West did not oppose pak's nuclear programme due to afghan war: aq khan

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He said that the West ignored Pakistan's nuclear program as it needed the country's support to push the then Soviet Russia out of Afghanistan. Western countries did not


"actively oppose" Pakistan developing its nuclear weapon in the late 1980s as they were "too scared" and pre-occupied with the Russian invasion of Afghanistan and its


future consequences, disgraced atomic scientist AQ Khan has said. Khan, who has been slapped sanctions by the US for running a clandestine nuclear network, also said that the West ignored


Pakistan's nuclear program as it needed the country's support to push the then Soviet Russia out of Afghanistan. "The Afghan War was a blessing for our nuclear program,"


Khan said in an interview to the _NewsWeek's_ inaugural Pakistani edition. "It was not that the Western countries actively supported it but that they were too scared and (pre)


occupied with the Russian invasion of Afghanistan and its future consequences to actively oppose it," he said. Khan said neither the Americans nor the British had a clue about the


status of Pakistan's nuclear programme until 1990. "After the Afghan War, they (US and UK) slapped sanctions on us to extract concessions from [former Pakistani president] Benazir


Bhutto's government, but [former president] Ghulam Ishaq Khan and [former Army chief] Gen Aslam Beg frustrated their nefarious designs," Khan said. The disgraced atomic scientist


alleged CIA chief Leon Panetta was a "liar", when asked about Panetta's statement that Pakistan is now the headquarters of al-Qaeda. "The CIA chief—like his bosses and


those before him is a liar. There is no headquarters of al-Qaeda in Pakistan. Yes, Pakistan has become very unsafe due to foreign troops in Afghanistan. Our cohesion has been


shattered," he said. He also said, "The "spineless political leaders" have turned Pakistan -- a nuclear and missile power with 175 million people —- into a "beggar


state", a third-rate country". "If there had been any pride left in our leaders, they would have responded appropriately and nobody would have dared to say such things in the


first place," he said. Khan said Pakistan's nuclear weapon is a deterrent against India. "Our nuclear program has ensured our survival, our security, and our sovereignty...I


am proud to have contributed to it together with my patriotic and able colleagues," he said, adding that Pakistan is not a threat to any country.