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Deception

Pakistan, the United States, and the Secret Trade in Nuclear Weapons

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Adrian Levy and Catherine Scott-Clark are internationally renowned investigative journalists. In Deception, they reveal the decades-long story of Pakistan's nuclear program-and how the United States has been complicit in the spread of nuclear arms. Based on hundreds of interviews from around the world, this work will force Americans to reexamine national priorities.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      A.Q. Khan set about to learn and procure nuclear bomb technology for his native country, Pakistan. He secretly purchased and imported raw materials and specialized equipment from European and American suppliers to build his weapons. Narrator Richard Poe's rendition makes a long and detailed book agreeable for listeners by suiting his demeanor to what is being said, and modifying his voice to become incredulous, angry, doubtful, or sad. He also rolls off the abundant Arabic and Urdu names with ease and fluency. Poe avoids long pauses to set off quoted material, instead using vocal inflections that signify a change from the author's words to those of another. This history of a nuclear theft explains why Pakistan poses such a threat to the world today. J.A.H. (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from July 30, 2007
      Earlier this year, William Langewiesche's The Atomic Bazaar
      alerted readers to the blind eye the United States and other nations have turned toward Pakistan's efforts to build a nuclear bomb and to sell that technology to other nations, including the entire “Axis of Evil.” Levy and Scott-Clark (The Amber Room
      ) work on a larger canvas, shaping their in-depth reporting into a compelling and more detailed narrative. They have not truly improved upon Langewiesche's portrait of A.Q. Khan, the metallurgist who became “Pakistan's biggest and most valuable personality” after smuggling atomic secrets out of the Netherlands. But they do substantially support the idea that the nuclear program influenced Pakistan's internal power struggles, and that American government officials led disinformation campaigns for 30 years in order to hang onto the nation as a dubious ally against first the Soviets and then al-Qaeda. The authors also hint at the possible involvement of Paul Wolfowitz and Scooter Libby in an attempt to discredit an intelligence analyst who spoke frankly of the Pakistani threat during the first Bush administration. Building on a decade's worth of interviews, the husband-and-wife investigative term serve a stunning indictment of “the nuclear crime of all our lifetimes,” in which, the authors claim, the U.S. has been an active accessory.

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