2001 OR EARLIER, BEFORE FALL OF THE TALIBAN: (PAKISTANI NUKE SCIENTISTS MET WITH BIN LADEN & MULLAH OMAR SEVERAL TIMES) WASHINGTON As the Pakistani nuclear proliferation story widens [IN 2004], U.S. intelligence officials say top atomic scientists from that country met with Osama bin Laden and Mullah Omar in Afghanistan. Two former senior Pakistani nuclear scientists who were based in the Afghan town of Kandahar met Mullah Omar and Osama bin Laden several times before the fall of the Taliban. They were later detained and questioned on their return to Pakistan. -
---------- "Bin Laden met nuke scientists -- 'Nuclear bazaar' story out of Pakistan gets more bizarre," by Joseph Farah, Worldnetdaily, 2.8.2004
OCTOBER 2001 : (SCIENTIST ROUNDUP --See MEHMOOD aka MAHMOOD & MAJID) Two of Pakistan's top atomic scientists were grilled yesterday about possible contacts with Afghanistan's Taliban rulers amid reports Osama Bin Laden had obtained nuclear material. Sultan Bashiru-Din Mehmood, one of the founders of the country's nuclear program, was detained Tuesday in Lahore, Interior Ministry officials said on condition of anonymity. They said Abdul Majid, a scientist who worked with Mehmood at the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission, also was being held.
"The investigation has nothing to do with the nuclear program," said Rashid Qureshi, a Pakistani military spokesman.
However, the Interior Ministry officials said the men were questioned about possible links to Afghan officials, including Taliban leader Mullah Mohammed Omar. Neither had been charged with a crime.
In Britain, The Times newspaper and Channel Four television news quoted Western intelligence sources as saying Bin Laden, a Saudi-born terrorism mastermind, had obtained nuclear material from Pakistan. Citing an informed source, the Times said Bin Laden appeared to have amassed a "terrifying" range of weapons.
The Taliban, who have given refuge to Bin Laden since 1996, were put in power by Pakistan and have had close ties with its intelligence agencies.
The Western sources said Bin Laden and his Al Qaeda network did not have the technology to make a nuclear bomb. But they said they were worried Bin Laden could produce a "dirty bomb" one that would disperse radioactive material across a small urban area rather than creating a nuclear explosion killing hundreds or thousands rather than millions.
---------Nuke Experts Detained/Pakistan probes 2 scientists' ties to Taliban, RICHARD WHITBY, New York Daily News ^ | 10/26/01 |
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