AQ Khan: How to Live Dangerously - podcast episode cover

AQ Khan: How to Live Dangerously

Jul 24, 202541 min
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Episode description

He’s been called the father of Pakistan’s nuclear bomb and a real-life Bond villain and depending on where you’re from, he’s a national hero or was the world’s most dangerous arms dealer - who made a career of selling his knowledge of nuclear weapons.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to Stuff you Should Know, a production of iHeartRadio.

Speaker 2

Hey, I'm welcome into the podcast. I'm Josh, and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too, and this is Stuff you Should Know, Foreign Policy Edition.

Speaker 1

That's right, take it away.

Speaker 2

Okay, So Chuck, we're talking today. Well let me start differently, Chuck. Yes, have you ever met Aq Khan?

Speaker 1

I had never heard of Aq Khn?

Speaker 2

What do you think of him? Now?

Speaker 1

You know, seems like a guy that made a lot of money helping countries develop their nuclear program.

Speaker 2

Sure, but I think that leaves out some very important stuff. This was in flagrant violation of UN non proliferation treaties. Who was generally illegal, and he was even doing it on the side. He had an underground clandestine proliferation network, which is I mean, that's very few people have ever done that in the world. Over here in the West, Chuck, he's viewed as a villain, and in other parts of the world, especially Pakistan where he's from, he's hailed as

a hero. He's very complex, complicated, and at the end of the day, he may essentially be generally a fall guy for a much larger cabal of people who were actually doing.

Speaker 1

This, Yeah, for sure. I guess we can go back and talk a little bit about how he got there, right, Yeah.

Speaker 2

I think so.

Speaker 1

He was born in India in nineteen thirty six and in nineteen fifty two moved to West Pakistan and he was into metallurgy and studied at a few different universities in a few different countries. He eventually graduated initially in nineteen sixty from the University of Karachi, but then got

a doctorate in metallurgical engineering in nineteen seventy two. In that time, he got married, had a couple of daughters, and then eventually he found his way with his family in the early seventies and the Netherlands working for a company called Physical Dynamic Research Laboratory which was doing uranium enrichment for another company called Urinko, which was a consortium of a few different countries Britain, Germany and the Netherlands,

and they were, you know, they were running ultracentrifuges and he was pretty good at snooping around.

Speaker 2

It seems like, yeah, in ultracentrifuge r centrifugias in general is used to enricheranium in your rich uranium to a certain extent to use for nuclear power. But if you keep going, you can use that enriched uranium for nuclear bombs. Right, So I think that these companies were doing this for power for power generation. But regardless, he wasn't a particular like brilliant physicists or metal or just or anything like that. He was just kind of a dude. He just had

a will that was unlike other people's typically. So when he started out, he had a very low level security clearance, but he very quickly like started making waves and catching the attention of Dutch intelligence agencies for asking a lot of questions that did not have much of anything to do with the work he was supposed to be doing.

Speaker 1

Yeah, so they started monitoring him, and this is something that kind of continued at at least as far as Dutch intelligence, and then you know, eventually other countries would start monitoring as well, because you know, like I said,

he got pretty good at snooping around. And in nineteen seventy one there was a conflict between East and West Pakistan and that led to a pretty brief war with India, and just for our purposes, what that eventually meant was a khan and a lot of Pakistan were kind of humiliated at the whole thing, and we're like, we're still under the thumb of India here, and kind of just sort of got that I guess national Pakistani pride going, as you know, wanting to get out from under that thumb.

Speaker 2

Yeah, I saw that that in that thirteen day war, Pakistan lost half its navy, a quarter of its air force, and a third of its army. So it was very much a humiliating defeat. And yeah, I saw that. Up to this point, aq Kan was just a generally average person, but that seemed to have really started to get him going. So he decided he was going to use what expertise

he had to help build a bomb for Pakistan. So he wrote a letter to the Prime Minister of Pakistan, Zulfa kar Ali Bhutto, who was running the show at the time, and said, Hey, I want to help build a nuclear bomb for Pakistan. We clearly need one. And if you said back and look at it, chuck like, this is just some random dude that the Prime Minister had never heard of who wrote him a letter and

said like, hey, let's build a bomb. And I heard the first time he was ignored and the second time, they were like, all right, let's see what this guy has to say.

