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Pardon for scientist who sold atom bomb secrets
www.telegraph.co.uk ^ | 04/02/2004 | Ahmed Rashid

Posted on 02/04/2004 8:18:43 AM PST by westerfield

Pakistan is likely to pardon without trial the father of the country's atomic bomb even though he has confessed to selling nuclear technology to rogue states, a senior government official told the Telegraph yesterday.

President Pervaiz Musharraf, now facing mounting anger over the detention of Abdul Qadeer Khan, is expected to indicate the government's plans in a television address in the next few days.

The scientist, a national icon, is under house arrest. He is said to have confessed to selling nuclear weapons technology to some of the world's most radical anti-western states, including Libya, Iran and North Korea, over at least 11 years.

There were growing indications last night that the mix of popular feeling and the risk that a trial would expose the army's involvement in the scandal will effectively end any chance of a trial.

Since Mr Khan had confessed to selling technology "there was no further need to humiliate the father of Pakistan's nuclear bomb, who has kept the nation safe from Indian attack", the official said.

The official, intimately involved in Mr Khan's investigation, said a trial would be too sensitive when "political opposition to the president is building up".

According to yesterday's Washington Post, the Pakistanis have other reasons for burying the issue.

It quoted a friend of Mr Khan and a senior Pakistani investigator as saying the scientist helped North Korea design and equip facilities for making weapons-grade uranium with the full knowledge of senior military commanders, including Gen Musharraf, who is also army chief of staff.

Mr Khan apparently urged investigators to question army commanders and Gen Musharraf, saying "no debriefing is complete unless you bring every one of them here and debrief us together".

Even if the president does not explicitly pardon Mr Khan, who led Pakistan's development of the Islamic world's first nuclear bomb in 1998, he is expected to say enough to calm mounting anger over his detention.

Both Washington and London, keenly aware of President Musharraf's dilemma, are understood not to have pressed him to stage a public trial.

While Pakistan can expect international indignation if a pardon were granted, the Americans and British say they are content that the nuclear network has been smashed.

"There is relief that this avenue for proliferating nuclear weapons has been cut off," said a senior diplomat in London.

"These transgressions occurred several years ago and even though one must assume they did so with the knowledge of Pakistan's intelligence services, it is not for us to advise a key ally on how to deal with the matter."

Other western diplomats appeared less conciliatory. One said leading western countries and institutions, including the US, Britain and the International Atomic Energy Agency, would demand that their experts debrief Mr Khan "in jail and not after a pardon in his mansion".

Another promised international indignation in the event of pardon. "He is the world's biggest criminal, involved for 27 years in selling nuclear technology. If you let him off with a slap on the wrist, then what kind of message are you sending to others?" he said.

Mr Khan has let it be known that he is prepared to blow the whistle on the army's involvement. A cabinet minister revealed that Mr Khan's daughter, a British citizen, had travelled to London with papers that could incriminate generals and other Pakistani leaders, including the former prime ministers Benazir Bhutto and Nawaz Sharif.

Mr Khan is also reported to have briefed several trusted local journalists with similar information before he was placed under house arrest two weeks ago, asking them to publish it if he went on trial.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: abdulqadeerkhan; nucleartechnology; pakistan

1 posted on 02/04/2004 8:18:51 AM PST by westerfield
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To: westerfield
The fact that a nuclear power nation cannot or will not prosecute it's custodian with embezzelment, selling state secrets, state assets, tax fraud, and a thousand other crimes, just because it will open a can of worms is horrifying to even think of.

Can you imagine a nuclear power nation conducting itself like this?

This snapshot is a picture of exactly why Islamic Nations should be crushed into rubble and ruins. They are run by corrupt, self serving, shakedown artists who use religion and violence to hold onto their loot.

Can the ICC arrest this guy and put him on trial in the world court?

2 posted on 02/04/2004 8:40:05 AM PST by blackdog (Democrat Party? Democratic Party? Democrat Candidate? Democratic Candidate? Wassup wit dat?)
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To: westerfield
Why doesn't the UN prosecute him for crimes against the entire world?

But then, they don't believe in the death penalty!
3 posted on 02/04/2004 8:40:50 AM PST by SwinneySwitch (Freedom isn't Free! Support those who ensure it.)
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To: westerfield
Islam takes care of its own.
4 posted on 02/04/2004 8:42:18 AM PST by Rebelbase ( <a href="http://www.michaelmoore.com" target="_blank">miserable failure put it in your tagline too!)
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To: westerfield
If this was a female scientist who sold nuclear secrets and technology to Israel(not that they need them), just what method of public execution do you think they would whip up for her? Fahget a trial!
5 posted on 02/04/2004 8:44:55 AM PST by blackdog (Democrat Party? Democratic Party? Democrat Candidate? Democratic Candidate? Wassup wit dat?)
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To: westerfield
Scary part is: Iran is closer to having the bomb than anyone previously may have thought.
6 posted on 02/04/2004 8:46:13 AM PST by Mordichia
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To: Mordichia
Nuclear weapons are very expensive to maintain. Most Islamic nations can't even maintain a phone system over time. Just what does the world expect to happen to these weapons after enough time has lapsed since their assembly?

If just one nuclear weapon is ever slipped into this country and set off in aggression aimed at us, I hope we send back a few million megaton postcards and do so every day for a year.

It's my guess that if the Islamic extremists set one off here, that they will do it in some place obscure and uninhabited as a test, in order to measure the response.

7 posted on 02/04/2004 8:55:19 AM PST by blackdog (Democrat Party? Democratic Party? Democrat Candidate? Democratic Candidate? Wassup wit dat?)
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To: westerfield
What did he do to deserve this pardon? Cut them in on his profits? Sheesh.
8 posted on 02/04/2004 9:14:31 AM PST by MizSterious (First, the journalists, THEN the lawyers.)
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To: blackdog; aculeus; swarthyguy
That audiotape Khan stashed with his daughter must be a doozy.

She fled Pakistan ... to where? Britain is a possibility.
9 posted on 02/04/2004 9:47:39 AM PST by Shermy
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To: Shermy
Send CIA cleaners to his daughter to start with and each month, clean up another Pakistani dirt pile. Once you've gotten them all, the world will be a safer place and other countries who have laxed controls over their nuclear assets will fear the same fate if they conduct themselves in an unethical manner. Even if their own states look the other way.
10 posted on 02/04/2004 9:53:17 AM PST by blackdog (Democrat Party? Democratic Party? Democrat Candidate? Democratic Candidate? Wassup wit dat?)
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To: MizSterious
What did he do to deserve this pardon? Cut them in on his profits?

This is not good news. Thank G-d President Bush is in the WH and Kerry, Edwards, etc.

11 posted on 02/04/2004 9:54:52 AM PST by af_vet_1981
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To: af_vet_1981
The thought of "nothing to worry about" Kerry in charge is chilling. See also Experts Worry Terrorists Have Nuke Plans.
12 posted on 02/04/2004 10:02:53 AM PST by MizSterious (First, the journalists, THEN the lawyers.)
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To: westerfield
This sure smells like a sham to me. Scientist takes the fall but gets a pardon. Sounds like this really was a government operation.
13 posted on 02/04/2004 10:07:20 AM PST by colorado tanker ("There are but two parties now, Traitors and Patriots")
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To: swarthyguy; HAL9000; Chronos
It seems Khan received/will receive a pardon. Somehow i am not surprised.
14 posted on 02/04/2004 12:14:00 PM PST by spetznaz (Nuclear missiles: The ultimate Phallic symbol.)
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