http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,1147246,00.htmlWhite House seeks credit for cracking secret weapons ring
Bush boasts about uncovering arms network but observers wonder why it took so long
Ian Traynor
Friday February 13, 2004
The Guardian
<snip>In his speech on Wednesday President Bush claimed credit, along with Britain, for an intelligence triumph in cracking the Khan racket. "We've uncovered their secrets. This work involved high risk, and all Americans can be grateful for the hard work and the dedication of our fine intelligence professionals," he trumpeted, going into surprising detail.
"This picture of the Khan network was pieced together over several years by American and British intelligence officers. Our intelligence services gradually uncovered this network's reach, and identified its key experts and agents and money men. Operatives followed its transactions, mapped the extent of its operations. They monitored the travel of A Q Khan and senior associates. They shadowed members of the network around the world, they recorded their conversations, they penetrated their operations."
<snip>..."It's absurd," commented William Potter, a leading US expert in nuclear proliferation. "It's nonsense," said a senior source familiar with the IAEA investigation into the network...Two recent developments brought matters to a head in the case of Mr Khan.
First, Libyan information to MI6 and the CIA on the middlemen, the companies, and the Pakistani sources of the uranium enrichment equipment and nuclear bomb blueprint it bought. Second, a lengthy dossier on the Iranian nuclear effort supplied to the IAEA by Tehran at the end of October, which named at least five businessmen in Europe and the Middle East as being involved in the black market. Armed with such specific information, the Americans were able to demand action by the Pakistani authorities against Khan and the IAEA investigators were able to trace the network.
<snip>David Albright, a leading US analyst of the US nuclear intelligence operation, said: "They missed this stuff for a very long time. It was operating under their nose. There's a lot more going on. They
have given us something to quiet us down. The IAEA is right to feel wronged."