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Abdul Qadeer Khan

Abdul Qadeer Khan, NI, HI, FPAS (/ˈɑːbdəl ˈkɑːdɪər ˈkɑːn/ AHB-dəl KAH-deer KAHN; Urdu: عبد القدیر خان; 1 April 1936 – 10 October 2021),[3] known as A. Q. Khan, was a Pakistani nuclear physicist and metallurgical engineer who is colloquially known as the "father of Pakistan's atomic weapons program".[a]

Abdul Qadeer Khan

ڈاکٹر عبدالقدیر خان
Khan in 2017
Born(1936-04-01)1 April 1936
Died10 October 2021(2021-10-10) (aged 85)
Islamabad, Pakistan
NationalityPakistani
Alma materUniversity of Karachi
Delft University of Technology
Catholic University of Louvain
D. J. Sindh Government Science College[2]
Known forPakistan's nuclear weapons program, gaseous diffusion, martensite and graphene morphology
Spouse
Hendrina Reternik
(m. 1963)
Children2
Awards Nishan-i-Imtiaz (1996; 1999)
Hilal-i-Imtiaz (1989)
Scientific career
FieldsMetallurgical engineering
InstitutionsKhan Research Laboratories
GIK Institute of Technology
Hamdard University
Urenco Group
ThesisThe effect of morphology on the strength of copper-based martensites (1972)
Doctoral advisorMartin J. Brabers[1]
Science Advisor to the Presidential Secretariat
In office
1 January 2001 – 31 January 2004
PresidentPervez Musharraf
Preceded byIshfaq Ahmad
Succeeded byAtta-ur-Rahman
Personal details
Political partyTehreek-e-Tahaffuz-e-Pakistan
(2012–2013)
Website

An émigré (Muhajir) from India who migrated to Pakistan in 1952, Khan was educated in the metallurgical engineering departments of Western European technical universities where he pioneered studies in phase transitions of metallic alloys, uranium metallurgy, and isotope separation based on gas centrifuges. After learning of India's "Smiling Buddha" nuclear test in 1974, Khan joined his nation's clandestine efforts to develop atomic weapons when he founded the Khan Research Laboratories (KRL) in 1976 and was both its chief scientist and director for many years.

In January 2004, Khan was subjected to a debriefing by the Musharraf administration over evidence of nuclear proliferation handed to them by the Bush administration of the United States.[6][7] Khan admitted his role in running a nuclear proliferation network – only to retract his statements in later years when he leveled accusations at the former administration of Pakistan's Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto in 1990, and also directed allegations at President Musharraf over the controversy in 2008.[8][9][10]

Khan was accused of selling nuclear secrets illegally and was put under house arrest in 2004. After years of house arrest, Khan successfully filed a lawsuit against the Federal Government of Pakistan at the Islamabad High Court whose verdict declared his debriefing unconstitutional and freed him on 6 February 2009.[11][12] The United States reacted negatively to the verdict and the Obama administration issued an official statement warning that Khan still remained a "serious proliferation risk".[13]

After his death on 10 October 2021, he was given a state funeral at Faisal Mosque before being buried at the H-8 graveyard in Islamabad.

Early life and education

Abdul Qadeer Khan was born on 1 April 1936, in Bhopal, a city then in the erstwhile British Indian princely state of Bhopal State, and now the capital city of Madhya Pradesh. He was a Muhajir of Urdu-speaking Pashtun origin.[14][15][2][5][16] His father, Abdul Ghafoor, was a schoolteacher who once worked for the Ministry of Education, and his mother, Zulekha, was a housewife with a very religious mindset.[17] His older siblings, along with other family members, had emigrated to Pakistan during the partition of India in 1947, who would often write to Khan's parents about the new life they had found in Pakistan.[18]

After his matriculation from a local school in Bhopal, in 1952 Khan emigrated from India to Pakistan on the Sind Mail train, partly due to the reservation politics[19]: 254  at that time, and religious violence in India during his youth had left an indelible impression on his world view.[20] Upon settling in Karachi with his family, Khan briefly attended the D. J. Science College before transferring to the University of Karachi, where he graduated in 1956 with a Bachelor of Science (BSc) in physics with a concentration on solid-state physics.[21][22]

From 1956 to 1959, Khan was employed by the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation (city government) as an Inspector of weights and measures, and applied for a scholarship that allowed him to study in West Germany.[23][24] In 1961, Khan departed for West Germany to study material science at the Technical University in West Berlin, where he academically excelled in courses in metallurgy, but left West Berlin when he switched to the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands in 1965.[18]

In 1962, while on vacation in The Hague, he met Hendrina "Henny" Reternik – a British passport holder who had been born in South Africa to Dutch expatriates. She spoke Dutch and had spent her childhood in Africa before returning with her parents to the Netherlands where she lived as a registered foreigner. In 1963, he married Henny in a modest Muslim ceremony at Pakistan's embassy in The Hague. Khan and Henny together had two daughters, Dina Khan - who is a doctor, and Ayesha Khan.[25][26][27]

In 1967, Khan obtained an engineer's degree in materials technology – an equivalent to a Master of Science (MS) offered in English-speaking nations such as Pakistan – and joined the doctoral program in metallurgical engineering at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in Belgium.[28] He worked under Belgian professor Martin J. Brabers at Leuven University, who supervised his doctoral thesis which Khan successfully defended, and graduated with a DEng in metallurgical engineering in 1972.[28] His thesis included fundamental work on martensite and its extended industrial applications in the field of graphene morphology.[29]

Career in Europe

In 1972, Khan joined the Physics Dynamics Research Laboratory (or in Dutch: FDO), an engineering firm subsidiary of Verenigde Machinefabrieken (VMF) based in Amsterdam, from Brabers's recommendation.[30] The FDO was a subcontractor for Ultra-Centrifuge Nederland of the, British-German-Dutch uranium enrichment consortium, URENCO which was operating a uranium enrichment plant in Almelo and employed gaseous centrifuge method to assure a supply of nuclear fuel for nuclear power plants in the Netherlands.[31] Soon after, Khan left FDO when URENCO offered him a senior technical position, initially conducting studies on the uranium metallurgy.[32]: 87 

Uranium enrichment is an extremely difficult process because uranium in its natural state is composed of just 0.71% of uranium-235 (U235), which is a fissile material, 99.3% of uranium-238 (U238), which is non-fissile, and 0.0055% of uranium-234 (U234), a daughter product which is also a non-fissile.[33] The URENCO Group utilised the Zippe-type of centrifugal method to electromagnetically separate the isotopes U234, U235, and U238 from sublimed raw uranium by rotating the uranium hexafluoride (UF6) gas at up to ~100,000 revolutions per minute (rpm).[30]: 49  Khan, whose work was based on physical metallurgy of the uranium metal,[32]: 87  eventually dedicated his investigations on improving the efficiency of the centrifuges by 1973–74.[34]: 140 

Frits Veerman, Khan's colleague at FDO, uncovered nuclear espionage at Almelo where Khan had stolen designs of the centrifuges from URENCO for the nuclear weapons programme of Pakistan.[35] Veerman became aware of the espionage when Khan had taken classified URENCO documents home to be copied and translated by his Dutch-speaking wife and had asked Veerman to photograph some of them.[36][37] In 1975, Khan was transferred to a less sensitive section when URENCO became suspicious and he subsequently returned to Pakistan with his wife and two daughters. Khan was sentenced in absentia to four years in prison in 1983 by the Netherlands for espionage but the conviction was later overturned due to a legal technicality.[38] Ruud Lubbers, Prime Minister of the Netherlands at the time, later said that the General Intelligence and Security Service (BVD) was aware of Khan's espionage activities but he was allowed to continue due to pressure from the CIA, with the US backing Pakistan during the Cold War.[39][40] This was also highlighted when despite Archie Pervez (Khan's associate for nuclear procurement in the US) being convicted in 1988, no action was taken against Khan or his proliferation network by the US government which needed the support of Pakistan during the Soviet–Afghan War.[41]

Henk Slebos [nl], a Dutch engineer and businessman who had studied metallurgy with Khan at the Delft University of Technology, continued providing goods needed for enriching uranium to Khan in Pakistan through his company Slebos Research. Slebos was sentenced in 1985 to one year in prison but the sentence was reduced on appeal in 1986 to six months of probation and a fine of 20,000 guilders. Though Slebos continued to export goods to Pakistan and was again sentenced to one year in prison and a fine of around 100,000 was imposed on his company.[42][43]

Ernst Piffl, was convicted and sentenced to three and a half years in prison by Germany in 1998 for supplying nuclear centrifuge parts through his company Team GmbH to Khan's Khan Research Laboratories in Kahuta.[44] Asher Karni, a Hungarian-South African businessman was sentenced to three years in prison in the US for the sale of restricted nuclear equipment to Pakistan through Humayun Khan (an associate of A. Q. Khan) and his Pakland PME Corporation.[45]

Scientific career in Pakistan

Smiling Buddha and initiation

Upon learning of India's surprise nuclear test, 'Smiling Buddha', in May 1974, Khan wanted to contribute to efforts to build an atomic bomb and met with officials at the Pakistani Embassy in The Hague, who dissuaded him by saying it was "hard to find" a job in PAEC as a "metallurgist".[46] In August 1974, Khan wrote a letter which went unnoticed, but he directed another letter through the Pakistani ambassador to the Prime Minister's Secretariat in September 1974.[34]: 140 

Unbeknownst to Khan, his nation's scientists were already working towards feasibility of the atomic bomb under a secretive crash weapons program since 20 January 1972 that was being directed by Munir Ahmad Khan, a reactor physicist, which calls into question of his "father-of" claim.[47]: 72 [48] After reading his letter, Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto had his military secretary run a security check on Khan, who was unknown at that time, for verification and asked PAEC to dispatch a team under Bashiruddin Mahmood that met Khan at his family home in Almelo and directed Bhutto's letter to meet him in Islamabad.[34]: 141 [49] Upon arriving in December 1974, Khan took a taxi straight to the Prime Minister's Secretariat. He met with Prime Minister Bhutto in the presence of Ghulam Ishaq Khan, Agha Shahi, and Mubashir Hassan where he explained the significance of highly enriched uranium, with the meeting ending with Bhutto's remark: "He seems to make sense."[34]: 140–141 [50]: 60–61 

