Today's Article
Bush's F-16 fighter
sell-off to Pakistani
President Pervez
Musharraf lets him 'off
the hook' for his
tyrannical activities,
says Sen. Joe Biden
(D-DE).
The American Spark
Bush's Jet Fighter Sale To Pakistan 'Reckless', Says Senate
Foreign Relations Chairman
By Cliff Montgomery - Jan. 9th, 2008
Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Joseph Biden (D-DE), offered a crushing analysis last week of
the Bush Administration's recent decision to go ahead with its planned sale of eighteen F-16 fighter planes to
Pakistan--the country now reeling in political chaos thanks to last month's assassination of former prime
minister and opposition leader Benazir Bhutto.
Sen. Biden declared Bush's sale to be "reckless", and added that the F-16 fighter sell-off to Pakistani
President Pervez Musharraf lets the dictator "off the hook" for such tyrannical activities as his November
suspension of civil liberties, and his detention of numerous Pakistanis whose only 'crime' is disagreeing with
him.
"The decision to go ahead with a half-billion-dollar sale of advanced fighter aircraft to Pakistan shows how
dangerously misguided President Bush's policy is," said Biden in a prepared statement.
Biden's statement also posed a simple question: "How can the White House even think of green-lighting such
a sale at such an incredibly sensitive time?"
On New Year's Eve 2007--a day when the administration knew reporters would not be asking many
questions--the Pentagon quietly admitted in its daily roundup of Defense contracting activity that Lockheed
Martin Aeronautics of Fort Worth, TX, had won a $498 million contract to build twelve F-16C single-seat jet
fighters and six F-16D two-seat jet planes for Pakistan.
"All 18 of these new aircraft will be delivered by 2010. Lockheed Martin appreciates the trust placed in us to
produce the F-16s for the Pakistan Air Force," Lockheed Martin declared in a later statement e-mailed to
Government Executive magazine.
In 2006, the Bush Administration first penned the deal with the tyrant Musharraf which OK'd the sale of the 18
jet fighters, and provided the Pakistani dictator with an option to purchase another 18 U.S. planes.
Later that year, Lockheed Martin--the Pentagon's biggest contractor--was given a $144 million contract to
provide the materials and parts needed to construct the F-16 jet fighters for Pakistan.
June Shrewsbury, Lockheed Martin's F-16 programs vice president, proudly declared in December 2006 that
this $144 million deal was "another great day for the F-16 program and for our customer."
"We remain committed to providing Pakistan with the most technologically advanced and proven fighter
available on the international market today," Shrewsbury continued.
"We value our long-standing relationship with the government of Pakistan, and the confidence they have
placed in the F-16 in support of their nation's security," she added.
The Bush White House also green-lighted an arms deal last year with Musharraf, allowing the dictator to
upgrade his outdated single-seat F-16A combat aircraft with new U.S. weapons and machinery.
The eighteen Lockheed F-16s are scheduled for delivery to the Pakistani military by 2010.
But Biden, a former 2008 presidential candidate, contends that the principal reason for Pakistan's purchase of
the F-16s is not to combat terrorism, but rather for use as a weapon of intimidation against its regional
nemesis, India.
"The day after President Musharraf announced his state of emergency, I publicly called for a possible
suspension of big-ticket military sales like F-16s, and called Musharraf to warn him that his acts would have
consequences," declared Biden in his statement.
The Bush Administration sale of F-16 fighter jets to the tyrant Musharraf "sends exactly the wrong message to
the Pakistani generals, and to the Pakistani people," said Biden's press release.
"This is the time we should be putting the pressure on the government and military to fully investigate the
assassination of Benazir Bhutto and to hold free and fair elections--not let them off the hook," added the
senator in his Jan. 2nd statement.
A spokesperson for the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, the Ohio facility that issued the F-16 jet fighter
contract, did not return requests from Government Executive for a comment.
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