Not worried on Pak nukes: US
Washington,
Nov
14:
The
Pentagon
today
said
it
was
not
worried
about
the
security
of
Pakistan's
nuclear
weapons
amid
the
political
crisis
there,
rolling
back
from
comments
made
by
a
senior
US
general
who
called
the
issue
a
''primary
concern.''
''At this point, we have no concerns,'' said Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell. ''We believe that they are under the appropriate control.'' Last week, Lt Gen Carter Ham, director of operations for the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the military was concerned about the security of Pakistan's nuclear arsenal after President Pervez Musharraf imposed emergency rule and arrested thousands.
''Any time there is a nation that has nuclear weapons that has experienced a situation such as Pakistan is at present, that is a primary concern,'' Ham said.
But US defense and military officials have since backpedaled, saying the weapons are controlled by Pakistan's military and that the military is a responsible steward of the arsenal.
Pakistan carried out its first nuclear test in 1998 and experts estimate it has material for as many as 90 weapons.
Washington considers Pakistan an important ally in the US-declared war on terrorism. The US military in particular works closely with Pakistani forces, especially along the Afghan border.
While the United States is reviewing all aid to Pakistan, which has received about 10 billion dollar in US funding since 2001, the Pentagon has been careful to say the Defense Department did not want to ''punish'' Pakistan for Musharraf's declaration of emergency rule.
Still, Morrell said the US military had begun looking at alternate routes to send supplies to its troops in Afghanistan in case the political crisis in Pakistan makes current supply lines unavailable.
The US military sends 75 per cent of its supplies for the Afghanistan war through or over Pakistan, including 40 per cent of the fuel sent to troops, the Defense Department said.
''There are efforts under way right now to figure out contingency supply lines to our troops in Afghanistan if it becomes necessary to alter the way we now support our troops in Afghanistan,'' Morrell said.
''In
light
of
the
fact
that
there
is
civil
unrest
in
Pakistan,
in
light
of
the
fact
that
there
is
a
state
of
emergency
in
Pakistan,
we
feel
it
is
responsible,
given
the
importance
of
the
Pakistani
supply
lines
to
our
operations
in
Afghanistan,
to
have
a
contingency
plan.''
Reuters
>