The next day, Khan met with Munir Ahmad and other senior scientists where he focused the discussion on production of highly enriched uranium (HEU), against weapon-grade plutonium, and explained to Bhutto why he thought the idea of "plutonium" would not work.[34]: 143–144  Later, Khan was advised by several officials in the Bhutto administration to remain in the Netherlands to learn more about centrifuge technology but continue to provide consultation on the Project-706 enrichment program led by Mahmood.[34]: 143–144  By December 1975, Khan was given a transfer to a less sensitive section when URENCO became suspicious of his indiscreet open sessions with Mahmood to instruct him on centrifuge technology. Khan began to fear for his safety in the Netherlands, ultimately insisting on returning home.[34]: 147 

Khan Research Laboratories and atomic bomb program

 
Diagram of the principles of a Zippe-type gas centrifuge with U-238 represented in dark blue and U-235 represented in light blue

In April 1976, Khan joined the atomic bomb program and became part of the enrichment division, initially collaborating with Khalil Qureshi – a physical chemist.[50]: 62–63  Calculations performed by him were valuable contributions to centrifuges and a vital link to nuclear weapon research, but continue to push for his ideas for feasibility of weapon-grade uranium even though it had a low priority, with most efforts still aimed to produce military-grade plutonium.[47]: 73–74 [50] Because of his interest in uranium metallurgy and his frustration at having been passed over for director of the uranium division (the job was instead given to Bashiruddin Mahmood), Khan refused to engage in further calculations and caused tensions with other researchers.[34]: 147–148  Khan became highly unsatisfied and bored with the research led by Mahmood – finally, he submitted a critical report to Bhutto, in which he explained that the "enrichment program" was nowhere near success.[50]: 62–63 

Upon reviewing the report, Bhutto sensed a great danger as the scientists were split between military-grade uranium and plutonium and informed Khan to take over the enrichment division from Mahmood, who separated the program from PAEC by founding the Engineering Research Laboratories (ERL).[50]: 63–64 [34]: 149–150  The ERL functioned directly under the Army's Corps of Engineers, with Khan being its chief scientist, and the army engineers located the national site at isolated lands in Kahuta for the enrichment program as ideal site for preventing accidents.[51]

The PAEC did not forgo their electromagnetic isotope separation program, and a parallel program was led by G. D. Alam at the Air Research Laboratories (ARL) located at Chaklala Air Force Base, even though Alam had not seen a centrifuge, and only had a rudimentary knowledge of the Manhattan Project.[47]: 72–110 [34]: 144  During this time, Alam accomplished a great feat by perfectly balancing the rotation of the first generation of centrifuge to ~30,000 rpm and was immediately dispatched to ERL which was suffering from many setbacks in setting up its own program under Khan's direction based on centrifuge technology dependent on URENCO's methods.[47]: 75–76  Khan eventually committed to work on problems involving the differential equations concerning the rotation around fixed axis to perfectly balance the machine under influence of gravity and the design of first generation of centrifuges became functional after Khan and Alam succeeded in separating the 235U and 238U isotopes from raw natural uranium.[47]: 78–79 [52]

In the military circles, Khan's scientific ability was well recognised and was often known with his moniker "Centrifuge Khan"[34]: 151  and the national laboratory was renamed after him upon the visit of President Muhammad Zia-ul-Haq in 1983.[53] In spite of his role, Khan was never in charge of the actual designs of the nuclear devices, their calculations, and eventual weapons testing which remained under the directorship of Munir Ahmad Khan and the PAEC.[53]

The PAEC's senior scientists who worked with him and under him remember him as "an egomaniacal lightweight"[53] given to exaggerating his scientific achievements in centrifuges.[53] At one point, Munir Khan said that, "most of the scientists who work on the development of atomic bomb projects were extremely 'serious'. They were sobered by the weight of what they don't know; Abdul Qadeer Khan is a showman."[53][34] During the timeline of the bomb program, Khan published papers on analytical mechanics of balancing of rotating masses and thermodynamics with mathematical rigour to compete, but still failed to impress his fellow theorists at PAEC, generally in the physics community.[53] In later years, Khan became a staunch critic of Munir Khan's research in physics, and on many occasions tried unsuccessfully to belittle Munir Khan's role in the atomic bomb projects.[53] Their scientific rivalry became public and widely popular in the physics community and seminars held in the country over the years.[54]

Nuclear tests: Chagai-I

 
Visible effect of the nuclear weapons test, Chagai-I, conducted in the Ras Koh Hills of the Sulaiman Mountains, May 1998.[53] All five nuclear devices were boosted fission devices that used highly enriched uranium.[34]: 145–146 

Many of his theorists were unsure that military-grade uranium would be feasible on time without the centrifuges, since Alam had notified PAEC that the "blueprints were incomplete" and "lacked the scientific information needed even for the basic gas-centrifuges."[47]: 75–76 [34]: 145–146  Calculations by Tasneem Shah, and confirmed by Alam, showed that Khan's earlier estimation of the quantity of uranium needing enrichment for the production of weapon-grade uranium was possible, even with the small number of centrifuges deployed.[47]: 77 

Khan produced the designs of the centrifuges from URENCO. However, they were riddled with serious technical errors, and while he bought some components for analysis, they were broken pieces, making them useless for quick assembly of a centrifuge.[48] Its separative work unit (SWU) rate was extremely low, so that it would have to be rotated for thousands of RPMs at the cost of millions of taxpayers money, Alam maintained.[55] Though Khan's knowledge of copper metallurgy greatly aided the innovation of centrifuges,[clarify] it was the calculations and validation that came from his team of fellow theorists, including mathematician Tasneem Shah and Alam, who solved the differential equations concerning rotation around a fixed axis under the influence of gravity, which led Khan to come up with the innovative centrifuge designs.[34]: 146 [55]

 
Diagram of the gun-type device developed by the United States

Scientists have said that Khan would have never got any closer to success without the assistance of Alam and others.[56] The issue is controversial;[47]: 79  Khan maintained to his biographer that when it came to defending the "centrifuge approach" and really putting work into it, both Shah and Alam refused.[47]: 79–80 

Khan was also very critical of PAEC's concentrated efforts towards developing a plutonium 'implosion-type' nuclear devices and provided strong advocacy for the relatively simple 'gun-type' device that only had to work with high-enriched uranium – a design concept of gun-type device he eventually submitted to Ministry of Energy (MoE) and Ministry of Defense (MoD).[34]: 152 [48] Khan downplayed the importance of plutonium despite many of the theorists maintaining that "plutonium and the fuel cycle has its significance", and he insisted on the uranium route to the Bhutto administration when France's offer for an extraction plant was in the offing.[54][57]

Though he had helped to come up with the centrifuge designs, and had been a long-time proponent of the concept, Khan was not chosen to head the development project to test his nation's first nuclear-weapons (his reputation of a thorny personality likely played a role in this[58]) after India conducted its series of nuclear tests, 'Pokhran-II' in 1998.[58] Intervention by the Chairman Joint Chiefs, General Jehangir Karamat, allowed Khan to be a participant and eye-witness his nation's first nuclear test, 'Chagai-I' in 1998.[58][52] At a news conference, Khan confirmed the testing of the boosted fission devices while stating that it was KRL's highly enriched uranium (HEU) that was used in the detonation of Pakistan's first nuclear devices on 28 May 1998.[52]

Many of Khan's colleagues were irritated that he seemed to enjoy taking full credit for something he had only a small part in, and in response, he authored an article, "Torch-Bearers", which appeared in The News International, emphasising that he was not alone in the weapon's development. He made an attempt to work on the Teller–Ulam design for the hydrogen bomb, but the military strategists had objected to the idea as it went against the government's policy of minimum credible deterrence.[47]: 108 [34][59] Khan often got engrossed in projects which were theoretically interesting but practically unfeasible.[60]

Proliferation controversy

In the 1970s, Khan had been very vocal about establishing a network to acquire imported electronic materials from the Dutch firms and had very little trust of PAEC's domestic manufacturing of materials, despite the government accepting PAEC's arguments for the long term sustainability of the nuclear weapons program.[34]: 148 [52][61][62][63] At one point, Khan reached out to the People's Republic of China for acquiring the uranium hexafluoride (UF6) when he attended a conference there – the Pakistani Government sent it back to the People's Republic of China, asking KRL to use the UF6 supplied by PAEC.[34]: 150–151  In an investigative report published by Nuclear Threat Initiative, Chinese scientists were reportedly present at Khan Research Laboratories (KRL) in Kahuta in the early 1980s.[64] In 1996, the U.S. intelligence community maintained that China provided magnetic rings for special suspension bearings mounted at the top of rotating centrifuge cylinders. In 2005, it was revealed that President Zia-ul-Haq's military government had KRL run a HEU programme in the Chinese nuclear weapons program.[65] Khan said that "KRL has built a centrifuge facility for China in Hanzhong city".[65] China also exported some of DF-11's ballistic missile technology to Pakistan, where Pakistan's Ghaznavi and Shaheen-II borrowed from DF-11 technology.[66][67][68]

In 1982, an unnamed Arab country reached out to Khan for the sale of centrifuge technology. Khan was very receptive to the financial offer, but one scientist alerted the Zia administration which investigated the matter, only for Khan to vehemently deny such an offer was made to him.[69] The Zia administration tasked Major-General Ali Nawab, an engineering officer, to keep surveillance on Khan, which he did until 1983 when he retired from his military service, and Khan's activities went undetected for several years after.[70]

Court controversy and U.S. objections

In 1979, the Dutch government eventually probed Khan on suspicion of nuclear espionage but he was not prosecuted due to lack of evidence, though it did file a criminal complaint against him in a local court in Amsterdam, which sentenced him in absentia in 1985 to four years in prison.[38][71] Upon learning of the sentence, Khan filed an appeal through his attorney, S. M. Zafar, who teamed up with the administration of Leuven University, and successfully argued that the technical information requested by Khan was commonly found and taught in undergraduate and doctoral physics at the university – the court exonerated Khan by overturning his sentence on a legal technicality.[71]: 35 [53] Reacting to the suspicions of espionage, Khan stressed that: "I had requested for it as we had no library of our own at KRL, at that time. All the research work [at Kahuta] was the result of our innovation and struggle. We did not receive any technical 'know-how' from abroad, but we cannot reject the use of books, magazines, and research papers in this connection."[53]

In 1979, the Zia administration, which was making an effort to keep their nuclear capability discreet to avoid pressure from the Reagan administration of the United States (U.S.), nearly lost its patience with Khan when he reportedly attempted to meet with a local journalist to announce the existence of the enrichment program.[47]: 82  During the Indian Operation Brasstacks military exercise in 1987, Khan gave another interview to local press and stated: "the Americans had been well aware of the success of the atomic quest of Pakistan", allegedly confirming the speculation of technology export.[72] At both instances, the Zia administration sharply denied Khan's statement and a furious President Zia met with Khan and used a "tough tone", promising Khan severe repercussions had he not retracted all of his statements, which Khan immediately did by contacting several news correspondents.[73]

