[font=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][font=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][font=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif]Remembering Unsung Heroes: Munir Ahmad Khan
The tremendous contribution made by Munir Ahmed Khan in making PAKISTAN nuclear.
[USMAN SHABBIR]
](http://www.defencejournal.com/2004-5/print/p-cvs.asp)
The Multan Conference, Jan 20, 1972: The day the bomb was born
Bhutto began the nuclear quest with his characteristic sense of urgency. He had taken power in mid-December 1971, and in January he hastily called together some fifty of Pakistan’s top scientists and government officials for what was to be a very secret meeting. At the time, the new government was still in a state of enormous confusion, and Bhutto’s aides originally scheduled in the meeting for the town of Quetta, the provincial capital of Balochistan. It was January, with winter storms blowing down from Afghanistan to the north, and Quetta had no facilities adequately heated for the selected scientists and bureaucrats to meet in. No one complained, when, the government laid on military planes to fly the freezing scientists south and east to the town of Multan. The day was sparkling clear, and Bhutto convened the meeting under a brightly coloured canvas canopy, on the lawn of a stately old Colonial mansion. The scientists and administrators who were there were far and away the best brains in Pakistan, and some were as good as could be found anywhere in the world. The Pakistani people and their Islamic forebears had historically nurtured a rich scientific tradition, and the country, though in some ways underdeveloped could count on a surprisingly strong scientific establishment. Three names are especially worth remembering.
Abdus Salam - the Professor to his worshipping younger colleagues - had founded the Third World-oriented International Centre for Theoretical Physics in Trieste, Italy, and would go on to win the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1979.
Dr. Ishrat Usmani had gained prominence as Chairman of the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission and would go on to build his reputation as an international civil servant specializing in energy questions at the United Nations.
And the man Bhutto would name to replace Usmani as head of the nuclear programme and the PAEC till his retirement in 1991, Munir Ahmed Khan, had just come with high marks from the staff of the very organization that is supposed to stop the spread of nuclear weapons, the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna. Munir Ahmed Khan was a nuclear engineer of international standing, and he spent nearly 14 years at the IAEA in Vienna, where he was the Head of Reactor Engineering, before joining PAEC, and he had organized more than twenty technical and international conferences on heavy water reactors, advanced gas cooled reactors, plutonium utilization, and small and medium power reactors. In the late 1970s, Director General of IAEA offered him the post of Deputy Director General in Vienna, but he refused it to accomplish his mission in Pakistan. He was the first Asian scientist to be appointed at the IAEA and later in 1986, he was elected as Chairman of the Board of Directors of IAEA in Vienna.
There was great deal of enthusiasm and joy. Bhutto started slowly. He spoke of Pakistan’s defeat in the war with India, and vowed that he would vindicate the country’s honour. He said that he had always wanted Pakistan to take the nuclear road, but nobody had listened to him. Now fate had placed him in a position where he could make the decision, he had the people of Pakistan behind him, and he wanted to go ahead. Pakistan was going to have the bomb, and the scientists sitting under the shamiana at Multan were going to make it for him. So Bhutto had all these boys together, these scientists, and there were senior people, very senior people, and junior people, and youngsters fresh with their PhDs in nuclear physics, and he said: Look, we’re going to have the bomb.” He said “Can you give it to me?” So, they started saying “Oh yes, yes, yes. You can have it. You can have it.” But Bhutto wanted more. He paused them. “How long will it take?” he asked. There was a lively debate on the time needed to make the bomb, and finally one scientist dared to say that maybe it could be done in five years. Bhutto smiled, lifted his hand, and dramatically thrust forward three fingers.” Three years”, he said.” I want it in three years”. The atmosphere suddenly became electric. It was then that one of the junior men - S.A.Butt, who under Munir Khan’s guiding hand would come to play a major role in making the bomb possible - jumped to his feet and clamoured for his leader’s attention. “It can be done in three years”, Butt shouted excitedly. Bhutto was very much amused and he said, “Well, much as I appreciate your enthusiasm, this is a very serious political decision, which Pakistan must make, and perhaps all Third World countries must make one day, because it is coming. So can you do it? “And they said, “Yes, we can do it, given the resources and given the facilities. ”Bhutto’s answer was simple.” I shall find you the resources and I shall find you the facilities”.
This then was the day the bomb was born, the meeting at Multan that set the seal on Pakistan’s nuclear future. From that moment, Pakistan would begin a national crash programme to get the bomb. It was a historic move.
The meeting set the stage and also helped select the actors. Most of the scientists came along. Few did not. Even Z.A.Bhutto, for all his powers of persuasion, could not convince some of the senior men, including the longtime friend and adviser, the future Nobel laureate Abdus Salam. Bhutto probably feared that any open condemnation of the project from Salam could severely split Pakistan’s nuclear scientists, many of whom revered him. His opposition could also trigger alarm bells among the scientists and diplomats around the world. So some time after the meeting, a special emissary was sent to Salam, who had returned to his home in Britain, to brief him on the programme and to assure him that it was really peaceful in intent.