Islama-bad Behavior
By Andrew Rice
Posted Saturday, March 26, 2005, at 2:48 AM PT 
 
The Los Angeles Times leads with a criminal investigation into a global arms 
trafficking ring, which has allegedly found evidence that the government of 
Pakistan illegally purchased nuclear weapons components from American 
companies. The timing of the revelation is awkward because, as the Washington 
Post and the New York Times report in their lead stories, President Bush 
announced yesterday that he had decided to allow Pakistan to buy American-made 
F-16 fighter planes, reversing a 15-year-old ban on the sale of such weaponry 
to the unstable nation. 
 
The criminal investigation began early last year, when a former Israeli army 
major was arrested at the Denver airport and charged with illegally exporting 
high-speed bomb triggers. The LAT's story includes new details suggesting that 
a separate shipment of sophisticated oscilloscopes, purchased by the Israeli 
from an Oregon company, were sent to a Pakistani arms merchant who has close 
ties both to his country's military and to Islamic militants. U.S. officials 
tell the paper that they suspect the materials ended up in the hands of the 
Pakistani government, which they allege has "begun a push to acquire advanced 
nuclear components in the black market as it tries to upgrade its 30-year-old 
nuclear program." But anonymous investigators grouse that their probe has been 
"stymied" by State Department officials, who consider Pakistani President 
Pervez Musharraf "too important to embarrass."
 
Similarly, the NYT sees lifting the ban on fighter jet sales to Pakistan "as 
reward for cooperation" in the war in Afghanistan and the hunt for Osama bin 
Laden. Bush's father barred such sales in 1990, citing evidence that Pakistan 
was attempting to build a nuclear bomb. Pakistan will probably buy two dozen 
planes to start, but the WP says there will be "no limits on how many it could 
eventually purchase." That's good news for the financially-struggling Lockheed 
Martin plant in Fort Worth, Texas that makes the planes, the WP says.
 
Predictably, Pakistan's regional rival India denounced the move as a "great 
disappointment." In a personal phone call, Bush told the India's prime minister 
that, as consolation, America is willing sell India even better planes, missile 
defense systems, and the like. The WP says some analysts doubt this strategy, 
saying it means the United States "would effectively supply both sides in a new 
arms race in one of the world's most dangerous hot spots." But Secretary of 
State Condoleezza Rice tells the WP that it's all part of a plan to "break out 
of the notion that ... anything that happens that is good for Pakistan is bad 
for India, and vice versa." 

Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://myweb.lmu.edu/jdevine 

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