In 1996, Khan again appeared on his country's news channels and maintained that "at no stage was the program of producing 90% weapons-grade enriched uranium ever stopped", despite Benazir Bhutto's administration reaching an understanding with the United States Clinton administration to cap the program to 3% enrichment in 1990.[73]

North Korea, Iran, and Libya

 
The centrifuges removed from Libya by the United States as seen in the image were developed by Khan, known as P1, when he worked for URENCO in the 1970s.[74]

The innovation and improved designs of centrifuges were marked as classified for export restriction by the Pakistan government, though Khan was still in possession of earlier designs of centrifuges from when he worked for URENCO in the 1970s.[34]: 156–158  In 1990, the United States alleged that highly sensitive information was being exported to North Korea in exchange for rocket engines. Pakistan's Ghauri missile was based entirely on North Korea's Rodong-1 as reflected in its technology. The project was supported by Benazir Bhutto who consulted for the project with North Korea and facilitated the technology transfer to Khan Research Laboratories in 1993.[75]

On multiple occasions, Khan levelled accusations against Benazir Bhutto's administration of providing secret enrichment information, on a compact disc (CD), to North Korea; these accusations were denied by Benazir Bhutto's staff and military personnel.[76]: 113–114 [77][78]

Between 1987 and 1989, Khan secretly leaked knowledge of centrifuges to Iran without notifying the Pakistan Government,[78] although this issue is a subject of political controversy.[72][70] In 2003, the European Union pressured Iran to accept tougher inspections of its nuclear program and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) revealed an enrichment facility in the city of Natanz, Iran, utilising gas centrifuges based on the designs and methods used by URENCO.[77] The IAEA inspectors quickly identified the centrifuges as P-1 types, which had been obtained "from a foreign intermediary in 1989", and the Iranian negotiators turned over the names of their suppliers, which identified Khan as one of them.[77] Heinz Mebus, a German engineer and businessman and college friend of Khan, was named as one of the suppliers - acting as a middleman for Khan.[79]

In May 1998, Newsweek reported that Khan had sent Iraq centrifuge designs, which were apparently confiscated by the UNMOVIC officials. Iraqi officials said "the documents were authentic but that they had not agreed to work with A. Q. Khan, fearing an ISI sting operation, due to strained relations between two countries.[80]

In 2003, merchant vessel BBC China was caught carrying nuclear centrifuges to Libya from Malaysia, the Scomi Group and Khan Research Laboratories were supplying nuclear parts to Libya through Khan's Dubai-based Sri Lankan associate Buhary Syed Abu Tahir.[81] This was further revealed in the Scomi Precision Engineering nuclear scandal surrounding Scomi CEO Shah Hakim Zain and Kamaluddin Abdullah [ms], son of former Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi.[82]

Libya negotiated with the United States to roll back its nuclear program to have economic sanctions lifted, effected by the Iran and Libya Sanctions Act, and shipped centrifuges to the United States that were identified as P-1 models by the American inspectors.[77] Ultimately, the Bush administration launched its investigation of Khan, focusing on his personal role, when Libya handed over a list of its suppliers.[77] Friedrich Tinner, a nuclear engineer and friend of Khan since their days at the Leuven University, was one of the heads of Libya's nuclear programme and worked in nuclear enrichment for Libya and Pakistan.[83] In 2008, German nuclear engineer Gotthard Lerch [de] was convicted and sentenced to five years and six months in prison for procuring centrifuges for Libya from Khan, Lerch also acted as Khan's middleman for Iran.[84][85] Alfred Hempel, a German businessman, arranged the shipment of gas centrifuge parts from Khan in Pakistan to Libya and Iran via Dubai.[86]

The "A. Q. Khan network" involved numerous shell companies set-up by Khan in Dubai to obtain equipment necessary for nuclear enrichment.[82] Shahid Bagheri Industrial Group [ko] of Iran's Defense Industries Organization was involved in nuclear proliferation for Iran and North Korea through China.[87] Parts needed for nuclear enrichment in Pakistan were also imported by Khan from several Japanese companies.[88]

Security hearings, pardon, and aftermath

Starting in 2001, Khan served as an adviser on science and technology in the Musharraf administration and had become a public figure who enjoyed much support from his country's political conservative sphere.[77] In 2003, the Bush administration reportedly turned over evidence of a nuclear proliferation network that implicated Khan's role to the Musharraf administration. Khan was dismissed from his post on 31 January 2004.[77] On 4 February 2004, Khan appeared on Pakistan Television (PTV) and confessed to running a proliferation ring, and transferring technology to Iran between 1989 and 1991, and to North Korea and Libya between 1991 and 1997.[89][90] The Musharraf administration avoided arresting Khan but launched security hearings on Khan who confessed to the military investigators that former Chief of Army Staff General Mirza Aslam Beg had given authorisation for technology transfer to Iran.[91]

On 5 February 2004, President Pervez Musharraf issued a pardon to Khan as he feared that the issue would be politicised by his political rivals.[92] Despite the pardon, Khan, who had strong conservative support, had badly damaged the political credibility of the Musharraf administration and the image of the United States who was attempting to win hearts and minds of local populations during the height of the Insurgency in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.[93] While the local television news media aired sympathetic documentaries on Khan, the opposition parties in the country protested so strongly that the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad had pointed out to the Bush administration that the successor to Musharraf could be less friendly towards the United States. This restrained the Bush administration from applying further direct pressure on Musharraf due to a strategic calculation that it might cause the loss of Musharraf as an ally.[93] In December 2006, the Weapons of Mass Destruction Commission (WMDC), headed by Hans Blix, stated that Khan could not have acted alone "without the awareness of the Pakistan Government".[94] Blix's statement was also reciprocated by the United States government, with one anonymous American government intelligence official quoted by independent journalist and author Seymour Hersh: "Suppose if Edward Teller had suddenly decided to spread nuclear technology around the world. Could he really do that without the American government knowing?".[93]

In 2007, the U.S. and European Commission politicians as well as IAEA officials had made several strong calls to have Khan interrogated by IAEA investigators, given the lingering scepticism about the disclosures made by Pakistan, but Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz, who remained supportive of Khan and spoke highly of him, strongly dismissed the calls by terming it as "case closed".[95]

In 2008, the security hearings were officially terminated by Chairman joint chiefs General Tariq Majid who marked the details of debriefings as "classified".[96] In 2008, in an interview, Khan laid the whole blame on former President Pervez Musharraf, and labelled Musharraf as the "Big Boss" for proliferation deals.[8] In 2012, Khan also implicated Benazir Bhutto's administration in proliferation matters, pointing to the fact as she had issued "clear directions in thi[s] regard."[93] Khan also said that he was persecuted because he was a Muhajir.[97]

Government work, academia, and political advocacy

Khan's strong advocacy for nuclear sharing of technology eventually led to his ostracisation by much of the scientific community, but Khan was still quite welcome in his country's political and military circles.: 151 [34] After leaving the directorship of the Khan Research Laboratories in 2001, Khan briefly joined the Musharraf administration as a policy adviser on science and technology on a request from President Musharraf.[77] In this capacity, Khan promoted increased defence spending on his nation's missile program to counter the perceived threats from the Indian missile program and advised the Musharraf administration on space policy. He presented the idea of using the Ghauri missile system as an expendable launch system to launch satellites into space.[98][99]

At the height of the proliferation controversy in 2007, Khan was paid tribute by Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz on state television while commenting in the last part of his speech, Aziz stressed: "The services of [nuclear] scientist ... Dr. [Abdul] Qadeer Khan are "unforgettable" for the country".[95]

In the 1990s, Khan secured a fellowship with the Pakistan Academy of Sciences – he served as its president in 1996–97.[100] Khan published two books on material science and started publishing his articles from KRL in the 1980s.[101] Gopal S. Upadhyaya, an Indian metallurgist who attended Khan's conference and met him along with Kuldip Nayar, reportedly described him as being a proud Pakistani who wanted to show the world that scientists from Pakistan are inferior to no one in the world.[101] Khan also served as project director of Ghulam Ishaq Khan Institute of Engineering Sciences and Technology and briefly tenured as professor of physics before joining the faculty of the Hamdard University; where he remained on the board of directors of the university up until his death in 2021.[100] Later, Khan helped established the A. Q. Khan Institute of Biotechnology and Genetic Engineering at Karachi University.[100]

In 2012, Khan announced the formation of a conservative political advocacy group, Tehreek-e-Tahaffuz-e-Pakistan ('Movement for the Protection of Pakistan'). It was subsequently dissolved in 2013.[102]

Illness and death

In August 2021, Khan was admitted to Khan Research Laboratories Hospital after testing positive for COVID-19.[103] Khan died on 10 October 2021, at the age of 85, after being transferred to a hospital in Islamabad with lung problems.[104] He was given a state funeral at the Faisal Mosque before being buried at the H-8 graveyard in Islamabad.[105]

The Prime Minister of Pakistan, Imran Khan, expressed grief over his death in a tweet adding that "for the people of Pakistan he was a national icon". President of Pakistan Arif Alvi also expressed sadness adding that "a grateful nation will never forget his services".[105]

Legacy

 
Khan attending literary conference with members of a civic society in 2017. Despite controversy, Khan remained a popular public figure.[18]

During his time in the atomic bomb project, Khan pioneered research in the thermal quantum field theory and condensed matter physics, while he co-authored articles on chemical reactions of the highly unstable isotope particles in the controlled physical system.[106] He maintained his stance of the use of controversial technological solutions to both military and civilian problems, including the use of military technologies for civilian welfare. Khan also remained a vigorous advocate for a nuclear testing program and defence strength through nuclear weapons. He justified Pakistan's nuclear deterrence program as sparing his country the fate of Iraq or Libya.[107] In an interview in 2011, Khan maintained his stance on peace through strength and vigorously defended the nuclear weapons program as part of the deterrence policy:

[P]akistan's motivation for nuclear weapons arose from a need to prevent "nuclear blackmail" by India. Had Iraq and Libya been nuclear powers, they wouldn't have been destroyed in the way we have seen recently. ... If (Pakistan) had an [atomic] capability before 1971, we [Pakistanis] would not have lost half of our country after a disgraceful defeat.

