News

A.Q. Khan, the father of Pakistan's atomic bomb and a proponent of nuclear proliferation, died on Sunday after a lengthy battle with COVID-19.
A.Q. Khan's Atomic Vision. How a petty postal inspector became the world's leading nuclear salesman. November 17, 2007. By Reviewed by Douglas Farah.
Abdul Qadeer Khan, who was considered the father of Pakistan’s atomic bomb and who secretly sold nuclear-weapons technology to such states as Iran and North Korea, died Sunday at age 85 after ...
A.Q. Khan, right, poses for a photo with Simon Henderson, a senior fellow at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. The photo was provided exclusively to Fox News. Image 2 of 3.
Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan, widely considered the father of Pakistan's nuclear bomb, has kept a low profile since his unprecedented 2004 television address accepting sole responsibility for providing ...
Khan, who had apparently already joined the Pakistani intelligence agency in Europe and had already attracted the CIA's attention, stood to benefit greatly from the copied know-how.
A new book by journalists Douglas Frantz and Catherine Collins alleges that the CIA was so obsessed with getting information from nuclear trafficker A.Q. Khan's network, it waited too long to shut ...
Just last week I described A.Q. Khan, Pakistani nuclear trafficker extraordinaire, as “secret wrapped inside a riddle inside an enigma.” I wrote of how he recently stepped into the online ...
Officials have relieved the house arrest on A.Q. Khan, a scientist who sold Pakistan's nuclear secrets to Iran, North Korean and Libya ...