The man who knew too much 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/pakistan/Story/0,,2188777,00.html

► The Guardian

Oct 15 2007 ► Oct 13. He was the CIA's expert on Pakistan's nuclear secrets, 
but Rich Barlow was thrown out and disgraced when he blew the whistle on a US 
cover-up. Now he's to have his day in court. Adrian Levy and Cathy Scott-Clark 
report 

Rich Barlow idles outside his silver trailer on a remote campsite in Montana - 
itinerant and unemployed, with only his hunting dogs and a borrowed computer 
for company. He dips into a pouch of American Spirit tobacco to roll another 
cigarette. It is hard to imagine that he was once a covert operative at the 
CIA, the recognised, much lauded expert in the trade in Weapons of Mass 
Destruction (WMD). 

He prepared briefs for Dick Cheney, when Cheney was at the Pentagon, for the 
upper echelons of the CIA and even for the Oval Office. But when he uncovered a 
political scandal - a conspiracy to enable a rogue nation to get the nuclear 
bomb - he found himself a marked man. 

In the late 80s, in the course of tracking down smugglers of WMD components, 
Barlow uncovered reams of material that related to Pakistan. It was known the 
Islamic Republic had been covertly striving to acquire nuclear weapons since 
India's explosion of a device in 1974 and the prospect terrified the west - 
especially given the instability of a nation that had had three military coups 
in less than 30 years . Straddling deep ethnic, religious and political 
fault-lines, it was also a country regularly rocked by inter-communal violence. 
"Pakistan was the kind of place where technology could slip out of control," 
Barlow says. 

He soon discovered, however, that senior officials in government were taking 
quite the opposite view: they were breaking US and international 
non-proliferation protocols to shelter Pakistan's ambitions and even sell it 
banned WMD technology. In the closing years of the cold war, Pakistan was 
considered to have great strategic importance. It provided Washington with a 
springboard into neighbouring Afghanistan - a route for passing US weapons and 
cash to the mujahideen, who were battling to oust the Soviet army that had 
invaded in 1979. Barlow says, "We had to buddy-up to regimes we didn't see 
eye-to-eye with, but I could not believe we would actually give Pakistan the 
bomb. 

How could any US administration set such short-term gains against the long-term 
safety of the world?" Next he discovered that the Pentagon was preparing to 
sell Pakistan jet fighters that could be used to drop a nuclear bomb. 

Barlow was relentless in exposing what he saw as US complicity, and in the end 
he was sacked and smeared as disloyal, mad, a drunk and a philanderer. If he 
had been listened to, many believe Pakistan might never have got its nuclear 
bomb; south Asia might not have been pitched into three near-nuclear 
conflagrations; and the nuclear weapons programmes of Iran, Libya and North 
Korea - which British and American intelligence now acknowledge were all 
secretly enabled by Pakistan - would never have got off the ground. "None of 
this need have happened," Robert Gallucci, special adviser on WMD to both 
Clinton and George W Bush, told us. "The vanquishing of Barlow and the erasing 
of his case kicked off a chain of events that led to all the nuclear-tinged 
stand-offs we face today. Pakistan is the number one threat to the world, and 
if it all goes off - a nuclear bomb in a US or European city- I'm sure we will 
find ourselves looking in Pakistan's direction." 

US aid to Pakistan tapered off when the Soviet Union withdrew from Afghanistan. 
Dejected and impoverished, in 1987 Pakistan's ruling military responded by 
selling its nuclear hardware and know-how for cash, something that would have 
been obvious to all if the intelligence had been properly analysed. "But the 
George HW Bush administration was not looking at Pakistan," Barlow says. "It 
had new crises to deal with in the Persian Gulf where Saddam Hussein had 
invaded Kuwait." 

As the first Gulf war came to an end with no regime change in Iraq, a group of 
neoconservatives led by Paul Wolfowitz, Dick Cheney, Lewis "Scooter" Libby and 
Donald Rumsfeld were already lobbying to finish what that campaign had started 
and dislodge Saddam. Even as the CIA amassed evidence showing that Pakistan, a 
state that sponsored Islamist terrorism and made its money by selling 
proscribed WMD technology, was the number one threat, they earmarked Iraq as 
the chief target. 

When these neocons came to power in 2001, under President George W Bush, 
Pakistan was indemnified again, this time in return for signing up to the "war 
on terror". Condoleezza Rice backed the line, as did Rumsfeld, too. Pakistan, 
although suspected by all of them to be at the epicentre of global instability, 
was hailed as a friend. All energies were devoted to building up the case 
against Iraq. 