— Abdul Qadeer Khan, statement on 16 May 2011, published in Newsweek[108]

During his work on the nuclear weapons program and onwards, Khan faced heated and intense criticism from his fellow theorists, most notably Pervez Hoodbhoy who contested his scientific understanding in quantum physics.[109] In addition, Khan's false claims that he was the "father" of the atomic bomb project since its inception and his personal attacks on Munir Ahmad Khan caused even greater animosity from his fellow theorists, and most particularly, within the general physics community, such as the Pakistan Physics Society.[110][109]

Various motivations have been cited for Khan's role in the proliferation of nuclear weapons. According to the editor-in-chief of Foreign Policy, Moisés Naím, although his actions were certainly ideological or political in nature, Khan's motives remain essentially financial. This is evidenced, according to him, by his commercial maneuvers, his presence in North Korean trade as well as his real estate ownerships.[111] For instance, Khan owned the Hendrina Khan Hotel in Timbuktu, named after his wife. It was one of dozens of his commercial enterprises. To build his hotel in Timbuktu, he reportedly used a Pakistan Air Force C-130 transport aircraft in the early 2000s to transport carved wooden furniture. The plane landed at Tripoli Airport in Libya and the cargo was then taken to Timbuktu by road as it was unable to land in Mali. Khan himself accompanied the furniture from Islamabad.[112] His wife, two daughters and brother Abdul Quyuim Khan were all named in the Panama Papers in 2016 as owners of Wahdat Ltd., an offshore company registered in the Bahamas.[113]

Bruno Tertrais, a senior researcher at the Foundation for Strategic Research states: "Khan's motivations were complex and evolving (...) The primary motivation seems to have been to ensure the legitimacy of his role in building Pakistan's nuclear force (...) The second motivation, which has become more important over time, is personal enrichment. Finally, the third important element of varying importance depending on the hypothesis: Khan's more or less diffuse desire to see other Muslim countries access nuclear power."[114]

In spite of the proliferation controversy and his volatile personality, Khan remained a popular public figure and has been as a symbol of national pride with many in Pakistan who see him as a national hero.[107][96] While Khan has been bestowed with many medals and honours by the federal government and universities in Pakistan, Khan also remains the only citizen of Pakistan to have been honoured twice with the Nishan-e-Imtiaz.[115][116]

Publications

Selected research papers and patents

Nuclear and material physics

  • Dilation investigation of metallic phase transformation in 18% Ni maraging steels, Proceedings of the International Conf. on Martensitic Transformations (1986), The Japan Institute of Metals, pp. 560–565.
  • The spread of Nuclear weapons among nations: Militarization or Development, pp. 417–430. (Ref. Nuclear War Nuclear Proliferation and their consequences "Proceedings of the 5th International Colloquium organised by the Group De Bellerive Geneva 27–29 June 1985", Edited by: Sadruddin Aga Khan, Published by Clarendon Press-Oxford 1986).
  • Flow-induced vibrations in Gas-tube assembly of centrifuges. Journal of Nuclear Science and Technology, 23(9) (September 1986), pp. 819–827.
  • Dimensional anisotropy in 18% of maraging steel,[118] Seven National Symposium on Frontiers in Physics, written with Anwar-ul-Haq, Mohammad Farooq, S. Qaisar, published at the Pakistan Physics Society (1998).
  • Thermodynamics of Non-equilibrium phases in Electron-beam rapid solidification,[106] Proceedings of the Second National Symposium on Frontiers in Physics, written with A. Tauqeer, Fakhar Hashmi, publisher Pakistan Physics Society (1988).

Books

  • Khan, Abdul Qadeer (1972). Advances in Physical Metallurgy (in English, German, and Dutch). Amsterdam, Netherlands: Elsevier Press.
  • Khan, Abdul Qadeer (1983). Metallurgical Thermodynamics and Kinetics (in English, German, and Dutch). Islamabad, Pakistan: The Proceedings of the Pakistan Academy of Sciences.
  • Khan, Abdul Qadeer; Hussain, Syed Shabbir; Kamran, Mujahid (1997). Dr. A.Q. Khan on science and education. Islamabad, Pakistan: Sang-e-Meel Publications. ISBN 978-969-35-0821-5.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Though other people such as Munir Ahmad Khan and Zulfikar Ali Bhutto have also been accorded that title.[4] Khan has also been titled Mohsin-e-Pakistan (lit.'Protector of Pakistan') by the local media.[2][5]

References

Citations

  1. ^ "The Wrath of Khan". The Atlantic. 4 February 2004. from the original on 14 May 2008. Retrieved 26 September 2010.
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Bibliography

  • Burr, William. "The 'Labors of Atlas, Sisyphus, or Hercules'? US Gas-Centrifuge Policy and Diplomacy, 1954–60." The International History Review 37.3 (2015): 431–457.
  • Khan, Abdul Qadeer (2010). "Sehar Honay Tak: Dr. A.Q. Khan gave us the sense of security, Javed Hashmi.". In Khan, Abdul Qadeer (ed.). Sehar Honay Tak. Islamabad, Pakistan: Ali Masud books. pp. 1–158.[clarification needed]
  • Upadhyaya, Gopal S. (2011). "Dr. A.Q. Khan of Pakistan". Men of Metals and Materials: My Memoires. Bloomington, IN: iUniverse.com. pp. 138–140.
  • Rahman, Shahid (1998). "Dr. A. Q. Khan: Nothing Succeed like Success". In Rahman, Shahid (ed.). Long Road to Chagai. Islamabad, Pakistan: Printwise publication. pp. 49–60. ISBN 969-8500-00-6.
  • Fitzpatrick, Mark (2007). "Dr. A. Q. Khan and the rise and fall of proliferation network". Nuclear black markets. London, UK: International Institute for Strategic Studies. ISBN 978-0-86079-201-7.
  • Kan, Shirley A. (2009). "A.Q. Khan's nuclear network". China and Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction and Missiles: Policy issues. Washington, DC: Congressional Research Service. pp. 5–6.
  • Cooney, Thomas E.; Denny, David Anthony, eds. (2005). "A.Q. Khan and the nuclear market". E=mc²: Today's Nuclear Equation. Washington, DC: United States: Judith S. Seagal. pp. 30–33.[clarification needed]
  • Bernstein, Jeremy (2008). Physicists on Wall Street and other essays on science and society. New York: Springer. ISBN 978-0387765068.

Web links

External links

Written by Abdul Qadeer Khan

  • Heart disease Random thoughts 11 June 2012
  • More on thalassemia 4 June 2012
  • 28 May 2012
  • Great expectations 14 May 2012
  • Mass graves 30 April 2012
  • I saved my country 1 November 2012

Online books

  • Scott-Clark, Adrian Levy & Catherine (2007). Deception: Pakistan, the United States, and the secret trade in nuclear weapons (1st ed.). New York: Walker & Co. ISBN 978-0-8027-1554-8.
  • Upadhyaya, Gopal S. (1 May 2011). "Dr. A.Q. Khan of Pakistan". Men of metals and materials: my memoirs. Bloomington, IN: iUniverse. p. 138. ISBN 978-1-4620-1840-6.
Government offices
Preceded by Science Advisor to the Presidential Secretariat
1 January 2001 – 31 January 2004
Succeeded by

