Reading: Jeremy Bernstein on A.Q. Khan
The April 9 issue of The New York Review of Books includes a short article on A. Q. Khan by Jeremy Bernstein, a physicist who worked at Los Alamos and author of Plutonium: A History of the World’s Most Dangerous Element. Here’s some food for thought from that piece:
I think that it is fair to say that at first Khan’s motives were patriotic. He wanted desperately for Pakistan to have the bomb. But it was not long before his megalomania took over. He identified himself with the Pakistani bomb and he seemed to think he could sell any parts or technology associated with the program that he wanted. …
Some of Khan’s proliferation was surely done with the collusion of the Pakistani government. Pakistani military aircraft took centrifuge technology to North Korea and returned with missiles by way of payment. …
Let them talk. Are they happy with our God? Are they happy with our prophet? Are they happy with our leaders? Never, so why should we bother what they say about us?