Speaker 1

Yeah, because he was lobbying for uranium and that was his expertise, was enriching uranium and at the time, Pakistan was trying to enrich and produce plutonium. And he was like, that's not the way. Uranium is the way to go.

And just a couple of months after that, Bhutto met with him and over about the next eleven or twelve months, con was like, all right, I'm going to make a little grocery shopping list of what we need, the parts that we need to get a nuclear program started here in earnest and I'm going to make a list of companies and suppliers and who can get us this stuff.

And he basically got all of this information while he was working for that Dutch company, right, you know, making copies of blueprints and sneaking them out and supply lists, suppers lists and stuff like that.

Speaker 2

Yeah, he was very well known around the office or be like making capies.

Speaker 1

Yeah.

Speaker 2

So he well, I just dated myself. Can we just do a little science minute off to the side.

Speaker 1

Sure.

Speaker 2

So you said that there was a course that Pakistan was already on for making a bomb out of plutonium. Right. Aq Con was all about enriching uranium. There are two routes you can use to make a nuclear bomb, and the background and training khan Head was in uranium enrichment, and he loved to like talk trash about plutonium and the people in Pakistan running the plutonium program. But just the upshot of it is this, if you want to get weapons grade uranium, you need about ninety percent pure

uranium in nature. The U two thirty five uranium that you're looking for occurs about three quarters of a percent of any natural lump of uranium. So there's two ways to get that purified U two thirty five. One is enrichment, where you spin it in centrifugias that go so fast that it actually separates the different kinds of uranium isotopes and then you just kind of siphon off the stuff

you want. Or with plutonium, you bombard it with neutron so that uranium two thirty eight eventually turns into two thirty nine, decays into neptunium and then plutonium. They're both like great ways of creating nuclear material to blow up the world with, but they're just two totally different tracks.

Speaker 1

Yeah, so we did a whole episode on that. If you're interested in like the finer details, seek that one out.

Speaker 2

Was that the one that we did after Fukushima?

Speaker 1

I don't know, but we did a whole episode on how to that whole process. I can't remember what it was called, though.

Speaker 2

Well I can't help but talk about it. I love that for some reason, really like tickles me.

Speaker 1

Yeah. So in October of seventy five, the Dutch authorities who had been watching him this whole time, noting all this sort of suspicious stuff that he was doing at work, all right, we're going to transfer you out of these enrichment projects because we think you're, you know, you're clearly some sort of a snoop or a thread or something.

And just a couple of months after that, and I guess late nineteen seventy five, in December, he left the company all together and had you know, basically under his in his banker's box on the way out the door. He had a bunch of sensitive documents, blueprints and those supplier lists, and he said, don't bother looking in these banker boxes. The lid is on, right.

Speaker 2

He just kind of vanished and showed back up in Pakistan and he was very quickly put in charge of the uranium project. And there was a guy named Manir Ahmad Khan who was essentially his rival in the quest to build Pakistan a bomb. The other Cohn was involved in the plutonium wing of the whole thing. Khn eventually got Bhutto and then the guy who overthrew Bhuto over to his side in favor of uranium enrichment, but also

in favor of aq Con. From what I could tell, he had a really big ego and he wanted to be like the top dog in getting Pakistan the bomb, and so he was working on the project called Project

seven oh six. It was the uranium Enrichment project, and by nineteen eighty two, I think they managed to produce the highly enriched uranium that you need to make a bomb, very very small amount at first, you need several kilograms to actually make a bomb, but they were successful at doing it through that uranium enrichment program by nineteen eighty two for the first time.

Speaker 1

Yeah, and as they're doing this, are also researching how to get this thing into a missile. So you know, as you'll see, I mean, if you just look back at the history of enriching uranium or for nuclear energy. It's usually a country is like, hey, you know, we just want to have a nuclear energy company and we want to get a to speed on that. But what they're also trying to do is get a nuclear bomb.