abdul, qadeer, khan, cricketer, named, abdul, qadir, cricketer, fpas, ɑː, ɑː, ɪər, ɑː, dəl, deer, kahn, urdu, عبد, القدیر, خان, april, 1936, october, 2021, known, khan, pakistani, nuclear, physicist, metallurgical, engineer, colloquially, known, father, pakist. For the cricketer named Abdul Qadeer Khan see Abdul Qadir cricketer Abdul Qadeer Khan NI HI FPAS ˈ ɑː b d el ˈ k ɑː d ɪer ˈ k ɑː n AHB del KAH deer KAHN Urdu عبد القدیر خان 1 April 1936 10 October 2021 3 known as A Q Khan was a Pakistani nuclear physicist and metallurgical engineer who is colloquially known as the father of Pakistan s atomic weapons program a Abdul Qadeer KhanNI HI FPASڈاکٹر عبدالقدیر خانKhan in 2017Born 1936 04 01 1 April 1936Bhopal Bhopal State British IndiaDied10 October 2021 2021 10 10 aged 85 Islamabad PakistanNationalityPakistaniAlma materUniversity of KarachiDelft University of TechnologyCatholic University of LouvainD J Sindh Government Science College 2 Known forPakistan s nuclear weapons program gaseous diffusion martensite and graphene morphologySpouseHendrina Reternik m 1963 wbr Children2AwardsNishan i Imtiaz 1996 1999 Hilal i Imtiaz 1989 Scientific careerFieldsMetallurgical engineeringInstitutionsKhan Research LaboratoriesGIK Institute of TechnologyHamdard UniversityUrenco GroupThesisThe effect of morphology on the strength of copper based martensites 1972 Doctoral advisorMartin J Brabers 1 Science Advisor to the Presidential SecretariatIn office 1 January 2001 31 January 2004PresidentPervez MusharrafPreceded byIshfaq AhmadSucceeded byAtta ur RahmanPersonal detailsPolitical partyTehreek e Tahaffuz e Pakistan 2012 2013 Websitedraqkhan com pkAn emigre Muhajir from India who migrated to Pakistan in 1952 Khan was educated in the metallurgical engineering departments of Western European technical universities where he pioneered studies in phase transitions of metallic alloys uranium metallurgy and isotope separation based on gas centrifuges After learning of India s Smiling Buddha nuclear test in 1974 Khan joined his nation s clandestine efforts to develop atomic weapons when he founded the Khan Research Laboratories KRL in 1976 and was both its chief scientist and director for many years In January 2004 Khan was subjected to a debriefing by the Musharraf administration over evidence of nuclear proliferation handed to them by the Bush administration of the United States 6 7 Khan admitted his role in running a nuclear proliferation network only to retract his statements in later years when he leveled accusations at the former administration of Pakistan s Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto in 1990 and also directed allegations at President Musharraf over the controversy in 2008 8 9 10 Khan was accused of selling nuclear secrets illegally and was put under house arrest in 2004 After years of house arrest Khan successfully filed a lawsuit against the Federal Government of Pakistan at the Islamabad High Court whose verdict declared his debriefing unconstitutional and freed him on 6 February 2009 11 12 The United States reacted negatively to the verdict and the Obama administration issued an official statement warning that Khan still remained a serious proliferation risk 13 After his death on 10 October 2021 he was given a state funeral at Faisal Mosque before being buried at the H 8 graveyard in Islamabad Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career in Europe 3 Scientific career in Pakistan 3 1 Smiling Buddha and initiation 3 2 Khan Research Laboratories and atomic bomb program 3 3 Nuclear tests Chagai I 4 Proliferation controversy 4 1 Court controversy and U S objections 4 2 North Korea Iran and Libya 4 3 Security hearings pardon and aftermath 5 Government work academia and political advocacy 6 Illness and death 7 Legacy 8 Publications 8 1 Selected research papers and patents 8 1 1 Nuclear and material physics 8 2 Books 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 11 1 Citations 11 2 Bibliography 12 External linksEarly life and educationAbdul Qadeer Khan was born on 1 April 1936 in Bhopal a city then in the erstwhile British Indian princely state of Bhopal State and now the capital city of Madhya Pradesh He was a Muhajir of Urdu speaking Pashtun origin 14 15 2 5 16 His father Abdul Ghafoor was a schoolteacher who once worked for the Ministry of Education and his mother Zulekha was a housewife with a very religious mindset 17 His older siblings along with other family members had emigrated to Pakistan during the partition of India in 1947 who would often write to Khan s parents about the new life they had found in Pakistan 18 After his matriculation from a local school in Bhopal in 1952 Khan emigrated from India to Pakistan on the Sind Mail train partly due to the reservation politics 19 254 at that time and religious violence in India during his youth had left an indelible impression on his world view 20 Upon settling in Karachi with his family Khan briefly attended the D J Science College before transferring to the University of Karachi where he graduated in 1956 with a Bachelor of Science BSc in physics with a concentration on solid state physics 21 22 From 1956 to 1959 Khan was employed by the Karachi Metropolitan Corporation city government as an Inspector of weights and measures and applied for a scholarship that allowed him to study in West Germany 23 24 In 1961 Khan departed for West Germany to study material science at the Technical University in West Berlin where he academically excelled in courses in metallurgy but left West Berlin when he switched to the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands in 1965 18 In 1962 while on vacation in The Hague he met Hendrina Henny Reternik a British passport holder who had been born in South Africa to Dutch expatriates She spoke Dutch and had spent her childhood in Africa before returning with her parents to the Netherlands where she lived as a registered foreigner In 1963 he married Henny in a modest Muslim ceremony at Pakistan s embassy in The Hague Khan and Henny together had two daughters Dina Khan who is a doctor and Ayesha Khan 25 26 27 In 1967 Khan obtained an engineer s degree in materials technology an equivalent to a Master of Science MS offered in English speaking nations such as Pakistan and joined the doctoral program in metallurgical engineering at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in Belgium 28 He worked under Belgian professor Martin J Brabers at Leuven University who supervised his doctoral thesis which Khan successfully defended and graduated with a DEng in metallurgical engineering in 1972 28 His thesis included fundamental work on martensite and its extended industrial applications in the field of graphene morphology 29 Career in EuropeIn 1972 Khan joined the Physics Dynamics Research Laboratory or in Dutch FDO an engineering firm subsidiary of Verenigde Machinefabrieken VMF based in Amsterdam from Brabers s recommendation 30 The FDO was a subcontractor for Ultra Centrifuge Nederland of the British German Dutch uranium enrichment consortium URENCO which was operating a uranium enrichment plant in Almelo and employed gaseous centrifuge method to assure a supply of nuclear fuel for nuclear power plants in the Netherlands 31 Soon after Khan left FDO when URENCO offered him a senior technical position initially conducting studies on the uranium metallurgy 32 87 Uranium enrichment is an extremely difficult process because uranium in its natural state is composed of just 0 71 of uranium 235 U235 which is a fissile material 99 3 of uranium 238 U238 which is non fissile and 0 0055 of uranium 234 U234 a daughter product which is also a non fissile 33 The URENCO Group utilised the Zippe type of centrifugal method to electromagnetically separate the isotopes U234 U235 and U238 from sublimed raw uranium by rotating the uranium hexafluoride UF6 gas at up to 100 000 revolutions per minute rpm 30 49 Khan whose work was based on physical metallurgy of the uranium metal 32 87 eventually dedicated his investigations on improving the efficiency of the centrifuges by 1973 74 34 140 Frits Veerman Khan s colleague at FDO uncovered nuclear espionage at Almelo where Khan had stolen designs of the centrifuges from URENCO for the nuclear weapons programme of Pakistan 35 Veerman became aware of the espionage when Khan had taken classified URENCO documents home to be copied and translated by his Dutch speaking wife and had asked Veerman to photograph some of them 36 37 In 1975 Khan was transferred to a less sensitive section when URENCO became suspicious and he subsequently returned to Pakistan with his wife and two daughters Khan was sentenced in absentia to four years in prison in 1983 by the Netherlands for espionage but the conviction was later overturned due to a legal technicality 38 Ruud Lubbers Prime Minister of the Netherlands at the time later said that the General Intelligence and Security Service BVD was aware of Khan s espionage activities but he was allowed to continue due to pressure from the CIA with the US backing Pakistan during the Cold War 39 40 This was also highlighted when despite Archie Pervez Khan s associate for nuclear procurement in the US being convicted in 1988 no action was taken against Khan or his proliferation network by the US government which needed the support of Pakistan during the Soviet Afghan War 41 Henk Slebos nl a Dutch engineer and businessman who had studied metallurgy with Khan at the Delft University of Technology continued providing goods needed for enriching uranium to Khan in Pakistan through his company Slebos Research Slebos was sentenced in 1985 to one year in prison but the sentence was reduced on appeal in 1986 to six months of probation and a fine of 20 000 guilders Though Slebos continued to export goods to Pakistan and was again sentenced to one year in prison and a fine of around 100 000 was imposed on his company 42 43 Ernst Piffl was convicted and sentenced to three and a half years in prison by Germany in 1998 for supplying nuclear centrifuge parts through his company Team GmbH to Khan s Khan Research Laboratories in Kahuta 44 Asher Karni a Hungarian South African businessman was sentenced to three years in prison in the US for the sale of restricted nuclear equipment to Pakistan through Humayun Khan an associate of A Q Khan and his Pakland PME Corporation 45 Scientific career in PakistanSmiling Buddha and initiation Main articles Operation Smiling Buddha and Project 706 Upon learning of India s surprise nuclear test Smiling Buddha in May 1974 Khan wanted to contribute to efforts to build an atomic bomb and met with officials at the Pakistani Embassy in The Hague who dissuaded him by saying it was hard to find a job in PAEC as a metallurgist 46 In August 1974 Khan wrote a letter which went unnoticed but he directed another letter through the Pakistani ambassador to the Prime Minister s Secretariat in September 1974 34 140 Unbeknownst to Khan his nation s scientists were already working towards feasibility of the atomic bomb under a secretive crash weapons program since 20 January 1972 that was being directed by Munir Ahmad Khan a reactor physicist which calls into question of his father of claim 47 72 48 After reading his letter Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto had his military secretary run a security check on Khan who was unknown at that time for verification and asked PAEC to dispatch a team under Bashiruddin Mahmood that met Khan at his family home in Almelo and directed Bhutto s letter to meet him in Islamabad 34 141 49 Upon arriving in December 1974 Khan took a taxi straight to the Prime Minister s Secretariat He met with Prime Minister Bhutto in the presence of Ghulam Ishaq Khan Agha Shahi and Mubashir Hassan where he explained the significance of highly enriched uranium with the meeting ending with Bhutto s remark He seems to make sense 34 140 141 50 60 61 The next day Khan met with Munir Ahmad and other senior scientists where he focused the discussion on production of highly enriched uranium HEU against weapon grade plutonium and explained to Bhutto why he thought the idea of plutonium would not work 34 143 144 Later Khan was advised by several officials in the Bhutto administration to remain in the Netherlands to learn more about centrifuge technology but continue to provide consultation on the Project 706 enrichment program led by Mahmood 34 143 144 By December 1975 Khan was given a transfer to a less sensitive section when URENCO became suspicious of his indiscreet open sessions with Mahmood to instruct him on centrifuge technology Khan began to fear for his safety in the Netherlands ultimately insisting on returning home 34 147 Khan Research Laboratories and atomic bomb program See also Pakistan and weapons of mass destruction Rotation around a fixed axis Gaseous diffusion and Analytical mechanics nbsp Diagram of the principles of a Zippe type gas centrifuge with U 238 represented in dark blue and U 235 represented