Pakistan

A.Q. Khan's Nuclear Ad


To help spread the word about his laboratory's ability to produce nuclear weapons, Pakistani engineer A.Q. Khan produced a marketing video that he sent to potential clients around the world.

Police from South Africa's Crimes Against the State division discovered the video when they raided a small factory on the outskirts of Johannesberg called Tradefin Engineering. Inside they also found containers filled with pipes and valves, marked for export to Libya. A factory engineer claimed the parts were for building a "water purification facility." Investigators later discovered Tradefin was supplying parts for a uranium enrichment plant that would have allowed Libya to build several nuclear bombs.

Tradefin, it turned out, was part of a vast, global supply network directed by A.Q. Khan. Khan's objective: To sell the know-how and technology for building nuclear bombs to anyone who could pay the price.

The video promoted the successes of KRL, the Khan Research Laboratory based at the Kahuta nuclear weapons center in Pakistan. The tape provided further evidence linking the three men behind Tradefin to AQ Khan's global network of nuclear traffickers. All three ultimately pled guilty to violating South Africa's laws against nuclear proliferation.

CIR obtained a portion of the audio from that videotape. It provides a glimpse into the crude logic of nuclear proliferation: Just as Khan was able to bolster Pakistani prestige and security with nuclear weapons, the same such nuclear guarantors were available to others who could afford them. The Libyans made payments of some $80 million in their efforts to obtain a fully functional nuclear weapons facility from Khan.

The tape, according to Olli Heinonen, the chief weapons inspector for the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), was intended as "advertising" for AQ Khan, to demonstrate his wares and "to show to their clients how good they are in various things and … to create a certain charisma around him and his laboratory."

Five minutes of the audio portion of that twenty-minute video can be heard here for the first time. The entire tape includes segments promoting Khan's ability to provide sophisticated technology for medical and industrial purposes, as well as for building weapons-grade uranium enrichment facilities for nuclear bombs.

In this portion, a narrator explains how and why Khan created Pakistan's own nuclear weapons arsenal—prompted, he says, by the nuclear weapons program launched in neighboring India. And A.Q. Khan himself promotes his own success, saying he promised Pakistan's president that the country could "detonate a nuclear device on a week's notice."

On May 11 and May 13, 1998, Pakistan's archrival, India, tested its nuclear arsenal with a series of five underground nuclear explosions. It took just over two weeks, but on May 28 and 30, 1998, Pakistan detonated its own nuclear bombs in a test that provided the first conclusive proof to the world that Khan had in fact succeeded. A year later Khan intermediaries in Dubai and Europe set the deal with Tradefin into motion.

VIDEO PRODUCED BY CARRIE CHING
TEXT BY MARK SCHAPIRO

Nuclear Proliferation

Asher Karni was sentenced August 4 to three years in federal prison for his role in a plot to export nuclear weapons parts to Pakistan. U.S. District Judge Ricardo M. Urbina handed down the sentence after Karni pled guilty last year to helping ship devices that could be used to test, develop and detonate nuclear weapons.

"I want you to know how serious I think your conduct was," Urbina told Karni. A federal indictment remains pending against Humayun A. Khan, a Pakistan businessman alleged to be Karni's partner and who was interviewed recently by CIR reporter Mark Schapiro on behalf of PBS' NewsHour and Frontline/WORLD programs. Read more on the Karni case here:

CIR investigates the thriving trade in ‘dual-use’ technology. This multi-media investigation follows the tangled web of interests and operators behind the thriving trade in nuclear technology, much of it from U.S. manufacturers, which finds its way to rogue nuclear powers like Pakistan.

CIR Editorial Director Mark Schapiro travels to South Africa on the trail of Asher Karni, a South African technology trader who almost succeeded in selling nuclear triggers to Pakistan. Stories appear as a web-only video exclusive for the PBS series Frontline/WORLD and in print for the May/June 2005 issue of Mother Jones magazine.

The three-part web documentary includes:

PART 1: Reconstruction of Karni’s deal through interviews with his rabbi, his lawyer and numerous associates in Cape Town. Click here to watch.

PART 2: An exclusive interview with the Commerce Department agent who was responsible for ultimately arresting Karni. Click here to watch.

PART 3: Telephone conversation between Schapiro and the Pakistani businessman, Humayun Khan, who has been accused by the Justice Department of trying to purchase the triggers. Click here to listen.

For the print version of the Karni story in the May/June 2005 issue of Mother Jones, click here.






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