Speaker 2

They're also making copies.

Speaker 1

Yeah, it kind of just happens over and over and over where they're like, no, no, no, we just want nuclear energy and don't worry about what's in that bunker over there.

Speaker 2

Right and again I kind of I mentioned it at the outset. The reason that countries have to do it like that is because there's a huge treaty from the sixties that said, Okay, the people who already have the bomb, they're agreeing to disassemble it. People who don't have the bomb, they're going to agree not to seek the bomb. And it's still in effect and it's still enforced. So that's why you have to do it right exactly. But it's just been so just kind of nibble that and worn

down and just flagrantly ignored that. It doesn't really seem to have that much teeth, but I guess it's enough to make countries feel like they have to be subversive when they're trying to create a nuclear weapons program.

Speaker 1

Yeah, exactly. So while he's doing all this, and you mentioned at the beginning that he had a side gig, you know, getting rich off of selling these secrets and blueprints and helping other countries, you know, get in touch with the right. As you'll see, he worked with a lot of middlemen over the years and spoke a bunch of different languages, so he was really kind of the

perfect dude to do this. And while he was doing this, he developed that side gig as importing and exporting all these components and plans that you know, some of which he just outright stole.

Speaker 2

Yeah, And he was able to do this in large part because he had by this time garnered so much respect in Pakistan among the leadership of Pakistan, emerging as the guy who was giving the bomb or developing the bomb for Pakistan that they just weren't. They were like, just go, here's a blank check, do whatever you need

to do. So he started ordering doubles of the stuff yeah, that he was he needed to set up Pakistan's uranium enrichment program, and then he would take the stuff that he didn't need and turn around and essentially reverse the way that it got there. He would use Pakistani military planes cargo planes to take those parts, the extra parts back to middlemen, and then he'd tell the middlemen what buyers to direct it to, and then he'd pocket the money.

Speaker 1

Yeah, and it was very lucrative, as we'll see, he ended up making a ton of money doing this. He ended up having a few kind of major clients. No one really knows how many countries he really dealt with, because I think they found out he traveled to many more countries than they officially sort of accused him of dealing with. But the first country to step up and say hey, I really want to do business with you

was Iran, and this was in nineteen eighty seven. He helped them build up to fifty thousand centrifuges P one types Pakistan won. There are a couple of different types, Pakistan one and the P two, the Pakistan two. Those the P twos are much faster. And the belief at the time is that he was just kind of sending the stuff that they didn't need anymore to Iran and it was kind of outdated equipment that wasn't going to help him that much.

Speaker 2

Yeah, for sure, that's how it started out. They were they because Pakistan upgraded their setup from what I saw. And the reason why you need fifty thousand centrifuges is because when you spin that uranium to separate it and you siphon off the stuff you want, you have to do it again and again and again and again, and it can take weeks and months and sometimes years depending on what kind of centrifuges you're working with. But if you have fifty thousand centrifuges like Iran supposedly got, you

can make a lot of highly enriched uranium fairly fast. Which, let me know, wonder, Chuck, like, what is taking Iran so long? If they still don't have a nuke and they started in nineteen eighty seven, What's what's the deal there? And the best answer I could come up with is that back in the nineties, the Ayatola issued a fatois like a ruling on Sharia law that basically said no nukes, Iran's not going to have any nukes, and that it wasn't until twenty twenty four that Iran said that they

were starting to rethink it. So I guess just because the leadership said they weren't going to have nukes. That is the reason Iran doesn't have a nuke right now.

Speaker 1

Yeah, interesting, I thought so too. So he was dealing with their government. Supposedly until nineteen ninety one there was a final shipment of the p ones, but other people have said no, no, no. That continued for at least another four years through the mid nineties, and those P

two centerfuges started flowing in. Iran wanted this potential bomb because they were at war with Iraq at the time in the eighties, over the course of about eight years, So Khan over the businessman, was like, hey, Iraq, I've been helping Iran developed their You could probably use a little with my help in stolen documents as well.