in light blueIn April 1976 Khan joined the atomic bomb program and became part of the enrichment division initially collaborating with Khalil Qureshi a physical chemist 50 62 63 Calculations performed by him were valuable contributions to centrifuges and a vital link to nuclear weapon research but continue to push for his ideas for feasibility of weapon grade uranium even though it had a low priority with most efforts still aimed to produce military grade plutonium 47 73 74 50 Because of his interest in uranium metallurgy and his frustration at having been passed over for director of the uranium division the job was instead given to Bashiruddin Mahmood Khan refused to engage in further calculations and caused tensions with other researchers 34 147 148 Khan became highly unsatisfied and bored with the research led by Mahmood finally he submitted a critical report to Bhutto in which he explained that the enrichment program was nowhere near success 50 62 63 Upon reviewing the report Bhutto sensed a great danger as the scientists were split between military grade uranium and plutonium and informed Khan to take over the enrichment division from Mahmood who separated the program from PAEC by founding the Engineering Research Laboratories ERL 50 63 64 34 149 150 The ERL functioned directly under the Army s Corps of Engineers with Khan being its chief scientist and the army engineers located the national site at isolated lands in Kahuta for the enrichment program as ideal site for preventing accidents 51 The PAEC did not forgo their electromagnetic isotope separation program and a parallel program was led by G D Alam at the Air Research Laboratories ARL located at Chaklala Air Force Base even though Alam had not seen a centrifuge and only had a rudimentary knowledge of the Manhattan Project 47 72 110 34 144 During this time Alam accomplished a great feat by perfectly balancing the rotation of the first generation of centrifuge to 30 000 rpm and was immediately dispatched to ERL which was suffering from many setbacks in setting up its own program under Khan s direction based on centrifuge technology dependent on URENCO s methods 47 75 76 Khan eventually committed to work on problems involving the differential equations concerning the rotation around fixed axis to perfectly balance the machine under influence of gravity and the design of first generation of centrifuges became functional after Khan and Alam succeeded in separating the 235U and 238U isotopes from raw natural uranium 47 78 79 52 In the military circles Khan s scientific ability was well recognised and was often known with his moniker Centrifuge Khan 34 151 and the national laboratory was renamed after him upon the visit of President Muhammad Zia ul Haq in 1983 53 In spite of his role Khan was never in charge of the actual designs of the nuclear devices their calculations and eventual weapons testing which remained under the directorship of Munir Ahmad Khan and the PAEC 53 The PAEC s senior scientists who worked with him and under him remember him as an egomaniacal lightweight 53 given to exaggerating his scientific achievements in centrifuges 53 At one point Munir Khan said that most of the scientists who work on the development of atomic bomb projects were extremely serious They were sobered by the weight of what they don t know Abdul Qadeer Khan is a showman 53 34 During the timeline of the bomb program Khan published papers on analytical mechanics of balancing of rotating masses and thermodynamics with mathematical rigour to compete but still failed to impress his fellow theorists at PAEC generally in the physics community 53 In later years Khan became a staunch critic of Munir Khan s research in physics and on many occasions tried unsuccessfully to belittle Munir Khan s role in the atomic bomb projects 53 Their scientific rivalry became public and widely popular in the physics community and seminars held in the country over the years 54 Nuclear tests Chagai I Main article Chagai I Further information Boosted fission weapon nbsp Visible effect of the nuclear weapons test Chagai I conducted in the Ras Koh Hills of the Sulaiman Mountains May 1998 53 All five nuclear devices were boosted fission devices that used highly enriched uranium 34 145 146 Many of his theorists were unsure that military grade uranium would be feasible on time without the centrifuges since Alam had notified PAEC that the blueprints were incomplete and lacked the scientific information needed even for the basic gas centrifuges 47 75 76 34 145 146 Calculations by Tasneem Shah and confirmed by Alam showed that Khan s earlier estimation of the quantity of uranium needing enrichment for the production of weapon grade uranium was possible even with the small number of centrifuges deployed 47 77 Khan produced the designs of the centrifuges from URENCO However they were riddled with serious technical errors and while he bought some components for analysis they were broken pieces making them useless for quick assembly of a centrifuge 48 Its separative work unit SWU rate was extremely low so that it would have to be rotated for thousands of RPMs at the cost of millions of taxpayers money Alam maintained 55 Though Khan s knowledge of copper metallurgy greatly aided the innovation of centrifuges clarify it was the calculations and validation that came from his team of fellow theorists including mathematician Tasneem Shah and Alam who solved the differential equations concerning rotation around a fixed axis under the influence of gravity which led Khan to come up with the innovative centrifuge designs 34 146 55 nbsp Diagram of the gun type device developed by the United StatesScientists have said that Khan would have never got any closer to success without the assistance of Alam and others 56 The issue is controversial 47 79 Khan maintained to his biographer that when it came to defending the centrifuge approach and really putting work into it both Shah and Alam refused 47 79 80 Khan was also very critical of PAEC s concentrated efforts towards developing a plutonium implosion type nuclear devices and provided strong advocacy for the relatively simple gun type device that only had to work with high enriched uranium a design concept of gun type device he eventually submitted to Ministry of Energy MoE and Ministry of Defense MoD 34 152 48 Khan downplayed the importance of plutonium despite many of the theorists maintaining that plutonium and the fuel cycle has its significance and he insisted on the uranium route to the Bhutto administration when France s offer for an extraction plant was in the offing 54 57 Though he had helped to come up with the centrifuge designs and had been a long time proponent of the concept Khan was not chosen to head the development project to test his nation s first nuclear weapons his reputation of a thorny personality likely played a role in this 58 after India conducted its series of nuclear tests Pokhran II in 1998 58 Intervention by the Chairman Joint Chiefs General Jehangir Karamat allowed Khan to be a participant and eye witness his nation s first nuclear test Chagai I in 1998 58 52 At a news conference Khan confirmed the testing of the boosted fission devices while stating that it was KRL s highly enriched uranium HEU that was used in the detonation of Pakistan s first nuclear devices on 28 May 1998 52 Many of Khan s colleagues were irritated that he seemed to enjoy taking full credit for something he had only a small part in and in response he authored an article Torch Bearers which appeared in The News International emphasising that he was not alone in the weapon s development He made an attempt to work on the Teller Ulam design for the hydrogen bomb but the military strategists had objected to the idea as it went against the government s policy of minimum credible deterrence 47 108 34 59 Khan often got engrossed in projects which were theoretically interesting but practically unfeasible 60 Proliferation controversyFurther information Nuclear proliferation In the 1970s Khan had been very vocal about establishing a network to acquire imported electronic materials from the Dutch firms and had very little trust of PAEC s domestic manufacturing of materials despite the government accepting PAEC s arguments for the long term sustainability of the nuclear weapons program 34 148 52 61 62 63 At one point Khan reached out to the People s Republic of China for acquiring the uranium hexafluoride UF6 when he attended a conference there the Pakistani Government sent it back to the People s Republic of China asking KRL to use the UF6 supplied by PAEC 34 150 151 In an investigative report published by Nuclear Threat Initiative Chinese scientists were reportedly present at Khan Research Laboratories KRL in Kahuta in the early 1980s 64 In 1996 the U S intelligence community maintained that China provided magnetic rings for special suspension bearings mounted at the top of rotating centrifuge cylinders In 2005 it was revealed that President Zia ul Haq s military government had KRL run a HEU programme in the Chinese nuclear weapons program 65 Khan said that KRL has built a centrifuge facility for China in Hanzhong city 65 China also exported some of DF 11 s ballistic missile technology to Pakistan where Pakistan s Ghaznavi and Shaheen II borrowed from DF 11 technology 66 67 68 In 1982 an unnamed Arab country reached out to Khan for the sale of centrifuge technology Khan was very receptive to the financial offer but one scientist alerted the Zia administration which investigated the matter only for Khan to vehemently deny such an offer was made to him 69 The Zia administration tasked Major General Ali Nawab an engineering officer to keep surveillance on Khan which he did until 1983 when he retired from his military service and Khan s activities went undetected for several years after 70 Court controversy and U S objections In 1979 the Dutch government eventually probed Khan on suspicion of nuclear espionage but he was not prosecuted due to lack of evidence though it did file a criminal complaint against him in a local court in Amsterdam which sentenced him in absentia in 1985 to four years in prison 38 71 Upon learning of the sentence Khan filed an appeal through his attorney S M Zafar who teamed up with the administration of Leuven University and successfully argued that the technical information requested by Khan was commonly found and taught in undergraduate and doctoral physics at the university the court exonerated Khan by overturning his sentence on a legal technicality 71 35 53 Reacting to the suspicions of espionage Khan stressed that I had requested for it as we had no library of our own at KRL at that time All the research work at Kahuta was the result of our innovation and struggle We did not receive any technical know how from abroad but we cannot reject the use of books magazines and research papers in this connection 53 In 1979 the Zia administration which was making an effort to keep their nuclear capability discreet to avoid pressure from the Reagan administration of the United States U S nearly lost its patience with Khan when he reportedly attempted to meet with a local journalist to announce the existence of the enrichment program 47 82 During the Indian Operation Brasstacks military exercise in 1987 Khan gave another interview to local press and stated the Americans had been well aware of the success of the atomic quest of Pakistan allegedly confirming the speculation of technology export 72 At both instances the Zia administration sharply denied Khan s statement and a furious President Zia met with Khan and used a tough tone promising Khan severe repercussions had he not retracted all of his statements which Khan immediately did by contacting several news correspondents 73 In 1996 Khan again appeared on his country s news channels and maintained that at no stage was the program of producing 90 weapons grade enriched uranium ever stopped despite Benazir Bhutto s administration reaching an understanding with the United States Clinton administration to cap the program to 3 enrichment in 1990 73 North Korea Iran and Libya nbsp The centrifuges removed from Libya by the United States as seen in the image were developed by Khan known as P1 when he worked for URENCO in the 1970s 74 The innovation and improved designs of centrifuges were marked as classified for export restriction by the Pakistan government though Khan was still in possession of earlier designs of centrifuges from when he worked for URENCO in the 1970s 34 156 158 In 1990 the United States alleged that highly sensitive information was being exported to North Korea in exchange for rocket engines Pakistan s Ghauri missile was based entirely on North Korea s Rodong 1 as reflected in its technology The project was supported by Benazir Bhutto who consulted for the project with North Korea and facilitated the technology transfer to Khan Research Laboratories in 1993 75 On multiple occasions Khan