“Musharraf and Aziz were trained as commandos in the 1960s and, together with Yusuf, had played critical roles in the training of the Afghan mujahideen in the 1980s under the tutelage of General Hamid Gul,” the book “Deception: Pakistan, the United States and the Global Nuclear Weapons Conspiracy” stated. “Musharraf, Aziz and Yusuf had run the proxy war in Kashmir in the early 1990s, and Aziz, a Kashmiri by birth, had been on the ground handling Musharraf's disastrous Kargil operation in 1999,” the book by investigative journalists Adrian Levy and Catherin Scott-Clark said.
The authors are internationally renowned and award-winning investigative journalists who worked as staff writers and foreign correspondents for the “Sunday Times” before joining the Guardian.
‘Jihadi’ sponsor
Aziz was so close to Pakistan’s sponsored ‘jihadi’ organisations that when Musharraf had tried to promote him to commander of 10 Corps (Rawalpindi) in October 1999 as a precursor to making him army chief, a job that would have brought him back to the capital, Jamaat-e-Islami and Maulana Fazlur Rahman of the Jamiat Ulema Islam protested, warning it would weaken the 'jihad' in Kashmir. Musharraf subsequently backed down, the authors said.
Aziz, who held great influence over Pakistan's president, persuaded him against clamping down on the Taliban and Osama bin Laden as a result of the then US President Bill Clinton’s visit to Islamabad in 2000 and he also vetoed US demands for action against Pakistan-based activities of outfits such as the Harkat-ul-Mujahideen and Lashkar-e-Taiba.
Aziz was promoted to chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, a position that until then Musharraf had retained for himself. Yusaf was promoted to vice chief of army staff, the second most important job in the Pakistan army.
Nuclear proliferation
According to the authors, the evidence of Pakistan's “hand in nuclear proliferation” was everywhere.
The book also claims that Pakistan's Khan Research Laboratories, which was founded by nuclear scientist A Q Khan, had clandestinely supplied centrifuge components to a nuclear plant intended to be installed in Libya.
While the centrifuge components were first sent from Kahuta in Pakistan to Vanderbijlpark in South Africa before forwarding them to Tripoli, "the Libyans showed their visitors canisters at the Al Fallah storage facility in Tripoli that contained 1.7tons of UF6 gas from Pakistan, a gift to get the Libyan enrichment factory up and running."