Speaker 2

Yeah, what's crazy is Iroq was like very suspicious of this from the outset, and I guess they asked for a sample and they couldn't find what sample they were given. Just that con was like, don't taste this, that's not that kind of sample.

Speaker 1

Right, And I think you dab your pinky in it, Yeah, exactly, put it on your tongue.

Speaker 2

It's like, don't do that. So I guess a rock thought that this is some sort of maybe international un sting operation. And then around the same time, the first Gulf War broke out and they were like, we don't have time for this, so they moved on. And I guess he never managed to get a bomb or the information a rock needed to a rock.

Speaker 1

Yeah, but there were documents that said, hey, this little you know, the paperwork was there. This will cost you five million bucks and a ten percent commission on materials right through my network, So I can you know, pay people off basically. But yeah, like you said, it seems like it never ended up happening, and Iraq was probably wise to think that that was a sting operation even though it wasn't.

Speaker 2

Well, what something I saw that was kind of funny was Iran paid three million dollars for THEIRS and they actually were like ten percent commission. That seems steep, So they went and started calling up the list of suppliers that aq Con had for him, rather than dealing with him, because they were bargain shopping for their nuclear.

Speaker 1

Pro Well apparently, well maybe that has something to do with it too.

Speaker 2

Their nuclear centrifuges were held together bubble gum and duct tape.

Speaker 1

Should we take a break. Yeah's all right, we'll come back and talk about a couple of more clients right after this. All right, so we're back, and we promised to talk about new clients. This is where North Korea enters a picture. It's the mid nineties, and with a deal with the United States, North Korea said, you know what, we're going to stop building our nuclear reactors. We're going to stop producing plutonium again. We're just trying to get

nuclear energy going. But all right, we'll stop doing that. But what we're really going to do is very quietly start looking to continue that process, just on the down load.

Speaker 2

Right, But Kim Jung il had his fingers crossed behind his back, so none of that counted.

Speaker 1

That's right. And so who do they turn to? Of course they turned to Pakistan and aq Kan.

Speaker 2

Yeah, so this is where it really seems like Pakistan. Pakistani officials were definitely involved in this, even though later on, as we'll see, they're like, we had nothing to do with this. But Pakistan conducted its first nuclear test in nineteen ninety eight, which really surprised the world, and even more dramatically, they did it in response to a test that India had carried out two weeks before and during

this test. One of the groups that was there was a delegation of North Koreans who were invited to watch the whole thing. And the common wisdom among the intelligence community is that this was a group of nuclear scientists from North Korea's nuclear program who are basically being you know, run through the motions of how this is working. I don't know if we said or not. Also, a q Khan was known to have gone to North Korea at

least thirteen times that were documented. Something really weird happened during this nuclear test with the North Korean delegation though, and that was that one of them, a woman who was among this group died. Mys seriously. She was shot and eventually sent back to North Korea. Her body was but on the cargo plane were centrifuges and other things for North Korea's nuclear program too.

Speaker 1

Yeah, was that just like, Hey, we've got this plane going, so why don't we just double dip and get some stuff moved, maybe transporting this body.

Speaker 2

Maybe Pakistan is the bargain shop as well.

Speaker 1

So, like you said, he went to North Korea at least thirteen times that intelligence knows about. And while he was helping North Korea sort of develop their enrichment program. They were supplying Pakistan. It was a bit of a quid pro quo. They're like, hey, we've got long distance missile technology that you don't have, and so we're perfect bedfellows here.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and so they got the missiles from North Korea through a guy named Kang. He was on paper the dip the astor to Pakistan for North Korea. In reality, he was the husband of the woman who was murdered. She turned out to be murdered during the missile test because she was spying for the US, but her husband managed to hang in there and it turns out he was an armstealer for North Korea. He was the one

who provided the missiles. So again, all this time, North Korea is saying like, we don't have a nuclear program. Pakistan's like, we don't even know what anybody's talking about. This is all in retrospect, like this is not on

a lot of people's radar right now. And as a matter of fact, Aq Khan was on the radar of international intelligence communities again all the way back to the with the seventies, when the Dutch started watching him but somehow, some way, the global intelligence community missed the fact that he was a rogue nuclear weapons technology salesman, which is one of the weirdest things ever. But it turned out that it was his next business venture in Libya that led to his downfall.

