By Mark Urban, BBC
Saudi nuclear weapons 'on order' from Pakistan.
Since 2009, when King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia warned visiting US special envoy
to the Middle East Dennis Ross that if Iran crossed the threshold, "we will get
nuclear weapons", the kingdom has sent the Americans numerous signals of its
intentions.
Saudi Arabia has invested in Pakistani nuclear weapons projects, and believes it
could obtain atomic bombs at will, a variety of sources have told BBC Newsnight.
While the kingdom's quest has often been set in the context of countering Iran's
atomic programme, it is now possible that the Saudis might be able to deploy
such devices more quickly than the Islamic republic.
Earlier this year, a senior Nato decision maker told me that he had seen
intelligence reporting that nuclear weapons made in Pakistan on behalf of Saudi
Arabia are now sitting ready for delivery.
Gary Samore, until March 2013 President Barack Obama's counter-proliferation
adviser, has told Newsnight: "I do think that the Saudis believe that they have some understanding with
Pakistan that, in extremis, they would have claim to acquire nuclear weapons
from Pakistan."
RELATED
Appeasement won't reduce risk of nuclear Iran
By Mark Kirk, The Telegraph
US senator Mark Kirk, a key author of sanctions against Tehran, urges David Cameron to follow Churchill’s example and demand that the regime abandons its illicit nuclear programme.
US senator Mark Kirk, a key author of sanctions against Tehran, urges David Cameron to follow Churchill’s example and demand that the regime abandons its illicit nuclear programme.
Ayatollah Khamenei wants to build and maintain a nuclear weapons capability – not to construct an atomic device immediately, but to have the technical ability to do so at a moment of his choosing.
Such a capability might include the ability to produce weapons-grade uranium, the ability to produce plutonium, and the ability to launch missiles capable of travelling long distances with heavy payloads.
If it possessed this, the Islamic Republic would gain enormous leverage over the West – further emboldening the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism to expand its sphere of influence.
AS IN 1938 - APPEASEMENT CAN LEAD TO WAR
by Michael Curtis, The American Thinker
The democratic countries of the world today may be heading towards a possible recurrence of a policy of appeasement, concessions made to an enemy or potential enemy in order to avoid a conflict or a resort to hostilities.
The image of the supine pessimistic British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain needs to be remembered. It was he who submitted to and acquiesced in a policy that turned out to be disastrous, bringing war not peace.
The historic date was September 29, 1938 in Munich when Chamberlain accepted Adolf Hitler's demand that Nazi Germany would occupy the Sudetenland, part of the independent state of Czechoslovakia.
The insatiable Hitler followed this in March 1939 by taking over all of the country, which then ceased to exist.
The British appeasement policy may have been popular in Britain and France, countries whose populations were not eager to go to war, but the end result was war in increasingly unfavorable circumstances and with greater casualties. Appeasement had made the world less safe.
Read more - http://www.americanthinker.com/2013/10/no_appeasement_of_iran.html
A picture is worth a thousand words. See infographics showing what Iran gets out of the deal
IRAN GETS 7 BILLION DOLLARS
Enough for:
6 months to enrich uranium
35 years of funding for terror group Hizbullah
21 months funding for space military program
9 months funding for war budget
6 months to forge ahead on plutonium
See graphic here - http://www.thetower.org/iran-bad-deal/
***************************************************************************
INFOGRAPHICS
A picture is worth a thousand words. See infographics showing what Iran gets out of the deal
IRAN GETS 7 BILLION DOLLARS
Enough for:
6 months to enrich uranium
35 years of funding for terror group Hizbullah
21 months funding for space military program
9 months funding for war budget
6 months to forge ahead on plutonium
See graphic here - http://www.thetower.org/iran-bad-deal/
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for visiting my blog. Your comments are always appreciated, but please do not include links.