most significantly the August 20, 2008
attack when Pakistani Taliban suicide bombers blew up several entry points to
one of the armament complexes at the Wah cantonment, considered one of
Pakistan's main nuclear weapons assembly.
These attacks have occurred even as Pakistan has taken several steps to secure
and fortify its nuclear weapons against potential attacks, particularly by the
United States and India, says Gregory.
In fact, the attacks have received so little attention that Peter Bergen, the
eminent terrorism expert who reviewed Gregory's paper first published in West
Point's Counter Terrorism Center Sentinel, said "he (Gregory) points out
something that was news to me (and shouldn't have been) which is that a series
of attacks on Pakistan's nuclear weapons facilities have already happened."
Pakistan insists that its nuclear weapons are fully secured and there is no
chance of them falling into the hands of the extremists or terrorists.
But Gregory, while detailing the steps Islamabad has taken to protect them
against Indian and US attacks, asks if the geographical location of Pakistan's
principle nuclear weapons infrastructure, which is mainly in areas dominated by
al-Qaida and Taliban, makes it more vulnerable to internal attacks.
Gregory points out that when Pakistan was developing its nuclear weapons
infrastructure in the 1970s and 1980s, its
principal concern was the risk that India would overrun its nuclear weapons
facilities in an armored offensive if the
facilities were placed close to the long Pakistan-India border.
As a result, Pakistan, with a few exceptions, chose to locate much of its
nuclear weapons infrastructure to the
north and west of the country and to the region around Islamabad and Rawalpindi
- sites such as Wah, Fatehjang,
Golra Sharif, Kahuta, Sihala, Isa Khel Charma, Tarwanah, and Taxila. The
concern, however, is that most of Pakistan's nuclear sites are close to or even
within areas dominated by Pakistani Taliban militants and home to al-Qaida.
Detailing the actions taken by Islamabad to safeguard its nuclear assets from
external attacks, Gregory writes that
Pakistan has established a "robust set of measures to assure the security of its
nuclear weapons." These have
been based on copying US practices, procedures and technologies, and comprise:
a) physical security; b)
personnel reliability programs; c) technical and procedural safeguards; and d)
deception and secrecy.
In terms of physical security, Pakistan operates a layered concept of concentric
tiers of armed forces personnel to
guard nuclear weapons facilities, the use of physical barriers and intrusion
detectors to secure nuclear weapons
facilities, the physical separation of warhead cores from their detonation
components, and the storage of the
components in protected underground sites.
With respect to personnel reliability, Gregory says the Pakistan Army conducts a
tight selection process drawing
almost exclusively on officers from Punjab Province who are considered to have
fewer links with religious extremism (now increasingly a questionable premise)
or with the Pashtun areas of Pakistan from which groups such as the Pakistani
Taliban mainly garner their support.
Pakistan operates an analog to the US Personnel Reliability Program (PRP) that
screens individuals for Islamist sympathies, personality problems, drug use,
inappropriate external affiliations, and sexual deviancy.
The army uses staff rotation and also operates a "two-person" rule under which
no action, decision, or
activity involving a nuclear weapon can be undertaken by fewer than two persons.
In total, between 8,000 and 10,000 individuals from the SPD's security division
and from Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence Directorate (ISI), Military
Intelligence and Intelligence Bureau agencies are involved in the security
clearance and monitoring of those with nuclear weapons duties.
Gregory says despite formal command authority structures that cede a role to
Pakistan’s civilian leadership, in
practice the Pakistan Army has complete control over the country's nuclear
weapons.
It imposes its executive authority over the weapons through the use of an
authenticating code system down through the command chains that is deployment
sites, aspects of the nuclear command and control arrangements, and many aspects
of the arrangements for nuclear safety and security (such as the numbers of
those removed under personnel reliability programs, the reasons for their
removal, and how often authenticating and enabling (PAL-type) codes are
changed).
In addition, Pakistan uses deception - such as dummy missiles - to complicate
the calculus of adversaries and is
likely to have extended this practice to its nuclear weapons infrastructure.
Taken together, these measures provide confidence that the Pakistan Army can
fully protect its nuclear weapons against the internal terrorist threat, against
its main adversary India, and against the suggestion that its nuclear weapons
could be either spirited out of the country by a third party (posited to be the
United States) or destroyed in the event of a deteriorating situation or a state
collapse in Pakistan, says Gregory.
However, at another point, he says "despite these elaborate safeguards,
empirical evidence points to a clear
set of weaknesses and vulnerabilities in Pakistan's nuclear safety and security
arrangements."
Does obamacare cover radiation poisoning?