The
mounting concern of an Islamic State presence in Pakistan has put the spotlight on
the security of the country's nuclear arsenal. In February, the
director-general of Pakistan's
intelligence bureau, Aftab Sultan, said hundreds of fighters from his country
were joining IS in Syria,
generating concerns about their links and activities when they returned home.
He also said an
undisclosed network in Pakistan
had been broken up.
More recently, US
President Barack Obama declared at a nuclear summit in Washington: "The threat from terrorists
trying to launch a nuclear attack is real. It would change the world."
The warnings have
triggered debate in Pakistan
about the possibility of a "dirty" nuclear bomb.
"There is a
possibility of making a dirty bomb if the militants abduct some nuclear
scientists, metallurgists with some fissile materials and uranium from Iraq and Syria," said retired Brigadier
Said Nazir.
The brigadier,
now a defence analyst, spent much of his career in Pakistan's
Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), bordering Afghanistan.
The FATA are home
to 60 militant organisations, some sympathetic to IS, according to Mr Sultan.
Zia Ur Rahman
Zia, an international politics professor at Qurtaba
University in Peshawar, said he believed IS could make a
dirty bomb.
"They have
safe havens in Iraq and Syria where it
can set up a laboratory to satisfy its nasty plans," he said.
"Pakistan's
nuclear weapons might be secure but not safe.
"An ever
growing danger persists of the militants putting their hands on the country's
nuclear arsenals."
Professor Zia
pointed to the attacks in recent years on the army's general headquarters in Rawalpindi and airbases in Mehran, Karachi,
Kamra and Peshawar.
"These are
not a soft target, keeping in view the track record of militant attacks on the
highly secured installations in Pakistan,
one can gauge the threat," he said.
Nuclear terror attack 'not possible': analyst
However,
according to now retired Lieutenant General Talat Masood, a defence analyst in Islamabad, a
terrorist-instigated attack is "technically not possible".
"The nuclear
warheads, the safety mechanism and the electronic code words all lie in
different hands. How could the militants therefore know how to trigger [a
device]?" General Masood asked.
As further
evidence of the security of the current arsenal, retired army officer and now
social sciences dean at the National University of Science and Technology,
Tughral Yameen, pointed to Pakistan's
track record.
"Compared to
2000 incidents of leakages around the world, Pakistan has never witnessed a
single incident of its nuclear weapons or fissile materials being stolen,"
Mr Yameen said.
"It's
launching techniques are very complicated and hard to be triggered, at least by
those with no know-how."
Pakistan's history of nuclear weapons
After Pakistan's defeat in the 1971 war against India, Islamabad
formally initiated its nuclear program the following year and now has around
120 warheads.
Pakistan's nuclear security was dealt a devastating blow over
a decade ago with the admission by Abdul Qadeer Khan, the father of the
Pakistani bomb, that he had secretly provided Iran,
North Korea and Libya with the
technical ability to develop nuclear weapons.
Pakistan's military has long been accused of links with
terrorist groups and allowing the rise of the Taliban in Afghanistan,
which neighbours its lawless and porous FATA.
But some experts
dismiss IS as having no viable command and control structure in Pakistan, or Afghanistan.
"How many
militants are we talking of [on the ground]. On the other hand we are talking
of over 700,000 professionals in the army, well trained and well
equipped," said Brigadier Mehmood Shah, a former Secretary of Security for
FATA.
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