levelled accusations against Benazir Bhutto s administration of providing secret enrichment information on a compact disc CD to North Korea these accusations were denied by Benazir Bhutto s staff and military personnel 76 113 114 77 78 Between 1987 and 1989 Khan secretly leaked knowledge of centrifuges to Iran without notifying the Pakistan Government 78 although this issue is a subject of political controversy 72 70 In 2003 the European Union pressured Iran to accept tougher inspections of its nuclear program and the International Atomic Energy Agency IAEA revealed an enrichment facility in the city of Natanz Iran utilising gas centrifuges based on the designs and methods used by URENCO 77 The IAEA inspectors quickly identified the centrifuges as P 1 types which had been obtained from a foreign intermediary in 1989 and the Iranian negotiators turned over the names of their suppliers which identified Khan as one of them 77 Heinz Mebus a German engineer and businessman and college friend of Khan was named as one of the suppliers acting as a middleman for Khan 79 In May 1998 Newsweek reported that Khan had sent Iraq centrifuge designs which were apparently confiscated by the UNMOVIC officials Iraqi officials said the documents were authentic but that they had not agreed to work with A Q Khan fearing an ISI sting operation due to strained relations between two countries 80 In 2003 merchant vessel BBC China was caught carrying nuclear centrifuges to Libya from Malaysia the Scomi Group and Khan Research Laboratories were supplying nuclear parts to Libya through Khan s Dubai based Sri Lankan associate Buhary Syed Abu Tahir 81 This was further revealed in the Scomi Precision Engineering nuclear scandal surrounding Scomi CEO Shah Hakim Zain and Kamaluddin Abdullah ms son of former Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi 82 Libya negotiated with the United States to roll back its nuclear program to have economic sanctions lifted effected by the Iran and Libya Sanctions Act and shipped centrifuges to the United States that were identified as P 1 models by the American inspectors 77 Ultimately the Bush administration launched its investigation of Khan focusing on his personal role when Libya handed over a list of its suppliers 77 Friedrich Tinner a nuclear engineer and friend of Khan since their days at the Leuven University was one of the heads of Libya s nuclear programme and worked in nuclear enrichment for Libya and Pakistan 83 In 2008 German nuclear engineer Gotthard Lerch de was convicted and sentenced to five years and six months in prison for procuring centrifuges for Libya from Khan Lerch also acted as Khan s middleman for Iran 84 85 Alfred Hempel a German businessman arranged the shipment of gas centrifuge parts from Khan in Pakistan to Libya and Iran via Dubai 86 The A Q Khan network involved numerous shell companies set up by Khan in Dubai to obtain equipment necessary for nuclear enrichment 82 Shahid Bagheri Industrial Group ko of Iran s Defense Industries Organization was involved in nuclear proliferation for Iran and North Korea through China 87 Parts needed for nuclear enrichment in Pakistan were also imported by Khan from several Japanese companies 88 Security hearings pardon and aftermath Starting in 2001 Khan served as an adviser on science and technology in the Musharraf administration and had become a public figure who enjoyed much support from his country s political conservative sphere 77 In 2003 the Bush administration reportedly turned over evidence of a nuclear proliferation network that implicated Khan s role to the Musharraf administration Khan was dismissed from his post on 31 January 2004 77 On 4 February 2004 Khan appeared on Pakistan Television PTV and confessed to running a proliferation ring and transferring technology to Iran between 1989 and 1991 and to North Korea and Libya between 1991 and 1997 89 90 The Musharraf administration avoided arresting Khan but launched security hearings on Khan who confessed to the military investigators that former Chief of Army Staff General Mirza Aslam Beg had given authorisation for technology transfer to Iran 91 On 5 February 2004 President Pervez Musharraf issued a pardon to Khan as he feared that the issue would be politicised by his political rivals 92 Despite the pardon Khan who had strong conservative support had badly damaged the political credibility of the Musharraf administration and the image of the United States who was attempting to win hearts and minds of local populations during the height of the Insurgency in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 93 While the local television news media aired sympathetic documentaries on Khan the opposition parties in the country protested so strongly that the U S Embassy in Islamabad had pointed out to the Bush administration that the successor to Musharraf could be less friendly towards the United States This restrained the Bush administration from applying further direct pressure on Musharraf due to a strategic calculation that it might cause the loss of Musharraf as an ally 93 In December 2006 the Weapons of Mass Destruction Commission WMDC headed by Hans Blix stated that Khan could not have acted alone without the awareness of the Pakistan Government 94 Blix s statement was also reciprocated by the United States government with one anonymous American government intelligence official quoted by independent journalist and author Seymour Hersh Suppose if Edward Teller had suddenly decided to spread nuclear technology around the world Could he really do that without the American government knowing 93 In 2007 the U S and European Commission politicians as well as IAEA officials had made several strong calls to have Khan interrogated by IAEA investigators given the lingering scepticism about the disclosures made by Pakistan but Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz who remained supportive of Khan and spoke highly of him strongly dismissed the calls by terming it as case closed 95 In 2008 the security hearings were officially terminated by Chairman joint chiefs General Tariq Majid who marked the details of debriefings as classified 96 In 2008 in an interview Khan laid the whole blame on former President Pervez Musharraf and labelled Musharraf as the Big Boss for proliferation deals 8 In 2012 Khan also implicated Benazir Bhutto s administration in proliferation matters pointing to the fact as she had issued clear directions in thi s regard 93 Khan also said that he was persecuted because he was a Muhajir 97 Government work academia and political advocacySee also Pakistani missile research and development program Khan s strong advocacy for nuclear sharing of technology eventually led to his ostracisation by much of the scientific community but Khan was still quite welcome in his country s political and military circles 151 34 After leaving the directorship of the Khan Research Laboratories in 2001 Khan briefly joined the Musharraf administration as a policy adviser on science and technology on a request from President Musharraf 77 In this capacity Khan promoted increased defence spending on his nation s missile program to counter the perceived threats from the Indian missile program and advised the Musharraf administration on space policy He presented the idea of using the Ghauri missile system as an expendable launch system to launch satellites into space 98 99 At the height of the proliferation controversy in 2007 Khan was paid tribute by Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz on state television while commenting in the last part of his speech Aziz stressed The services of nuclear scientist Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan are unforgettable for the country 95 In the 1990s Khan secured a fellowship with the Pakistan Academy of Sciences he served as its president in 1996 97 100 Khan published two books on material science and started publishing his articles from KRL in the 1980s 101 Gopal S Upadhyaya an Indian metallurgist who attended Khan s conference and met him along with Kuldip Nayar reportedly described him as being a proud Pakistani who wanted to show the world that scientists from Pakistan are inferior to no one in the world 101 Khan also served as project director of Ghulam Ishaq Khan Institute of Engineering Sciences and Technology and briefly tenured as professor of physics before joining the faculty of the Hamdard University where he remained on the board of directors of the university up until his death in 2021 100 Later Khan helped established the A Q Khan Institute of Biotechnology and Genetic Engineering at Karachi University 100 In 2012 Khan announced the formation of a conservative political advocacy group Tehreek e Tahaffuz e Pakistan Movement for the Protection of Pakistan It was subsequently dissolved in 2013 102 Illness and deathIn August 2021 Khan was admitted to Khan Research Laboratories Hospital after testing positive for COVID 19 103 Khan died on 10 October 2021 at the age of 85 after being transferred to a hospital in Islamabad with lung problems 104 He was given a state funeral at the Faisal Mosque before being buried at the H 8 graveyard in Islamabad 105 The Prime Minister of Pakistan Imran Khan expressed grief over his death in a tweet adding that for the people of Pakistan he was a national icon President of Pakistan Arif Alvi also expressed sadness adding that a grateful nation will never forget his services 105 Legacy nbsp Khan attending literary conference with members of a civic society in 2017 Despite controversy Khan remained a popular public figure 18 During his time in the atomic bomb project Khan pioneered research in the thermal quantum field theory and condensed matter physics while he co authored articles on chemical reactions of the highly unstable isotope particles in the controlled physical system 106 He maintained his stance of the use of controversial technological solutions to both military and civilian problems including the use of military technologies for civilian welfare Khan also remained a vigorous advocate for a nuclear testing program and defence strength through nuclear weapons He justified Pakistan s nuclear deterrence program as sparing his country the fate of Iraq or Libya 107 In an interview in 2011 Khan maintained his stance on peace through strength and vigorously defended the nuclear weapons program as part of the deterrence policy P akistan s motivation for nuclear weapons arose from a need to prevent nuclear blackmail by India Had Iraq and Libya been nuclear powers they wouldn t have been destroyed in the way we have seen recently If Pakistan had an atomic capability before 1971 we Pakistanis would not have lost half of our country after a disgraceful defeat Abdul Qadeer Khan statement on 16 May 2011 published in Newsweek 108 During his work on the nuclear weapons program and onwards Khan faced heated and intense criticism from his fellow theorists most notably Pervez Hoodbhoy who contested his scientific understanding in quantum physics 109 In addition Khan s false claims that he was the father of the atomic bomb project since its inception and his personal attacks on Munir Ahmad Khan caused even greater animosity from his fellow theorists and most particularly within the general physics community such as the Pakistan Physics Society 110 109 Various motivations have been cited for Khan s role in the proliferation of nuclear weapons According to the editor in chief of Foreign Policy Moises Naim although his actions were certainly ideological or political in nature Khan s motives remain essentially financial This is evidenced according to him by his commercial maneuvers his presence in North Korean trade as well as his real estate ownerships 111 For instance Khan owned the Hendrina Khan Hotel in Timbuktu named after his wife It was one of dozens of his commercial enterprises To build his hotel in Timbuktu he reportedly used a Pakistan Air Force C 130 transport aircraft in the early 2000s to transport carved wooden furniture The plane landed at Tripoli Airport in Libya and the cargo was then taken to Timbuktu by road as it was unable to land in Mali Khan himself accompanied the furniture from Islamabad 112 His wife two daughters and brother Abdul Quyuim Khan were all named in the Panama Papers in 2016 as owners of Wahdat Ltd an offshore company registered in the Bahamas 113 Bruno Tertrais a senior researcher at the Foundation for Strategic Research states Khan s motivations were complex and evolving The primary motivation seems to have been to ensure the legitimacy of his role in building Pakistan s nuclear force The second motivation which has become more important over time is personal enrichment Finally the third important element of varying importance depending on the hypothesis Khan s more or less diffuse desire to see other Muslim countries access nuclear power 114 In spite of the proliferation controversy and his volatile personality Khan remained a