Eating Grass- The Insider Story of Pakistani Bomb

Unlike most western accounts of Pakistani nuclear program which begin and end with A.Q. Khan's network,  Brig Feroz H. Khan's  scholarly work "Eating Grass" offers a very comprehensive story of the "Making of The Pakistani Bomb". Feroz Khan takes the reader through the interdisciplinary nature and the inherent complexity of what it takes to develop, build and operationalize a nuclear weapons arsenal.

Book Cover: PINSTECH Campus, Nilore, Pakistan


Setting the Record Straight:

The standard Western and Indian narrative has us believe that A.Q. Khan stole the uranium enrichment technology and built the Pakistani atom bomb, and then proliferated it to Iran, Libya and North Korea. To put it perspective,  Feroz Khan explains that it takes at least 500 scientists and 1300 engineers with relevant
training and skills to have a nuclear weapons program, according to a 1968 UN study. In a piece titled "Laser Isotope Enrichment-a new dimension to the nth country problem?", Dr. Robert L. Bledsoe writes as follows: "a
United Nations study conservatively estimates that at least 500
scientists and 1300 engineers are needed to develop and maintain warhead
production facilities, and an additional 19,000 personnel (more than
5000 of them scientists and engineers) are required to produce delivery vehicles of the intermediate ballistic missile var...".

Book Launch:

Khan's book was launched in Silicon Valley at the Fremont Marriott yesterday, with about 100 invited guests, including this blogger, in attendance. The author was introduced by Ms. Sabahat Rafique, a prominent local Pakistani-American. The author, currently a lecturer at Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey,  spoke briefly about the extensive research he undertook to write the book. He was joined by Prof Rifaat Husain, visiting scholar at Stanford University's Center for International Security and Cooperation, to answer questions.

L to R: Sabahat Rafiq, Feroz Khan, Riaz Haq, Yasmeen Haq at "Eating Grass" Book Launch



Human Capital Development:

"Eating grass", published by Stanford University Press, traces the origins of Pakistani nuclear program to the work of Dr. Rafi Mohammad Chaudhry in 1950s and of Dr. Ishrat Husain Usmani in 1960s, both of whom were graduates of Aligarh Muslim University. Dr. Chaudhry did his doctoral research in physics under the supervision of the famous British physicist Ernest Rutherford at Cambridge and Dr. Usmani got his Ph.D. in physics at Imperial College, University of London, with Nobel Laureate Professor P.M.S. Blackett as his adviser.  Along with Pakistani Nobel Laureate Dr. Abdus Salam, Chaudhry and Usmani built laboratories and academic institutions and inspired generations of Pakistanis to study subjects in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) fields to produce the scientific and engineering talent for the young nation beginning in 1950s and 1960s.

Source: OECD Global Education Digest 2009


Darra Adam Khel cottage industry making copies of sophisticated firearms is a testament to the reverse engineering prowess in Pakistan. Faced with multiple layers of sanctions, Pakistanis have now developed industrial scale reverse engineering capabilities. The best example of it is Pakistan's cruise missile Babur which was derived from US Tomahawk cruise missile. Some of these Tomahawk missiles landed intact in Pakistani territory when Clinton ordered cruise missile attack on Bin Laden in August 1998 in response to USS Cole attack by Al Qaida.

Zulfikar Ali Bhutto's Role: 

The title of the book "Eating Grass" alludes to Zulfikar Ali Bhutto's famous quote "we will eat grass, even go hungry, but we will get one of our own (atom bomb). We have no other choice".  Khan goes beyond the quote to highlight Bhutto's substantial role in promoting Pakistan's nuclear program in 1960s. After India's humiliating defeat at the hands of the Chinese in 1962 and the Chinese nuclear test in 1964, Bhutto realized that India, too, would follow suit with a bomb of its own. He started lobbying with President Ayub Khan to start the bomb effort as early as mid 1960s. Ayub and most of his cabinet dismissed the idea but Bhutto remained committed to it and started taking modest steps toward building the scientific capability for it. As part of this effort, Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (PAEC) and Pakistan's Institute of Nuclear Science and Technology (PINSTECH) were established in 1960s under the leadership of Dr. I.H. Usmani. These were followed by the construction of Karachi Nuclear Power Plant (KANUPP) in 1970s. These institutions became training grounds for thousands of engineers and scientists in Pakistan in the field of nuclear science and technology.

