'Pakistan's nuclear reprocessing will disrupt ties with the US'
The following is an excerpt from a declassified document released online by America’s Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) as part of a searchable database on its website Reading Room. Declassified documents were previously only available to the public at the National Archives in College Park, Maryland.
In a declassified document from the early 1980s, a top CIA official alerts the US government of Pakistan’s reprocessing plant for extracting plutonium.
The remarks were made by then Deputy Director of Central Intelligence to the President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory, November 1982, in a document titled World Events Affecting the US.
Marked under the subheading "Pakistan's nuclear weapons development", the document contains a brief entry of US officials' knowledge of Pakistan's attempts at the time towards building a nuclear weapon.
"The Pakistanis continue to move toward the fabrication of a nuclear explosive device. They are buying components and equipment for building a nuclear implosion weapon and reportedly will start up the reprocessing plant for extracting plutonium within the next two months or so. President Zia knows that any reprocessing operations -- even those which the Pakistanis may consider "legal" -- could disrupt the US-Pakistani security relationship.
In the entry, the official also adds that no additional information has come to light in the interim bearing on Chinese involvement in Pakistan's nuclear activities or Indian reactions.
One declassified Worldwide Report on "Nuclear development and proliferation" features a July 1981 German newspaper report detailing how German scientists and then Libyan head of state Qadhdhafi 'secretly' helped Pakistan become an atomic power.
"Only a few days ago, Pakistani dictator General Zia-ul-Haq still claimed that his country had no intention of developing atomic weapons, but in secret high-pressure work is going on to make a bomb. Pakistan’s helpers: FRG [Federal Republic of Germany] scientists and Libyan head of state Qadhdhafi with his oil millions," the article starts.
It goes on to describe a meeting between three Germans and four Pakistanis, including "a high government official".