Speaker 1

Yeah, I mean there were you know, later on they were they were like, yeah, we knew he was ordering double the amount of everything, and we just couldn't figure out why.

Speaker 2

Right, it makes zero. There's a lot about this that just really smells like a kind of a poorly constructed cover up internationally, not just from Pakistan.

Speaker 1

Yeah, for sure. So yeah, the next client step forward, and that was Libya. And this was in the late nineties, like nineteen ninety six, ninety seven. He started trading centrifuges and the equipment and the components getting them over to Libya. This there's a guy here named Peter Griffin. Not what you're thinking from family guy is a real life human.

It was a British engineer who was involved in this operation who was like, man, I've been I've been given or not giving, but I've been selling material to Pakistan for you know, twenty years or more like this has been going on for a long time.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and that was a huge thing that allowed this to go on. Is like the international community would ban parts for like centrifuges or breeder reactors that you made plutonium with, and then people like Iq Khan would be like, well, fine, we're going to start shipping the parts to make those parts and then assemble the parts at the at the end. So they were legitimately allowed to do this stuff. It was just they still had to fake what the overall

purpose was. So yeah, guys like Peter Griffin were like, I actually wasn't breaking any laws. It was more like an international more that was broken where he knew he was helping states that should not have nuclear bombs get nuclear bombs essentially.

Speaker 1

Yeah, for sure. So Peter Griffin, Peter Griffin.

Speaker 2

There's just no way that couldn't do something.

Speaker 1

I guess that was. Uh, oh, what's the guy's name. I haven't watched Family Gun so long? Cleveland, Peter Cleveland. Yeah, that's right. So Peter Griffin was a partner and a company from Dubai, and in two thousand and one they placed a bunch of orders for these parts that they needed with a Malaysian company, and that company spun off a subsidiary and they hired workers and brought in, you know, all this equipment and brought in a bunch of new tools to start sort of you know, turning this into

a real program. And Con was like for my part, you know, I've got all these blueprints to show you how to put this you know, big lego machine together. And he sent at least one engineer, so like active involvement, sending engineers to Dubai to like make sure they were doing everything correctly, so like deep involvement at this point.

Speaker 2

Yeah. Huge. So he had like middlemen from Europe, He had designers from Switzerland. He had companies that were set up to build the parts that were being shipped from Turkey, from Malaysia to Turkey to Dubai where they were repackaged and sent on to Libya. It was a huge network. Also, I forgot to say earlier. By this time, the CON network had their own sales bruchures that they used to hand out at ARM sales fares, which apparently they have ARM sales fares, but they had brochures by this point.

That's that's how set up they were, I guess how established. That's what I was going for so it was a huge, huge network. But it was one of these shipments that somehow got intercepted and I think two thousand and three aboard the a ship called the BBC China, which as far as I noticed, I have anything to do with the BBC, And that was the thing that brought the whole thing down. Eventually, Chuck I proposed that since I remembered the word established, that kind of says we.

Speaker 1

Should take a break, all right, we'll be right back.

Speaker 2

So the whole thing came down with that Libya thing. Remember they had this amazing network going, all these amazing all this amazing subtrifuge going somehow, I don't know how, but a particular shipment aboard a ship called the BBC China was captured in I think, leaving Dubai en route to Libya. And at this point aq Con had basically been under great suspicion. I think he was being investigated

by CIA and MI six at the same time. But there wasn't a lot you could do about this if you were the US, because you needed Pakistan at the time, as we'll talk about in a second. But when this shipment was found, it was a massive shipment of centrifuge is going to Libya. It was just all out in the open now, there was just no denying it. Even Pakistan couldn't protect aq Kan anymore.

