FORMER Dutch Prime Minister Ruud Lubbers in an interview to
Dutch radio station on August 9 has revealed that the CIA
intervened on two occasions with the Dutch authorities to
persuade them not to take action against the Pakistani
proliferator, Dr A.Q. Khan. The first occasion was in the
mid seventies when Dr Khan was caught copying the drawings
and taking URENCO centri-fuge plant away. As the Dutch
authorities were about to prosecute him he was protected by
the CIA which intervened to stop the action. The second
time was in 1985 when the CIA dissuaded the Dutch not to go
ahead with a retrial ordered by the appellate court which
entertained Dr Khan’s appeal against his conviction
by the trial court on his removing secret documents.
According to Dr Lubbers, the CIA argued that if Dr Khan was
left free they would be able to follow him and keep track
of his activities in respect of the Pakistani nuclear
programme.
In the light of these disclosures of the former Dutch PM it
is obvious that the CIA had continued interest in Dr Khan
from the mid-seventies to 1985. Since 1987 was the year
when Dr Khan boasted to Indian journalist Kuldip Nayar
about Pakistan having assembled the bomb it is logical to
expect that the CIA’s interest in Dr Khan continued.
Dr Khan has confessed that he was approached by the Iranian
authorities in 1987 for transfer of nuclear technology and
he started his proliferation to Iran from that period with
the full approval of Gen Zia-ul-Haq. The CIA which was
keeping watch over Dr Khan should therefore have known
about Dr Khan’s proliferation to Iran and his black
market contacts with Western European firms.
Senator Kerry’s Senate Committee report on the
activities of Bank of Credit and Commerce International
(BCCI) of 1992 has referred to the linkage between BCCI, Dr
Khan, Iranian proliferation and the lack of cooperation on
the part of the CIA in regard to its interactions with the
bank.
It is now established that BCCI, which was financing the
Pakistani nuclear programme was also used by the CIA in the
Iran-Contra deal. The CIA which should have kept a close
watch on Dr Khan according to the disclosures of Dr Lubbers
should have known about Dr Khan’s repeated trips to
North Korea for missiles in exchange of uranium enrichment
deal after Ms Benazir Bhutto’s visit to Pyong-yang in
1994. In that case the US should have known about Dr
Khan’s proliferation activity to North Korea from the
very beginning.
Against this background the claims of former CIA director
George Tenet about the CIA coming to know about Dr
Khan’s activities from the year 2001 onwards and US
communicating its doubts about Dr Khan to General Musharraf
and consequently his being removed raises problems of
credibility. There appears to be a high probability that
the CIA was watching Dr Khan from the mid-seventies and it
was fully aware of proliferation network involving Western
European companies, China, North Korea, Dr Khan and the
Pakistan Army. That Carter and Reagan administrations
decided to look away from Pakistan-China-West European
companies proliferation network has been well researched
and documented by many American authors and journalists.
There is a view that Dr Khan has got away lightly because
of the Pakistan Army’s involvement in his activities
and his ability to spill the beans in respect of the
Army’s connivance in Dr Khan’s proliferation.
Now with the disclosures of Dr Lubbers it would be logical
to speculate whether Dr Khan and the Pakistani leadership
have not been let off lightly in spite of the proven
proliferation perhaps because they are in a position to
tell the world about the CIA’s long connection with
the nuclear walmart run by the Pakistani army leadership
and Dr Khan.
It has always been a mystery why the US administration was
soft on China-Pakistan proliferation interaction in the
‘90s. It took some seven years after Pakistan
officially admitted receipt of missiles from China, for the
US to admit that. Till then, the Clinton administration
pretended that it was still to make a determination about
the receipt of Chinese missiles in Pakistan.
While North Korea and Iran are denounced as “rogue
states”, the US establishment rarely refers to the
original proliferators, China and its partner, Pakistan.
Even as the Bush administration concludes a deal with India
to lift sanctions against civil technology transfer on the
ground that India has behaved as a responsible nuclear
power, some former American officials who were in the
decision making loop have raised the issue whether this
arrangement with India with irreproachable record on
proliferation should not be extended to Pakistan as well,
whose chief nuclear scientist, Dr Khan, according to Dr El
Baradei Director-General of the International Atomic Energy
Agency, ran a nuclear walmart black market chainstore.
Going by Dr Lubber’s disclosures of the CIA’s
benign interest in Dr Khan going back three decades and the
US having looked away from China-Pakistan proliferation, is
the interest in extending the Indo-US nuclear arrangement
to Pakistan purely a matter of principle or an attempt to
prevent the roles of former US administrations and some of
the prominent officials in them being exposed for their
activities in regard to global proliferation.
While President George Bush and Secretary Rice may have
chosen to make a clean break with the past and work out
effective measures to deal with proliferation threat from
non-state actors, they may face resistance from those
former officials in the administration and the agencies who
have been colluding with the nuclear walmart of Dr Khan,
Pakistani generals, China and West European black market.
Otherwise it is difficult to explain the interest of such
people in demanding the same treatment for Pakistan as has
been extended to India.