It is only now, amid the recriminations about the war in Iraq and reassessments 
of where the real danger lies, that Barlow - the despised bringer of bad news 
about Pakistan - is finally to get a hearing. More than 20 years after this 
saga began, his case, filed on Capitol Hill, is coming to court later this 
month. His lawyers are seeking millions of dollars in compensation for Barlow 
as well as the reinstatement of his $80,000 a year government pension. Evidence 
will highlight what happened when ideologues took control of intelligence in 
three separate US administrations - those of Reagan, and of the two Bushes - 
and how a CIA analyst who would not give up his pursuit for the truth became a 
fall guy. 

Born in Upper Manhattan, New York, the son of an army surgeon, Barlow went to 
an Ivy League feeder school before attending Western Washington University on 
America's northwest tip. Even then he was an idealist and an internationalist, 
obsessively following world events. He majored in political science, and his 
thesis was on counter-proliferation intelligence; he was concerned that the 
burgeoning black markets in nuclear weapons technology threatened peace in the 
west. "I got my material from newspapers and books," he recalls. "I went to 
congressional hearings in Washington and discovered that there was tonnes of 
intelligence about countries procuring nuclear materials." After graduation in 
1981, shortly after Reagan became president - avowedly committed to the non 
proliferation of nuclear weapons - Barlow won an internship at the State 
Department's Arms Control and Disarmament Agency (ACDA), which had been 
established by John F Kennedy in the 60s. 

At first Barlow thought he was helping safeguard the world. "I just loved it," 
he says. His focus from the start was Pakistan, at the time suspected of 
clandestinely seeking nuclear weapons in a programme initiated by Zulfikar Ali 
Bhutto, the father of Benazir. "Everywhere I looked I kept coming up against 
intelligence about Pakistan's WMD programme," Barlow says. "I thought I was 
telling them what they needed to hear, but the White House seemed oblivious." 
Immersed in the minutiae of his investigations, he didn't appreciate the bigger 
picture: that Pakistan had, within days of Reagan's inauguration in 1981, gone 
from being an outcast nation that had outraged the west by hanging Bhutto to a 
major US ally in the proxy war in Afghanistan. 

Within months Barlow was out of a job. A small band of Republican hawks, 
including Paul Wolfowitz, had convinced the president that America needed a new 
strategy against potential nuclear threats, since long-term policies such as 
détente and containment were not working. Reagan was urged to remilitarise, 
launch his Star Wars programme and neutralise ACDA. When the agency's staff was 
cut by one third, Barlow found himself out of Washington and stacking shelves 
in a food store in Connecticut, where he married his girlfriend, Cindy. He was 
not on hand in 1984 when intelligence reached the ACDA and the CIA that 
Pakistan had joined the nuclear club (the declared nuclear powers were Britain, 
France, the US, China and Russia) after China detonated a device on Pakistan's 
behalf. 

Soon after, Barlow was re-employed to work as an analyst, specialising in 
Pakistan, at the Office of Scientific and Weapons Research (OSWR). The CIA was 
pursuing the Pakistan programme vigorously even though Reagan was turning a 
blind eye - indeed, Reagan's secretary of state, George Schultz, claimed in 
1985: "We have full faith in [Pakistan's] assurance that they will not make the 
bomb." 

Back on a government salary, Barlow, aged 31, moved to Virginia with his wife 
Cindy, also a CIA agent. From day one, he was given access to the most highly 
classified material. He learned about the workings of the vast grey global 
market in dual-use components - the tools and equipment that could be put to 
use in a nuclear weapons programme but that could also be ascribed to other 
domestic purposes, making the trade in them hard to spot or regulate. "There 
was tonnes of it and most of it was ending up in Islamabad," he says. "Pakistan 
had a vast network of procurers, operating all over the world." A secret 
nuclear facility near Islamabad, known as the Khan Research Laboratories, was 
being fitted out with components imported from Europe and America "under the 
wire". But the CIA obtained photographs. Floor plans. Bomb designs. Sensors 
picked up evidence of high levels of enriched uranium in the air and in the 
dust clinging to the lorries plying the road to the laboratories. Barlow was in 
his element. 

However, burrowing through cables and files, he began to realise that the State 
Department had intelligence it was not sharing - in particular the identities 
of key Pakistani procurement agents, who were active in the US. Without this 
information, the US Commerce Department (which approved export licences) and US 
Customs (which enforced them) were hamstrung. 