Speaker 1

Yeah, for sure. And like you said, it was pretty complicated. I mean, it's always been fairly complicated, with US and Pakistan as being like sometimes bedfellows because they were necessary for the US until they weren't, and then you know,

that's when the US could take action. But in the eighties, you know, we were supplying military aid to Pakistan to help support the fight against Soviets in Afghanistan, so we couldn't really, you know, even though we intelligence services knew that they had a nuclear program going and even where that technology was coming from, there wasn't a lot we

could do at the time. In the mid eighties they caught Congress threatened to cut off that military aid unless Reagan could promise that they didn't they weren't producing nuclear weapons. And so for five years from eighty five to ninety, I guess Reagan and George H. W. Bush would certify that Pakistan didn't have a nuclear weapons program. And then

in nineteen ninety, once the Soviets were out of Afghanistan. Coincidentally, not really, Bush said, you know what, I'm not going to sign that certification anymore, and we're going to stop the flow of a to Pakistan.

Speaker 2

Yeah, which is I mean, talk about a screwjob. But apparently, Chuck, we were so in bed with Pakistan during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan that we were flying YouTube bomber flights to surveil Russia out of Pakistan. We had an NSA listening station there, like we needed them big time. But once we didn't anymore, we could start to press them on Aq Khan and that was when this whole thing started to kind of fall apart. But again, it wasn't until two thousand and three that the BBC China was

intercepted and the whole thing was on the table. But by this time the pressure that the US had been putting on Pakistan was enough that the president at the time, Proves Mushariff, who was the president of Pakistan around the time of nine to eleven and the subsequent invasion of Afghanistan, he essentially was like, Okay, I've got to do something, So he dismissed Khan from the research laboratories that by

this time bore his own name. They were called the Doctor aq Khan Research Laboratories, the National Nuclear Research Laboratories in Pakistan, and they were like, you're not the director of those anymore, but we're still friends, so you can be a government advisor.

Speaker 1

Yeah, I mean that's I don't know, I don't know enough about it, but that seemed to be very much just sort of like, hey, look what we're doing. We're saying he doesn't have that job anymore. Didn't that what was going on?

Speaker 2

Yeah? And the US had to put up with it because by this time we were in Afghanistan and we needed Pakistan him in just as much as we did when the Soviets were in Afghanistan. Because no one learns from history.

Speaker 1

That's right. So after that two thousand and three cargo ship exposure, I guess in December of that year, that's when Gaddafi of Libya said, all right, you know what, I'm going to shut down our nuclear program.

Speaker 2

I'm really sorry.

Speaker 1

United States didn't mean it and really sold con down the river and said this is the guy. He's been supplying us with materials and we're friends, right.

Speaker 2

Yeah, Apparently Kadafi was really really worried after the US invaded Iraq that he was going to be next, and he was right, but it was eight years down the road. Yeah, but I guess he He went so far as to show them like centrifuge labs that were described or disguised as chicken farms, and the whole time he's like, it was CON. It was CON. It was CON. And he gave I six and the CIA documents on how to build a nuclear warhead that he said CON had given him.

So he really sold them down the river. And by this point, the CIA chief at the time, George Tennant, had enough to go to pervezmer Sharff and was like, it's not enough to fire this guy from his job, like he's an international nuclear proliferation dealer and you need to do something much more pronounced. And Mouchharff said, Okay, I got it, I got it. We're going to make him apologize and we're going to put him under house arrests and then four days after that, I'm going to

pardon him. What do you think?

Speaker 1

Yeah, they put him on TV. He did confess, he did apologize, he did all that stuff, said he was he took the fall. He said, you know, I wasn't acting on the direction of my government. I was doing this on my own. And you know, I think everyone even at the time, kind of saw through that he would pardon him. I mean, the initial arrest was like a real arrest, but then he pardoned him and put

him under house arrests. And that whole time though, Pakistan was still like, no, CIA, you can't like same with the International Atomic Energy Agency, you can't come in here and ask him questions directly, like we're still shielding him from you.

