Bhutto Assassination Sets Off Alarms Over Pakistan�s
Nukes
Ron Kampeas � San Francisco Sentinel December 28, 2007
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For Israelis, the assassin that killed Benazir Bhutto removed
another barrier shielding the Jewish state from the Islamic bomb.
Israel�s media and leadership portrayed the sniper-suicide bombing
attack Thursday that ended the onetime Pakistani prime minister�s life
as a blow to hopes for a bridge to the Islamic world. They also
suggested it raised the risk of Pakistan�s nuclear bomb falling into
militant Islamist hands.
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Israel Is Very Sad
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert called Bhutto�s death a �great
tragedy,� according to the Jerusalem Post. �I saw her as someone who
could have served as a bridgehead to relations with that part of the
Muslim world with whom our ties are naturally limited,� the newspaper
quoted Olmert as saying.
Tzipi Livni, the Israeli foreign
minister, issued condolences to the Pakistani people.
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Bhutto �demonstrated brave leadership for her people,� Livni said in a
statement. �Israel expresses the hope that Pakistan will continue along
the path of reconciliation, moderation and democracy.�
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Jack Rosen Worries About Nukes And Al Queda
The chaos precipitated by the killing poses dangers beyond
Pakistan�s immediate neighborhood, said Jack Rosen, a past president
of the American Jewish Congress, noting that Pakistan is one of a
handful of declared nuclear powers and the only Muslim country with
the bomb. Rosen, who was the first Jewish leader to host a Pakistani
leader when the AJCongress held a dinner for President Pervez
Musharraf two years ago, said he was trying to reach the leadership in
Pakistan for an assessment.
�If the government fell into extremist hands, the bomb also falls into
the hands of extremists,� Rosen told JTA �You don�t need to worry
about a nuclear Iran; you have a nuclear Pakistan in the hands of
extremists.�
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Israel radio led its hourly news Friday evening quoting the Pentagon as
saying that Pakistan�s nuclear arsenal was �under control.�
Prior to her return from exile in October, Bhutto, 54, had been reaching out
to Israel as part of a broader strategy of garnering Western support for her
confrontation with the military regime led by Musharraf. The United States
had been pressing its ally, Musharraf, into accommodating Bhutto�s push for
new elections.
�She wrote me of how she admired Israel and of her desire to see a
normalization in the relations between Israel and Pakistan, including the
establishment of diplomatic ties,� Dan Gillerman, the Israeli ambassador to
the United Nations, told Ynet, an online Israeli news site affiliated with
Israel�s daily Yediot Acharonot
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Bhutto Wanted Mossad Body Guards
According to a report in Israel�s daily Ma�ariv, Bhutto reached out
to the Mossad, among other security agencies, for protection.
Bhutto sensed that Musharraf was not
fully committed to protecting her, the Ma�ariv report said. Among the
routine protective requests Musharraf�s government denied, the report
said, were darkened windows on all the cars of her convoy and
explosive detection devices.
Israeli authorities favored helping her, said Ma�ariv, which
reported that she also had turned to Scotland Yard and the CIA for
assistance. Hesitant to offend Musharraf, Israel�s government had yet
to make a decision, the report said.
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Bhutto was not always so friendly toward Israel. Pakistan maintained its
traditionally hostile posture during her two stints as prime minister, in
1988-1990 and 1993-1996. Those were also periods during which Pakistan�s
nuclear chief, A. Q. Khan, was developing what he dubbed an �Islamic
bomb,� and, according to reports, marketing it to Israel�s most
intransigent enemies at the time, Libya and Iran.
Musharraf contained Khan, placing him under house arrest, but only after
the United States increased pressure in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001
terrorist attacks.
Rosen said Musharraf still represented Israel�s best hope for
reconciliation, noting other signs of warming since the 2005 AJCongress
dinner.
�Musharraf has done a number of things,� said Rosen, who now chairs the
AJCongress� Council for World Jewry. �He had his foreign minister publicly
meet the Israeli foreign minister. He accepted aid from Israel for the
earthquake victims.�
For Jews and Pakistanis in America, the assassination presents an
opportunity for dialogue, said Rabbi Marc Schneier, president of the
Foundation for Ethnic Understanding.
Coincidentally, Schneier said, a meeting between American Jewish communal
leaders and Pakistani officials had been set just prior to the
assassination. Now, he added, the meeting, to take place next month, was
more imperative than ever.
�Now,� Schneier told JTA, �there is a shared experience, both in terms of
the assassination� in 1995 of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin, �and
in terms of the impact of extremism.�
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