Barlow came to the conclusion that a small group of senior officials was 
physically aiding the Pakistan programme. "They were issuing scores of 
approvals for the Pakistan embassy in Washington to export hi-tech equipment 
that was critical for their nuclear bomb programme and that the US Commerce 
Department had refused to license," he says. Dismayed, he approached his boss 
at the CIA, Richard Kerr, the deputy director for intelligence, who summoned 
senior State Department officials to a meeting at CIA headquarters in Langley. 
Barlow recalls: "Kerr tried to do it as nicely as he could. He said he 
understood the State Department had to keep Pakistan on side - the State 
Department guaranteed it would stop working against us." 

Then a Pakistani nuclear smuggler walked into a trap sprung by the CIA - and 
the Reagan administration's commitment to rid the world of nuclear weapons was 
put to the test. 

US foreign aid legislation stipulated that if Pakistan was shown to be 
procuring weapons of mass destruction or was in possession of a nuclear bomb, 
all assistance would be halted. This, in turn, would have threatened the 
US-funded war in Afghanistan. So there were conflicting interests at work when 
Barlow got a call from the Department of Energy. "I was told that a Pakistani 
businessman had contacted Carpenter Steel, a company in Pennsylvania, asking to 
buy a specific type of metal normally used only in constructing centrifuges to 
enrich uranium. His name was Arshad Pervez and his handler, Inam ul-Haq, a 
retired brigadier from the Pakistan army, had been known to us for many years 
as a key Pakistan government operative." Barlow and US customs set up a sting. 
"Pervez arrived to a do a deal at a hotel we had rigged out and was arrested," 
Barlow says. "But ul-Haq, our main target, never showed." 

Trawling through piles of cables, he found evidence that two high-ranking US 
officials extremely close to the White House had tipped off Islamabad about the 
CIA operation. Furious, Barlow called his superiors. "The CIA went mad. These 
were criminal offences," Barlow says. The State Department's lawyers considered 
their position. They argued that an inquiry would necessitate the spilling of 
state secrets. The investigation was abandoned just as Reagan made his annual 
statement to Congress, testifying that "Pakistan does not possess a nuclear 
explosive device." 

But the Pervez case would not go away. Congressman Stephen Solarz, a Democrat 
from New Jersey, demanded a closed congressional hearing to vet the 
intelligence concerning Pakistan's bomb programme. Barlow was detailed to 
"backbench" at the meeting, if necessary offering advice to the White House 
representative, General David Einsel (who had been chosen by Reagan to head his 
Star Wars programme). An armed guard stood outside the room where the hearing 
was held. 

Barlow recalls that Solarz got straight to the point: "Were Pervez and ul-Haq 
agents of the Pakistan government?" Without flinching, Einsel barked back: "It 
is not cut and dried." It was a criminal offence to lie to Congress, as other 
hearings happening on the same day down the corridor were spelling out to 
Colonel Oliver North, the alleged mastermind behind Iran-Contra. Barlow froze. 
"These congressmen had no idea what was really going on in Pakistan and what 
had been coming across my desk about its WMD programme," he says. "They did not 
know that Pakistan already had a bomb and was shopping for more with US help. 
All of it had been hushed up." 

Then Solarz called on Barlow to speak. "I told the truth. I said it was clear 
Pervez was an agent for Pakistan's nuclear programme. Everyone started 
shouting. General Einsel screamed, 'Barlow doesn't know what he's talking 
about.' Solarz asked if there had been any other cases involving the Pakistan 
government and Einsel said, 'No'." Barlow recalls thinking, " 'Oh no, here we 
go again.' They asked me and I said, 'Yes, there have been scores of other 
cases.' " 

The meeting broke up. Barlow was bundled into a CIA car that sped for Langley. 
It was a bad time to be the US's foremost expert on Pakistan's nuclear 
programme when the administration was desperate to prove it didn't exist. 
Shortly after, Barlow left the CIA, claiming that Einsel had made his job 
impossible. 

Later that year, Reagan would tell the US Congress: "There is no diminution in 
the president's commitment to restraining the spread of nuclear weapons in the 
Indian subcontinent or elsewhere." 

Once again, Barlow was able to bounce back. In January 1989, he was recruited 
by the Office of the Secretary of Defence (OSD) at the Pentagon to become its 
first intelligence analyst in WMD. For a man uncomfortable with political 
pragmatism, it was a strange move: he was now in a department that was steeped 
in realpolitik, balancing the commercial needs of the US military industry 
against America's international obligations. Within weeks, he had again built a 
stack of evidence about Pakistan's WMD programme, including intelligence that 
the Pakistan army was experimenting with a delivery system for its nuclear 
bomb, using US-provided technology. "Our side was at it again," Barlow says. 