Speaker 2

Yeah, And they continued to even after they let him out of house arrest. I also saw one other little note. He had a jasmine shrub trimmed in the shape of a topiary mushroom cloud outside of his house.

Speaker 1

Did he really is that a joke?

Speaker 2

No? Well, at least as far as I think Time magazine reported back in two thousand and five he did.

Speaker 1

That's the one time I thought you were actually thought you were pulling my leg, and it was the truth. So I don't even know what to think of.

Speaker 2

I like to mix it up and keep you guessing, buddy, he got to keep you on your toes. Uh.

Speaker 1

Yeah. People from Walt Disney World actually came and did that Is that true? The best No, So in two thousand and eight, the Pakistani government said, you know, this is internally of course, they were like, hey, we should let's just get him out of house too, because this is all just for show anyway, right, And the US was trying to work with Pakistan at the time to

fight against al Qaeda. So again we were in a position as the US to we couldn't publicly come out and say like, you can't like let this guy out of house arrest because once again we needed Pakistan.

Speaker 2

We did. And Seymour Hirsh, the very very very famous investigative reporter who broke the Mili massacre and that Osama bin Laden have been assassinated and so on, he reported back in two thousand and five that the US went along with it because Pakistan agreed to hand over all of the information they had on the nuclear program they had helped Iran start to build. And so the US was like, okay, that's a deal. Well, we'll take your Iranian secrets and then we'll just kind of look the

other way. And the slap on the wrist that you guys are giving a q Khan.

Speaker 1

Yeah, it's so interesting, like with the recent stuff with the US and Iran, Like when people try to argue about what's going on and they say, no, it's because of this thing that happened under Biden or Obama, or no it's Trump's fault. It's like, this stuff goes back decades and decades. If you really want to trace back to like the origins of all these issues, you know,

it's like you can't just look. You can't look. Yeah, you can't look back at one previous administration if you really want to investigate the true roots of this stuff.

Speaker 2

It's interesting because you had Carter getting in bed with Pakistan because the Russians invaded Afghanistan under his watch. You had Reagan and then hw Bush certifying every year lying that Pakistan didn't have a program, and so on and so forth. And yeah, that's actually a really important point. One of the reasons a Q Khan was allowed to continue proliferating nuclear programs to countries the US don't want to have nuclear programs is because the US looked the

other way on it. That's a huge factor in his success.

Speaker 1

Yeah. Absolutely. Eventually he was fully released in two thousand and nine, and they still said Hey, you can't, like you said, you can't interview him even now that he's that he's out, you know, United States or you know, international nuclear commissions, like just stay away from them. And there are a lot of Pakistanis that think he's a hero. Like he came out later on, and even though he took the fall, he came out later and was basically like, you know, like why should they have all the nukes?

Why why should those original five countries have all this power? He had a quote that said, are these bastards God appointed guardians of the world to stockpile hundreds of thousands of nuclear warheads? And have they God given authority to carry out explosions every month? So this was in an op ed in Derschpiegel magazine, a German magazine. So he's very much a hero to a lot of people in Pakistan still for sort of saying, hey, Muslim countries need to have the same weapons that you have.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and like we talked about all the way back in the seventies, patriotism certainly seems to have motivated him. For sure.

Speaker 1

He also had money.

Speaker 2

Yeah, he also made a lot of money. I saw an estimate that at his PQ is worth about four hundred million dollars. Yeah, and bear in mind he's on paper still just a civil servant, a scientist, a highly respected scientist, but he works for the government, and now he's worth four hundred million dollars. He died and a hotel he did in Molly and I looked it up and only as like two point six out of five stars on trip Advisor. Doesn't look that nice, but yeah,

it's in Timbuck two. And I guess it's in competition to the Biospherians hotel. They had one in Timbuk two, right, that's right.

Speaker 1

Yeah, I thought of that immediately. I guess that's the place to open a hotel if you want to, you know, fill out the hotel here for hotel yah waters.

