Frontline Pakistan : The Struggle With Militant Islam - Arz-e-Pak
Frontline Pakistan : The Struggle With Militant Islam - Arz-e-Pak
Frontline Pakistan : The Struggle With Militant Islam - Arz-e-Pak
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1 <strong>Frontline</strong> <strong><strong>Pak</strong>istan</strong><br />
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York Times, 26 December 2004.<br />
According to a senior <strong><strong>Pak</strong>istan</strong>i foreign ministry official.<br />
‘At least 7 nations tied to <strong><strong>Pak</strong>istan</strong> nuclear ring’, Washington Post, 8<br />
February 2004.<br />
Seymour M. Hersh, Chain of Command (New York: HarperCollins), pp.<br />
315–16.<br />
‘As nuclear secrets emerge in Khan inquiry, more are suspected’, New<br />
York Times.<br />
In <strong>The</strong> Guardian, 31 January 2004.<br />
‘Beg asked Nawaz to give nuclear technology to a “friend” says Ishaq<br />
Dar’, Daily Times, Lahore, 25 December 2003.<br />
Interview with General Aslam Beg in February 2004.<br />
‘Dr Khan linked to nuclear black-market’, <strong>The</strong> News, 28 January 2004.<br />
‘Confession or cover up’, Newsline, February 2004.<br />
According to a senior <strong><strong>Pak</strong>istan</strong>i official.<br />
‘<strong><strong>Pak</strong>istan</strong> aided Libya in N-plan’, New York Times, 5 January 2005.<br />
‘Confession or cover up’, Newsline, February 2004.<br />
‘<strong><strong>Pak</strong>istan</strong> aided Libya in N-plan’, New York Times, 5 January 2005.<br />
According to a top <strong><strong>Pak</strong>istan</strong>i official.<br />
‘Confession or cover up’, Newsline, February 2004.<br />
Seymour M. Hersh, Chain of Command, p. 312.<br />
In Newsline, February 2004.<br />
‘Dr. Khan admits to nuclear proliferation’, <strong>The</strong> News, 5 February 2004.<br />
ChaPter ten<br />
Aimal Kansi was a native of Quetta, a <strong><strong>Pak</strong>istan</strong>i city on Afghanistan<br />
border. He spent four years on the FBI’s ten most wanted fugitive list<br />
after he shot dead two CIA operatives at the entrance of CIA headquarters<br />
in Langley, Virginia on 25 January 1993. He fled to <strong><strong>Pak</strong>istan</strong>, where he<br />
remained in hiding for four years. He was captured on 15 June 1997<br />
and, following a trial, was executed by lethal injection in the US state of<br />
Virginia in 2002.<br />
MMA comprised six mainstream parties that included Jamaat-i-<strong>Islam</strong>i (JI),<br />
Jamiat Ulema <strong>Islam</strong> – Fazalur Rehaman faction (JUI-F), Jamiat Ulema<br />
<strong>Islam</strong>-Samiul Haq faction (JUI-S), Jamiat Ulema <strong><strong>Pak</strong>istan</strong> (JUP), Tehrik<br />
Nifaz Fikha Jaffaria (TNFJ) and Jamiat Ahle Hadith.<br />
‘<strong>The</strong> Mullah’s fight back’, Newsline, October 2002.<br />
‘President Musharraf goes all out to establish a shadowy military state in<br />
the garb of democracy’, Newsline, July 2002.<br />
‘How to steal an election: <strong>The</strong> ISI working behind the scenes to engineer<br />
a victory for the King’s Party’, Newsline, September 2002.<br />
‘<strong>The</strong> General’s selection’, Newsline, October 2002.