American and British intelligence agencies
have tried to bribe two Pakistani scientists "who have refused all kinds
of incentives" for betraying the country's nuclear program in mid 1990 and
has reported the case higher-ups man credited Pakistan making a nuclear power has claimed. In an interview
normally bombastic, AQ Khan, insisted recently released, but heavily guarded
nuclear scientist that Pakistan's nuclear program is safe from infiltration,
both external (Western agencies) and internal penetration (by extremists).
"Nobody has ever penetrated
Kahuta (main nuclear facility site in Pakistan), they could not do. The Americans, unlike their
statements, were totally ignorant of the situation of our program. Seniors - or
even the general-issue not have access to sensitive and classified information
... (Kahuta) or PAEC (Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission) has never been a store
where you can get a bomb! "Khan told Newsweek Pakistan in the first issue of the magazine a cover story entitled.
"The bravest country in the World: Pakistan." In addition, the company, after Washington, who until recently owned by the Newsweek magazine, sold
the publication last month for $ 1 per audio pioneer Sidney Harman. The sale
was followed by an exodus of Newsweek magazine, including his Mumbai-born
editor Fareed Zakaria, who joined Time magazine owned by its rival CNN. Khan
said that the idea of a nuclear weapon in bulk remains a myth of the West and
one of his phobias.