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The other official, retired Lt. Gen. Zulfiqar Khan, called the letter "a fabrication." The Post said the assertions by Khan and the details in the letter could not be independently verified. But the newspaper quoted one senior U.S. official who said the signature appeared genuine and the contents were "consistent with our knowledge" of the events described. Another intelligence official said the letter contained information known only to a handful of people. Khan has long denied claims that he was working behind his government's back in his covert nuclear technology sales to foreign governments. "This is a piece of dramatic evidence that Khan did not act as a single rogue agent, but instead was operating at the instruction of others," Henderson said. "I think the main point of this is that Pakistan used this technology to trade for diplomatic advantage." David Albright, an authority on nuclear proliferation with the Institute for Science and International Security in Washington, disagreed, saying the letter and Khan's narrative are evidence he acted alone. "It shows that Khan was a rogue agent and that he colluded to provide centrifuge components to North Korea without Pakistani official approval," Albright said. He said that in Khan's narrative, which has not been released, the scientist claimed he had assured the military that North Korea would not use the centrifuges for its nuclear weapons program, since it already had more advanced technology for that purpose. Albright said the claim was false, but Pakistani military officials could have found it plausible.
[Associated
Press;
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