Benazir Bhutto's return to Pakistan yesterday was made possible by a deal with Pervez Musharraf, who offered her amnesty from charges of stealing millions of dollars during her two terms as Prime Minister in exchange for Bhutto's party allowing Musharraf to be reelected President by the parliament, even though he is still the head of the Army. Last night's bombing turned a festival into a tragedy, killing almost 150 people and wounding hundreds more. Now, recriminations are fueling uncertainties about the deals between Musharraf and Bhutto, deals which are already being challenged in court. If that were not enough, it is being reported that the US and Britain ignored Pakistan's illegal nuclear weapons trade for 30 years, all the way back to the Presidency of Democrat Jimmy Carter. Did concern for the alliance allow Pakistan to become a nuclear power and illegally spread the technology to Libya, North Korea and Iran? What can the US do now?
Violence Greets Bhutto's Return to Nuclear-Armed Pakistan
Credits
Guests:
- Najam Sethi - Friday Times and Daily Times - @najam_sethi
- Adrian Levy - Special Correspondent, Guardian
- David Armstrong - Bureau Chief, National Security News Service
- Henry Sokolski - former Deputy for Nonproliferation Policy, Defense Department
- Philip Coyle - former Director of Weapons Testing, Pentagon