1971 India-Pakistan War:

It was Pakistan's dismemberment after a humiliating defeat in India-Pakistan war of 1971 and India's first successful nuclear test in 1974 that, according to Khan,  strengthened Pakistanis' resolve to weaponize the country's nuclear program.  This new resolve gave strong impetus to expanding research and development activities and covert acquisition of a range of components necessary to build indigenous capability to produce nuclear warheads and delivery mechanisms. This was done in the face of strict international controls mandated by NPT and MTCR to prevent proliferation of nuclear and missile technologies.

Parallel covert efforts started with the establishment of a uranium enrichment facility at Kahuta which was headed by A.Q. Khan. A.Q Khan, a graduate of Karachi University, had been working on uranium enrichment in Europe for many years. He had the knowledge and the experience. He also had a wide range of contacts he had developed over the years while working at URENCO in Europe which he used to establish a procurement network. A.Q. Khan succeeded in acquiring the components and building thousands of gas centrifuges to produce highly enriched uranium (HEU) well ahead of a similar plutonium (Pu) reprocessing program underway at PAEC.

The book explains that HEU from A.Q. Khan's Research Lab (KRL) was essential but alone was not enough to make a bomb. It was PAEC that did the R&D to metalize UF6 into bomb core, and designed and built trigger mechanism with specialized explosives, lenses and detonators. It also required lots of cold testing to test the bomb design before conducting hot tests.

May 1998 Nuclear Tests:

Pakistan finally decided to go ahead with its atomic weapons tests in response to India's tests in May, 1998. It took only two weeks for Pakistan to do so after the Indian tests. Pakistan's then-prime minister Nawaz Sharif ordered the tests in the face of intense international pressure, particularly from the US President Bill Clinton who made multiple phone calls to Sharif asking him to refrain from it.The tests were followed by severe international sanctions led by the United States against Pakistan.

Ballistic and Cruise Missiles:

In addition to the work on the bomb, both PAEC and KRL labs also pursued development of reliable delivery vehicles for nuclear warheads. While PAEC worked on solid fuel rockets based on Chinese M-11 design, KRL focused on liquid-fueled variety based North Korean Nodong, writes Khan in "Eating Grass".  Khan says Pakistanis have also reverse engineered American Tomahawk cruise missile as part of their efforts to add stealth capability to hit targets deep inside India from air, land and sea.

Command and Control: 

Khan goes into the efforts made by Pakistan under President Musharraf since 2000 to put in place robust security of its nuclear assets and sophisticated command and control structures. A separate strategic command has been established to operationalize its nuclear weapons capability. And it is continuing to develop with changing needs.

Response to Indo-US Nuclear Deal:

Khan says in the book that there are eight Indian reactors exempted by US-India nuclear deal from IAEA safeguards leaving India free to process and accumulate 500 Kg weapons-grade plutonium per year. In addition, India is rapidly expanding its HEU production for its nuclear submarine by adding thousands of centrifuges.

Pakistan has responded by increasing its plutonium production at its indigenously built Khushab reactor complex which is not covered by IAEA safeguards, according to Khan. KRL is also continuing to produce about 100 Kg per year HEU with a new generation of P-3 and P-4 centrifuges at much higher separation rate.

Damaging Episodes:

Khan does not gloss over the severe damage done to Pakistan by AQ Khan's proliferation network and concerns raised by a meeting of Pakistani nuclear scientists Sultan Bashiruddin Mehmood and Abdul Majeed with Osama Bin Laden. He discusses at length how AQ Khan turned his procurement network into a proliferation network for personal profit. Musharraf saw the AQ Khan's proliferation as the "most difficult thing to deal with". The author quotes Musharraf as saying, "(T)he public image of A.Q. Khan was that of a legend and father of the bomb. He certainly was a hero for his role and contribution to the nuclear program, but at the same time no other person brought so much harm to the nuclear program than him".

 As to Mehmood and Majeed, Khan says that they designed Khushab reactors. Their expertise was in reactor design, not bomb-making, and they couldn't have helped Al Qaeda  acquire a bomb even if they wanted to. Nonetheless, they reinforced international suspicions about Pakistan's primarily defensive nuclear efforts.