Still optimistic, still perhaps naive and still committed to the ideal of 
thwarting the Pakistan programme, Barlow convinced himself that his experience 
in the CIA was untypical, the work of a handful of political figures who would 
now not be able to reach him. When he was commissioned to write an intelligence 
assessment for Dick Cheney, defence secretary, giving a snapshot of the 
Pakistan WMD programme, he thought he was making headway. Barlow's report was 
stark. He concluded that the US had sold 40 F-16 fighter jets to Pakistan in 
the mid-80s - it had been a precondition of the sale that none of the jets 
could be adapted to drop a nuclear bomb. He was convinced that all of them had 
been configured to do just that. He concluded that Pakistan was still shopping 
for its WMD programme and the chances were extremely high that it would also 
begin selling this technology to other nations. Unbeknown to Barlow, the 
Pentagon had just approved the sale of another 60 F-16s to Pakistan in a deal 
worth $1.4bn, supposedly with the same provison as before. 

"Officials at the OSD kept pressurising me to change my conclusions," Barlow 
says. He refused and soon after noticed files going missing. A secretary tipped 
him off that a senior official had been intercepting his papers. In July 1989, 
Barlow was hauled before one of the Pentagon's top military salesmen, who 
accused him of sabotaging the new F-16 deal. Eight days later, when Congress 
asked if the jet could be adapted by Pakistan to drop a nuclear bomb, the 
Defence Department said, "None of the F-16s Pakistan already owns or is about 
to purchase is configured for nuclear delivery." Barlow was horrified. 

On August 4 1989, he was fired. "They told me they had received credible 
information that I was a security risk." Barlow demanded to know how and why. 
"They said they could not tell me as the information was classified." All they 
would say was that "senior Defence Department officials", whose identities were 
also classified, had supplied "plenty of evidence". The rumour going around the 
office was that Barlow was a Soviet spy. Barlow went home to Cindy. "We were in 
marriage counselling following my fall-out at the CIA. We were getting our 
relationship back on track. And now I had to explain that I was being fired 
from the Pentagon." 

Barlow still would not give up. His almost pathological tenacity was one of the 
characteristics that made him a great analyst. With no salary and few savings, 
he found a lawyer who agreed to represent him pro-bono. At this point, more 
documents surfaced linking several familiar names to Barlow's sacking and its 
aftermath; these included Cheney's chief of staff, Libby, and two officials 
working for Wolfowitz. Through his lawyer, Barlow discovered that he was being 
described as a tax evader, an alcoholic and an adulterer, who had been fired 
from all previous government jobs. It was alleged that his marriage counselling 
was a cover for a course of psychiatric care, and he was put under pressure to 
permit investigators to interview his marriage guidance adviser. "I had to 
explain to Cindy that her private fears were to be trawled by the OSD. She 
moved out. My life, professionally and personally, was destroyed. Cindy filed 
for divorce." 

Barlow's lawyers stuck by him, winning a combined inquiry by the three 
inspector generals acting for the Defence Department, the CIA and the State 
Department (inspector generals are the equivalent of ombudsmen in Britain). By 
September 1993, the lead inspector, Sherman Funk, concluded that the accusation 
of treachery was "an error not supported by a scintilla of evidence. The truth 
about Barlow's termination is, simply put, that it was unfair and unwarranted." 
The whole affair, Funk said, was "Kafka-like" - Barlow was sacrificed for 
"refusing to accede to policies which he knew to be wrong". 

It seemed Barlow had been vindicated. However, when the report was published it 
had been completely rewritten by someone at the Pentagon. Funk was appalled. 
When Barlow's lawyers called the Pentagon, they were told it was the department 
that had been exonerated. Now it was official: Pakistan was nuclear-free, and 
did not have the capability of dropping a bomb from an American-supplied F-16 
jet and the reputation of the only man who claimed otherwise was destroyed. 
Later, Barlow's lawyers would find his brief to Cheney had been rewritten, too, 
clearing Pakistan and concluding that continued US aid would ensure that the 
country would desist from its WMD programme. 

