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‘Scientists offered bin Laden
to supply N-weapons’
PTI -
NEW DELHI Barely a month
before the 9/11 terror attacks,
two Pakistani nuclear scientists,
said to be close to disgraced
Abdul Qadeer Khan, met up
with Al Qaeda leader Osama bin
Laden and offered to supply
him with atomic weapons,
according to a newly released
book.
Chaudiri Abdul Majeed and
Sultan Bashiruddin Mahmood,
who held a series of senior posts
in Pakistan’s nuke programme,
went to Taliban headquarters in
Kandahar in mid-August 2001
and spent three days with bin
Laden who was keen on acquiring
weapons of mass destruction,
the book says.
In fact, Mahmood was said to
be more close to Khan, the
‘’Father of the Islamic bomb’’
and the mastermind behind a
vast clandestine enterprise
which sold nuclear secrets to
rogue states like Iran, North
Korea and Libya. He also set up
the pilot plant for Pakistan’’s
uranium-enrichment programme.
However, the so-called
deal did not materialise as the
meeting between the Pakistani
nuclear scientists and bin
Laden ended inconclusively
when the Al Qaeda leader, along
with some of his senior associates,
had abruptly left for the
mountains of northwestern
Afghanistan.
And, according to
the book, ‘’The Man From
Pakistan’’ — the true story of the
world’’s most dangerous
nuclear smuggler AQ Khan —
before leaving, bin Laden had
told his followers that “something
great was going to happen,
and Muslims around the
world were going to join them
in the holy war”. A couple of
weeks later, the twin towers in
New York were brought
down.The 414-page book is
authored by two investigative
journalists — Douglas Frantz
and Catherine Collins.
What’’s more revealing is that
a year before they met bin
Laden in Kandahar, the two
Pakistani nuke scientists had
set up a non-profit organisation,
Ummah Tameer-e-Nau, to carry
out relief work in Afghanistan.
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