Criticism of the Book:

As expected, the main criticism of the book has come from Indian reviewers. In a 500-page book, Indian critics have singled  out a one-line citation by the author that on December 16, 1971, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi stood
before the Indian Parliament and, amid a thunderous standing ovation,
stated that India had “avenged several centuries of Hindu humiliation at
the hands of Mughal emperors and sultans”. Khan has cited his reference for it as follows: V. Longer, The Defence and Foreign Policy of India (New Delhi: Sterling
Publishers, 1998), 205. Cited in Sattar, Pakistan's Foreign Policy
1947-2005, 119.


Summary:

Brig Feroz Khan's "Eating Grass" is an erudite work that offers the first authentic insider account of the making of the Pakistani bomb. It
details a story of spectacular scientific and strategic achievement by a
nation dismissed as a temporary "tent" and a "nissen hut" at birth by
Viceroy Lord Mountbatten in 1947. That same "nissen hut" is now a nuclear power about
which Brookings' Stephen Cohen has said as follows:

“One of the
most important puzzles of India-Pakistan relations is not why the
smaller Pakistan feels encircled and threatened, but why the larger
India does. It would seem that India, seven times more populous than
Pakistan and five times its size, and which defeated Pakistan in 1971,
would feel more secure. This has not been the case and Pakistan remains
deeply embedded in Indian thinking. There are historical, strategic,
ideological, and domestic reasons why Pakistan remains the central
obsession of much of the Indian strategic community, just as India
remains Pakistan’s.”


Brig Feroz Khan concludes his book on a somber note by mentioning "massive corruption" and "stagflation" in the country he served. "Perhaps it never crossed Zulfikar Ali Bhutto's mind that his words (eat grass...even go hungry) would become a self-fulfilling prophesy."

Here's a video of President Pervez Musharraf speaking about Dr. AQ Khan's contribution to the Pakistani atomic bomb development:

http://www.youtube.com/embed/TOL2_Jw1YvI"; title="YouTube video player" width="560"></iframe>" height="315" src="https://img1.blogblog.com/img/video_object.png" width="560" style="cursor: move; background-color: #b2b2b2;" />


Here's a video of this blogger talking with Brig Firoz Khan, the author of "Eating Grass":

"Eating Grass-The Making of the Pakistani Bomb"-- Riaz Haq Talks Wi... from WBT TV on Vimeo.

Related Links:

Haq's Musings

India's Indigenous Copies of Nukes and Missiles 

India's Nuclear Bomb by George Perkovich

Bulletin of Atomic Scientists

Cyberwars Across India, Pakistan and China

Pakistan's Defense Industry Going High-Tech

Pakistan's Space Capabilities

India-Pakistan Military Balance

Scientist Reveals Indian Nuke Test Fizzled

The Wisconsin Project

The Non-Proliferation Review Fall 1997

India, Pakistan Comparison 2010

Can India "Do a Lebanon" in Pakistan?

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Evaluation of Military Strengths--India vs. Pakistan

Only the Paranoid Survive

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Mockery of National Sovereignty

Views: 800

Comment by Riaz Haq on July 29, 2023 at 9:21am

Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan: The Opennheimer Of Pakistan – OpEd

by Isha Noor

https://www.eurasiareview.com/26072023-dr-abdul-qadeer-khan-the-ope...

Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan, a brilliant scientist whose exceptional work prompted Pakistan’s nuclear capabilities, appears as an enigmatic figure in the historical events where the strands of science and destiny interwine.

The “Opennheimer of Pakistan,” Abdul Qadeer Khan, was a visionary scientist whose contributions to nuclear technology changed the course of Pakistan. Dr. Khan’s journey was one of brilliance and controversy, leading to his position as a key player in Pakistan’s nuclear programme. Although appreciated in Pakistan for his part in building the nation’s nuclear deterrent, his efforts towards nuclear proliferation sparked concerns around the entire globe. Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan’s tale is still fascinating and t serves as a reminder of how much influence scientific knowledge has on determination of the future of nations. In the end, it is important to recognise both the achievements and the concerns around Dr. Khan to understand the complex interplay between science and politics in the context of nuclear proliferation.

Dr. Khan was born in Bhopal, India, on April 27, 1936, migrated to Pakistan in 1952 and began a remarkable journey that would completely changed the direction of his country’s history permanently. He became a symbol of scientific brilliance and national pride thanks to his groundbreaking contribution in the creation of Pakistan’s nuclear programme. This article examines Dr. Abdul Qadeer’s significant contribution to Pakistan’s nuclear programme and the circumstances that led to his perception as a danger to the West.