The Pentagon officials who were responsible for Barlow's downfall would all be 
out of government by 1993, when Bill Clinton came into the White House. In 
opposition they began pursuing an aggressive political agenda, canvassing for 
war in Iraq rather than restraining nuclear-armed Pakistan. Their number now 
included Congressman Donald Rumsfeld, a former Republican defence secretary, 
and several others who would go on to take key positions under George Bush, 
including Richard Armitage, Richard Perle and John Bolton. 

Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz headed the Commission to Assess the Ballistic Missile 
Threat to the United States, which concluded in July 1998 that the chief threat 
- far greater than the CIA and other intelligence agencies had so far reported 
- was posed by Iran, Iraq and North Korea: the future Axis of Evil powers. 
Pakistan was not on the list, even though just two months earlier it had put an 
end to the dissembling by detonating five nuclear blasts in the deserts of 
Balochistan. 

It was also difficult not to conclude that Islamist terrorism was escalating 
and that its epicentre was Pakistan. The camps that had once been used to train 
the US-backed mujahideen had, since the Soviet retreat from Afghanistan, 
morphed into training facilities for fighters pitted against the west. Many 
were filled by jihadis and were funded with cash from the Pakistan military. 

It was made clear to the new president, Bill Clinton, that US policy on 
Pakistan had failed. The US had provided Islamabad with a nuclear bomb and had 
no leverage to stop the country's leaders from using it. When he was contacted 
by lawyers for Barlow, Clinton was shocked both by the treatment Barlow had 
received, and the implications for US policy on Pakistan. He signed off $1m in 
compensation. But Barlow never received it as the deal had to be ratified by 
Congress and, falling foul of procedural hurdles, it was kicked into the Court 
of Federal Claims to be reviewed as Clinton left office. 

When the George Bush came to power, his administration quashed the case. CIA 
director George Tenet and Michael Hayden, director of the National Security 
Agency, asserted "state secrets privilege" over Barlow's entire legal claim. 
With no evidence to offer, the claim collapsed. Destroyed and penniless, the 
former CIA golden boy spent his last savings on a second-hand silver Avion 
trailer, packed up his life and drove off to Bear Canyon campground in Bozeman, 
Montana, where he still lives today. 

Even with Barlow out of the picture, there were still analysts in Washington - 
and in the Bush administration - who were wary of Pakistan. They warned that 
al-Qaida had a natural affinity with Pakistan, geographically and religiously, 
and that its affiliates were seeking nuclear weapons. Some elements of the 
Pakistan military were sympathetic and in place to help. But those arguing that 
Pakistan posed the highest risk were isolated. Cheney, Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz 
were in the ascendant, and they returned to the old agenda, lobbying for a war 
in Iraq and, in a repeat of 1981 and the Reagan years, signed up Pakistan as 
the key ally in the war against terror. 

Contrary advice was not welcome. And Bush's team set about dismantling the 
government agency that was giving the most trouble - the State Department's 
Nonproliferation Bureau. Norm Wulf, who recently retired as deputy assistant 
secretary of state for non-proliferation, told us: "They met in secret, 
deciding who to employ, displacing career civil servants with more than 30 
years on the job in favour of young, like-thinking people, rightwingers who 
would toe the administration line." And the administration line was to do away 
with any evidence that pointed to Pakistan as a threat to global stability, 
refocusing all attention on Iraq. 

The same tactics used to disgrace Barlow and discredit his evidence were used 
again in 2003, this time against Joseph Wilson, a former US ambassador whom the 
Bush administration had sent to Africa with a mission to substantiate the story 
that Saddam Hussein was seeking to buy material to manufacture WMD. When Wilson 
refused to comply, he found himself the subject of a smear campaign, while his 
wife, Valerie Plame, was outed as a CIA agent. Libby would subsequently be 
jailed for leaking Plame's identity (although released on a presidential 
pardon). Plame and Wilson's careers and marriage would survive. Barlow and his 
wife, Cindy's, would not - and no one would be held to account. Until now. 

When the Republicans lost control of both houses of Congress in 2006, Barlow's 
indefatigable lawyers sensed an opportunity, lodging a compensation claim on 
Capitol Hill that is to be heard later this month. This time, with supporters 
of the Iraq war in retreat and with Pakistan, too, having lost many friends in 
Washington, Barlow hopes he will receive what he is due. "But this final 
hearing cannot indict any of those who hounded me, or misshaped the 
intelligence product," he says. "And it is too late to contain the flow of 
doomsday technology that Pakistan unleashed on the world." 

· Adrian Levy and Catherine Scott-Clark are the authors of Deception: Pakistan, 
The United States And Global Nuclear Weapons Conspiracy, published later this 
month by Atlantic Books, £25.



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