popular public figure and has been as a symbol of national pride with many in Pakistan who see him as a national hero 107 96 While Khan has been bestowed with many medals and honours by the federal government and universities in Pakistan Khan also remains the only citizen of Pakistan to have been honoured twice with the Nishan e Imtiaz 115 116 Nishan e Imtiaz 1999 Nishan e Imtiaz 1996 Hilal e Imtiaz 1989 Sir Syed University of Engineering and Technology 100 60 Gold medal from universities in the country 100 University of Karachi 100 Baqai Medical University 117 Hamdard University 100 Gomal University 100 University of Engineering and Technology Lahore 100 PublicationsSelected research papers and patents Nuclear and material physics Dilation investigation of metallic phase transformation in 18 Ni maraging steels Proceedings of the International Conf on Martensitic Transformations 1986 The Japan Institute of Metals pp 560 565 The spread of Nuclear weapons among nations Militarization or Development pp 417 430 Ref Nuclear War Nuclear Proliferation and their consequences Proceedings of the 5th International Colloquium organised by the Group De Bellerive Geneva 27 29 June 1985 Edited by Sadruddin Aga Khan Published by Clarendon Press Oxford 1986 Flow induced vibrations in Gas tube assembly of centrifuges Journal of Nuclear Science and Technology 23 9 September 1986 pp 819 827 Dimensional anisotropy in 18 of maraging steel 118 Seven National Symposium on Frontiers in Physics written with Anwar ul Haq Mohammad Farooq S Qaisar published at the Pakistan Physics Society 1998 Thermodynamics of Non equilibrium phases in Electron beam rapid solidification 106 Proceedings of the Second National Symposium on Frontiers in Physics written with A Tauqeer Fakhar Hashmi publisher Pakistan Physics Society 1988 Books Khan Abdul Qadeer 1972 Advances in Physical Metallurgy in English German and Dutch Amsterdam Netherlands Elsevier Press Khan Abdul Qadeer 1983 Metallurgical Thermodynamics and Kinetics in English German and Dutch Islamabad Pakistan The Proceedings of the Pakistan Academy of Sciences Khan Abdul Qadeer Hussain Syed Shabbir Kamran Mujahid 1997 Dr A Q Khan on science and education Islamabad Pakistan Sang e Meel Publications ISBN 978 969 35 0821 5 See alsoDr A Q Khan Institute of Computer Sciences and Information Technology Dr A Q Khan Research Laboratories Pakistani missile research and development program Conservatism in Pakistan Nuclear espionage Nuclear arms race Nuclear Secrets 2007 documentary series about the nuclear race and proliferation including Khan s role therein Anwar Ali physicist Pakistani physicist charged with nuclear proliferation Peter Finke German physicist in the nuclear weapons programme of PakistanNotes Though other people such as Munir Ahmad Khan and Zulfikar Ali Bhutto have also been accorded that title 4 Khan has also been titled Mohsin e Pakistan lit Protector of Pakistan by the local media 2 5 ReferencesCitations The Wrath of Khan The Atlantic 4 February 2004 Archived from the original on 14 May 2008 Retrieved 26 September 2010 a b c Overview of Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan s Life on his 83rd Birth Anniversary ARY News 1 April 2019 Archived from the original on 10 October 2021 Retrieved 19 September 2021 Abdul Qadeer Khan at the Encyclopaedia Britannica IISS International Institute for Strategic Studies 1 May 2007 Bhutto was father of Pakistan s Atom Bomb Programme International Institute for Strategic Studies Archived from the original on 14 March 2012 Retrieved 1 May 2011 a b Tribute to Dr A Q Khan Pakistan Observer 2 April 2021 Archived from the original on 10 October 2021 Retrieved 19 September 2021 A Q Khan amp Iran Global Security Archived from the original on 24 October 2014 Retrieved 24 November 2014 Staff 16 April 2006 Chronology A Q Khan The New York Times Archived from the original on 27 March 2015 Retrieved 24 November 2014 a b Mush helped proliferate N technology AQ Khan The Times of India 6 July 2008 AQ Khan Global Security Rashid Ahmed 2012 Pakistan in the Brink Allen Lane pp 60 61 ISBN 9781846145858 IHC declares Dr A Q Khan a free citizen GEO tv 6 February 2009 Archived from the original on 15 April 2012 Retrieved 26 September 2010 Rashid Ahmed 2012 Pakistan in the Brink Allen Lane pp 63 64 ISBN 9781846145858 Warrick Joby Warrick 7 February 2009 Nuclear Scientist A Q Khan Is Freed From House Arrest The Washington Post Retrieved 2 October 2016 TV Riphah Dr Abdul Qadeer khan Share his Experience Must Watch YouTube YouTube Retrieved 30 July 2020 Overview of Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan s Life Khyber News Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan faces discrimination because he is a Mohajir amp not considered Son of Soil video Dailymotion Dailymotion 28 May 2013 Retrieved 18 April 2022 Chronology A Q Khan The New York Times 16 April 2006 Archived from the original on 27 March 2015 Retrieved 21 February 2017 a b c Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan storyofpakistan com Islamabad Story of Pakistan Press Foundation 17 October 2013 p 1 Archived from the original on 22 January 2015 Retrieved 22 January 2015 Ansari Iqbal Ahmad 2006 Political representation of Muslims in India 1952 2004 1st ed New Delhi India Manak Publications p 418 ISBN 9788178271309 The mysterious world of Pakistan 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and Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction and Missiles Policy issues Washington DC Congressional Research Service CRS Congressional Research Service CRS pp 5 6 ISBN Congressional Research Service CRS Duncan Lennox Hatf 6 Shaheen 2 Jane s Strategic Weapon Systems June 15 2004 Haft 6 Shaheen 2 CSIS Missile Threat Retrieved 26 June 2017 Usman Ansari 22 April 2014 Pakistan Tests Short Range Ballistic Missile DefenseNews Gannett Archived from the original on 1 October 2014 Retrieved 30 September 2014 Kirk Russell 2017 Organizational Cultures and the Management of Nuclear Technology Political and Military Sociology googlebooks 1st ed Washington DC Islamabad Routledge ISBN 978 1 351 50115 6 Archived from the original on 28 May 2021 Retrieved 4 July 2020 a b IISS reports A Q Khan and onward proliferation from Pakistan Copyright 2006 2012 The International Institute For Strategic Studies IISS Viewed 24 October 2012 a b Khan Abdul Qadeer June 2010 2010 How we developed the program Sehar Honay Tak Until Sunrise 1 in English and Urdu vol 1 Islamabad Pakistan Ali Masud books publication pp 34 39 a b Nayyar Kuldip 16 February 2004 A day with A Q Khan archive indianexpress com London Eng UK Indian Express Pakistan Bureau Indian Express Archived from the original on 11 July 2011 Retrieved 5 July 2020 a b Pike John 16 May 2000 Engineering Research Laboratories ERL The Federation of American Scientists John Pike John Pike of Federation of American Scientists Archived from the original on 21 October 2012 Retrieved 24 October 2012 American Spaces Dashboard usinfo org Archived from the original on 24 July 2009 Retrieved 7 February 2009 Ansari Usman 28 May 2012 Pakistan Test Fires Medium Range Ballistic Missile Defence News Defence News Archived from the original on 19 July 2013 Retrieved 22 November 2014 Allen Brooke 2016 Benazir Bhutto Favored Daughter Icons Series New York Amazon New Harvest ISBN 978 0 544 64893 7 a b c d e f g h Fitzpatrick Mark 2007 Dr A Q Khan and the rise 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original on 8 October 2021 Retrieved 10 October 2021 Abdul Qadeer Khan Father of Pakistan s nuclear bomb dies BBC News 10 October 2021 Archived from the original on 10 October 2021 Retrieved 10 October 2021 a b Nuclear scientist Dr Abdul Qadeer Khan given state funeral laid to rest in Islamabad Dawn 10 October 2021 Archived from the original on 11 October 2021 Retrieved 10 October 2021 a b Frontiers in Physics PDF 13 December 1988 Proceedings of the Second National Symposium on Frontiners in Physics Archived PDF from the original on 23 May 2013 Retrieved 16 January 2012 a b GEO TV 17 May 2011 Nuclear capability saved Pakistan Geo Television Network GTN GEO News GNews Archived from the original on 20 May 2011 Retrieved 8 December 2011 Khan Abdul Qadeer 17 May 2011 I saved my country from nuclear blackmail The Tribune Archived from the original on 18 September 2011 Retrieved 3 December 2011 a b Hoodbhoy Pervez 4 May 1999 Bombs Missiles and Pakistani Science The Chaghi tests and more recent Ghauri II and Shaheen I missile launches have been deemed heroic symbols of high scientific achievement Are they Chowk com Archived from the original on 3 January 2011 Retrieved 2 October 2016 IISS International Institute for Strategic Studies 2006 Bhutto was father of Pakistan s Atom Bomb Program International Institute for Strategic Studies Archived from the original on 14 March 2012 Retrieved 2 October 2016 Le Livre noir de l economie mondiale p 61 Khan built hotel in Timbuktu Times of India 2004 Husain Khurram 14 May 2016 A Q Khan s family figures in Panama Papers DAWN COM Retrieved 6 September 2022 Le pere de la bombe atomique pakistanaise est libre Le Figaro in French February 2009 Abdul Qadeer Khan HI NI amp Bar remains the only Pakistani who got the Nishan i Imtiaz the highest civil award twice He also got the Hilal i Imtiaz along with Munir Ahmad Khan in 1989 A Shabbir Usman Remembering Unsung Heroes Munir Ahmed Khan Defence Journal 27 June 2004 Khan Abdul Qadeer 1998 Islamic Academy of Sciences Fellowship members Islamic Academy of Sciences Archived from the original on 28 January 2002 Murtaza Ghulam Zhahour Ahmad 21 November 1998 Condense Matter Physics PDF Seven National Symposium on Frontiers in Physics 7 7 7 2 3 Archived PDF from the original on 31 December 2015 Retrieved 16 January 2012 Bibliography Burr William The Labors of Atlas Sisyphus or Hercules US Gas Centrifuge Policy and Diplomacy 1954 60 The International History Review 37 3 2015 431 457 Khan Abdul Qadeer 2010 Sehar Honay Tak Dr A Q Khan gave us the sense of security Javed Hashmi In Khan Abdul Qadeer ed Sehar Honay Tak Islamabad Pakistan Ali Masud books pp 1 158 clarification needed Upadhyaya Gopal S 2011 Dr A Q Khan of Pakistan Men of Metals and Materials My Memoires Bloomington IN iUniverse com pp 138 140 Rahman Shahid 1998 Dr A Q Khan Nothing Succeed like Success In Rahman Shahid ed Long Road to Chagai Islamabad Pakistan Printwise publication pp 49 60 ISBN 969 8500 00 6 Fitzpatrick Mark 2007 Dr A Q Khan and the rise and fall of proliferation network Nuclear black markets London UK International Institute for Strategic Studies ISBN 978 0 86079 201 7 Kan Shirley A 2009 A Q Khan s nuclear network China and Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction and Missiles Policy issues Washington DC Congressional Research Service pp 5 6 Cooney Thomas E Denny David Anthony eds 2005 A Q Khan and the nuclear market E mc Today s Nuclear Equation Washington DC United States Judith S Seagal pp 30 33 clarification needed Bernstein Jeremy 2008 Physicists on Wall Street and other essays on science and society New York Springer ISBN 978 0387765068 Web links Annotated bibliography for A Q Khan Archived 14 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Physics war of Munir Khan and A Q Khan The Wrath of Khan The Atlantic Monthly November 2005 Kahuta Research Laboratories Federation of American Scientists Unraveling the A Q Khan and Future Proliferation Networks The Washington Quarterly Spring 2005 Archived from the original on 7 April 2005 Retrieved 30 April 2005 Tracking the technology Nuclear Engineering International Archived from the original on 27 December 2004 BBC profile BBC Pakistan s Nuclear Father Master Spy MSNBC permanent dead link British Reporter Adrian Levy The United States Secretly Helped Pakistan Build Its Nuclear Arsenal Are Pakistani Ahmadis Loyal to their Homeland Pakistani Tribune External linksOfficial website Abdul Quadeer Khan at the Pakistan Academy of Sciences Prof Abdul Qadeer Khan at the Islamic Academy of Sciences Why He Went Nuclear by Douglas Frantz and Catherine CollinsWritten by Abdul Qadeer Khan Heart disease Random thoughts 11 June 2012 More on thalassemia 4 June 2012 Memorable Karachi 28 May 2012 Great expectations 14 May 2012 Mass graves 30 April 2012 I saved my country 1 November 2012Online books Scott Clark Adrian Levy amp Catherine 2007 Deception Pakistan the United States and the secret trade in nuclear weapons 1st ed New York Walker amp Co ISBN 978 0 8027 1554 8 Upadhyaya Gopal S 1 May 2011 Dr A Q Khan of Pakistan Men of metals and materials my memoirs Bloomington IN iUniverse p 138 ISBN 978 1 4620 1840 6 Government officesPreceded byIshfaq Ahmad Science Advisor to the Presidential Secretariat1 January 2001 31 January 2004 Succeeded byAtta ur Rahman Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abdul Qadeer Khan amp oldid 1210954470, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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