In the 1960s, Dr. Khan began his career as a scientist by studying metallurgical engineering in Germany. The foundation for his future contributions to Pakistan’s technological breakthroughs was created by this academic endeavour. As he ventured into the field of nuclear research, Dr. Khan’s experience in metallurgical engineering proved to be a valuable advantage. His early experiences in Western research labs broadened his knowledge.

The acquirement to uranium centrifuge blueprints, which turn uranium into weapons-grade fuel for nuclear fissile material, was a key contribution to Pakistan’s nuclear programme. While employed by the Anglo-Dutch-German nuclear engineering partnership Urenco, he was accused of stealing it from the Netherlands and transporting it to Pakistan in 1976. Zulfiqar Ali Bhutto, the country’s former prime minister, assigned Khan control over the initiating uranium enrichment programme shortly after he returned to Pakistan. Khan later revealed in a newspaper interview that by 1978 his team had enriched uranium and that by 1984 they were all set to explode a nuclear bomb. Pakistan’s economy fell into a severe decline after the 1998 nuclear test because of the international sanctions.

The Nishan-e-Imtiaz was given to him by the government in recognition of his remarkable contributions in 1996 and again in 1998. . Although Dr. Khan is considered as a national hero in Pakistan, his work and Pakistan’s nuclear programme threatened Western countries, especially the United States. The West saw Pakistan’s groundbreaking achievement of nuclear weapons as a threat because it was concerned about the conflicts that could come with the proliferation of nuclear technology. The potential of nuclear technology slipping into the wrong hands was one of the most important issues that the West emphasised, particularly in the view of the unstable regional security climate. Calls for greater regulation of the transfer of nuclear technology and initiatives to stop proliferation were stimulated by this concern.

Comment by Riaz Haq on July 29, 2023 at 9:22am

Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan: The Opennheimer Of Pakistan – OpEd

by Isha Noor

https://www.eurasiareview.com/26072023-dr-abdul-qadeer-khan-the-ope...

Pakistan’s relations with the West were crucial in the early 2000s by the disclosure of the Khan network. The network, an illegal proliferation network controlled by Dr. Khan, facilitated the sharing of nuclear technology with other countries, including Iran, Libya and North Korea. Geopolitical dynamics were complicated as a result of the Western response to Pakistan’s nuclear programme and Dr. Khan’s participation in proliferation activities. Pakistan was under pressure from the United States and other Western nations to stop developing nuclear weapons and abide by international non-proliferation standards. Pakistan was in a difficult situation as it tried to establish its right for national security while dealing with the foreign pressure.

It is crucial to comprehend the intricate context in which Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan’s acts took place. Pakistan believes in nuclear deterrence as the only way to maintain national security and safeguard the country’s sovereignty. In the beginning, Dr. Khan denied any kind of involvement in the nuclear proliferation but he confessed on national television in Pakistan in 2004 that he had given nuclear technology and centrifuge parts to other nations. He asserted that he did not have the Pakistani government’s consent and took full responsibility for his actions. After this confession, Khan was pardoned by Musharraf, although he later walked back his statements.

“I saved the country for the first time when I made Pakistan a nuclear nation and saved it again when I confessed and took the whole blame on myself,” Khan said in an interview while under effective house arrest.

Pakistan is the first and only Muslim country to have developed and tested nuclear weapons till the date. It was crucial for Pakistan to develop nuclear weapons because of the geostrategic threats including establishing deterrence to deter aggression, ensuring security against India’s nuclear threat, improving national prestige, achieving regional power balance and obtaining diplomatic leverage in peace negotiations. Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan’s work played a major role in the establishment of Pakistan’s nuclear programme.

In conclusion, Dr. Abdul Qadeer Khan has been the only driving force behind Pakistan’s development of nuclear weapons. His outstanding achievements in the field of nuclear science significantly advanced the nation’s nuclear programme. Dr. Khan’s knowledge of uranium enrichment accelerated Pakistan’s progress towards nuclear capability. Dr. Khan played a crucial part in the creation of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons, despite the controversies and international concerns. His contributions changed South Asia’s geostrategic environment, changing the security dynamics and strengthening Pakistan’s position on national security. As the curtains fall on the remarkable contributions of Dr. Khan, it is clear that his unwavering commitment, dedication, and groundbreaking accomplishmentsb have forever cemented his legacy as the Oppennheimer of Pakistan, a visionary scientist whose exceptional work will continue to inspire generations to come.

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