Speaker 2

Do you want to get your feet wet? For sure?

Speaker 1

Yeah, exactly. He eventually passed away. Aq Con died in October twenty twenty one, apparently died of COVID nineteen. And he got a full military funeral, even though he was, you know, not a part of their military.

Speaker 2

No, but that really goes to show what a national hero he was considered then and now this is twenty twenty one. I think, to me, the biggest the biggest shock of all this is that he managed to live to be an old man and die of COVID. Like the fact that he wasn't assassinated during his career when he was putting out brochures for his services, and the fact that he wasn't assassinated by the Pakistani military because they were worried he was going to start pointing fingers

like it's nuts. This guy managed to stay alive. But he did. And he was a public figure too. He used to write op eds in the newspaper once in a while. He was like a public intellectual in Pakistan. He was a big deal throughout his life. It's not like he went into hiding. He did the oppoice.

Speaker 1

Yeah, you know, very interesting.

Speaker 2

And then one thing I saw, though, the irony of all this is that supposedly his technology didn't work all that well. North Korea ended up abandoning the centrifuge program in favor of plutonium, and I think even Pakistan's arsenal is largely based on plutonium now rather than highly enriched uranium.

Speaker 1

Yeah. I wonder if that was any kind of ruse on his part, But it seemed like he really did believe in uranium.

Speaker 2

Yeah, and it does work. I think, who knows. Maybe it's just harder to do when you have to keep it secret. I don't know. But one other thing I want to shout out. There's a Adam Curtis documentary. Remember he's the one who did the Century of the Self that we talked a lot about in the PR episode.

He did one called Hypernormalization and it covers a lot of Cutaffi and Libya throughout the years and his relationship with the US and basically makes the has the theory that Kadafi was essentially an international punching bag for the US for show that the the US beat up on kind of with his Agreement tests agreement because the US wasn't able or didn't think it was able to take on the real issue in the Middle East, which was Syria,

the real strong man in the Middle East. So they made Kaddafi look like a strong man that he wasn't so that they could pummel him in the public sphere and look like they were doing something about Middle East problems at the time.

Speaker 1

I'll say one thing about Kadafi is he could he could rock those aviators.

Speaker 2

Oh yeah, and that that perm.

Speaker 1

Yeah, two looks that I've never been able to pull off.

Speaker 2

I would pay good money to see you try, though, I have a feeling as a photoshop in the future.

Speaker 1

I'm looking at him right now. He kind of looked a little bit like Carlos Santana.

Speaker 2

Yeah, for sure, he got he got mistaken for that all the time. He thought that was like, yeah, and Santana too, but it was not as good for Santana to be mistaken as Kadafi. Yeah, yeah, you got anything else about aq Kahn?

Speaker 1

I got nothing else.

Speaker 2

I don't either, which means, of course, everybody, it's time for a listener mail.

Speaker 1

This is a not a correction, just a little bit of added info. Hey guys, we've heard from a few people by the way from Canada, specifically about Phil Hartman. Love the show, guys, my favorite podcast for years now. As a huge comedy and huge SNL fan. I really

appreciated your recent Phil Hartman podcast. You said in your show that you surmised he was probably the second most famous person from Branford after Wayne Gretzky, but also qualified there were probably someone else that you might be missing that was more famous. Just wanted to pass along that Alexander Graham Bell was born in Branford and this is arguably the most famous person born in Branford, Ontario, ahead of Gretzky and then Hartman. I think I agree with

that Jay. That is Jay Hammer from Hamilton, Ontario.

Speaker 2

Thanks Jay, It was a short and sweet email and we love those kind and yeah, I would agree to Alexander Graham Bell is probably more famous even than Wayne Gretzky.

Speaker 1

Oh hooy.

Speaker 2

If you want to be like Jay and get in touch with us and set us straight about something, we love that kind of thing, you can send it via email to stuff podcast at iHeartRadio dot com.

Speaker 1

Stuff you Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio. For more podcasts my heart Radio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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