David took the silencer off the pistol, cocked the hammer, and started counting.
Ten, nine, eight, seven, six…
Without warning, he pulled the trigger, though aiming slightly to the side at the last moment. The explosion terrified Khan and seemed to shatter his already-frayed nerves. He began weeping and resumed begging David not to hurt him or his family.
“What do you want?” he cried. “Just tell me, what do you want?”
“How long have you been working on Iran’s nuclear weapons program?”
“On and off for six years.”
“What do you mean, ‘on and off’?”
“At the beginning, when the Iranians bought the plans from my uncle…”
“A. Q. Khan?”
“Right — when they bought them, my uncle sent me to Tehran and then to Bushehr, just for a few months to help them get organized. Then I went home and didn’t come back for a few years. Then, about five or six years ago, they asked me to come for a month at a time.”
“Who did?”
“Mohammed Saddaji.”
“How did you know him?”
“I didn’t. My uncle did. I first met him in Karachi, then in Tehran on that first trip, and we have worked closely together ever since. He was a hard man, but we got along well.”
“And then?”
“When Darazi became president, that’s when things really accelerated.”
“How so?”
“When you Americans went into Iraq, Hosseini got nervous. He decided not to pursue the Bomb, at least not for a while. But when Darazi came to power, they started talking more and more about the coming of the Mahdi. They started believing they had to build the Bomb to prepare the way for him to come.”
“Aren’t you Sunni?”
“Yes.”
“Then you don’t believe in the Mahdi.”
“I didn’t, not when I first started coming here from Pakistan. I was just coming for the money — they pay very well — and because my uncle told me to.”
“But now?”
“What can I tell you? The Twelfth Imam is here.”
“So now you’re a Twelver?”
“I don’t know what I am. I’m just trying to get my work done well and on time.”
“Have you met Imam al-Mahdi?”
“No. They keep us away from anyone political. Actually, they keep us away from almost anyone.”
“When was the last time you saw your family?”
“I see them by Skype.”
“What about in person?”
“Two years.”
“Really? Why don’t you go visit them?”
“They won’t let me. They say it would be a security risk.”
“Why can’t your family come here to stay, or to visit at least?”
“That’s what I ask, but they say that’s a security risk too.”
“What if we get your family and bring them to the States?”
Khan had a startled look on his face. “Would you do that?”
“If you cooperate, absolutely.”
“Really?”
“Of course.”
“I could see my wife and my daughters?”
“They couldn’t ever go back to Pakistan, of course.”
“That’s okay. Just to have them with me. Just to hold them in my arms again. Is it really possible?”
“Yes,” David said. “Tell me where the warheads are, and I’ll get the ball rolling.”
Khan hesitated. David wanted to push him but restrained himself. The guy was talking. He just needed a few minutes. David reached into his coat pocket and found his phone and immediately patched back into the Global Ops Center at Langley. He said nothing, just let the team listen.
“You can’t ever go back — not to the missile base, not to Tehran, not to Pakistan,” David said gently. “You know that, right, Tariq? I’m never going to let that happen. And as we speak, I’m putting a new SIM card into your phone that is going to load all the Mossad material I told you about earlier.”
Tariq watched in wide-eyed horror as David reached into his jacket, tore a piece of the inner lining, and took out a SIM card that had been taped inside. Then he removed the SIM card in Tariq’s phone, put the new card in, and taped Tariq’s original SIM card back into the lining of his jacket.
“You are now officially a Mossad agent,” he smiled. “All that’s left is to turn it on.”
But Tariq would have none of it. The fear in his eyes told the story, and he began to talk.
52
Jalal Zandi tried to tell himself to calm down.
He walked the floor of the 120,000-square-foot missile-assembly facility in the middle of a poverty-stricken neighborhood on the periphery of the Iranian city of Arak — a facility most locals thought built construction cranes because, in fact, half of the massive plant did — and tried not to hyperventilate. Looking scared would only make him look guilty, and looking guilty right now would be a death sentence. Inside, uniformed IRGC were everywhere. Outside, plainclothes agents acted like factory workers, truck drivers, and maintenance men, but they were all armed and beyond paranoid. They knew what had happened to Saddaji. And they knew what had happened to the nuclear facilities built by Saddam Hussein and Bashar al-Assad. They had all met the same fate, a fate none here was eager to share.
But telling oneself not to look scared or be scared hardly removed the fear, and Zandi was terrified. Hadn’t he given them everything they had asked of him so far? Hadn’t he done what he had promised? He hadn’t demanded or accepted much money, just enough not to feel like he was giving his valuable services away for free. After all, there weren’t a lot of people who did what he did or knew what he knew. All he’d ever wanted was peace of mind. He’d have done it for free, actually, if they’d asked him. All he’d wanted was not to be killed and for his family to be safe as well. It hadn’t seemed too much to ask. Until now.
He checked in with two shift supervisors and answered a few technical questions. He gave some instructions as they made final adjustments to the second of two Shahab-3 (or Meteor-3 or Shooting Star–3) ballistic missiles, an adaptation of the North Korean Nodong missile. The variant they were finishing was stronger and faster than its predecessors, with a speed of Mach 2.1 and an extended range just shy of 2,000 kilometers, or about 1,200 miles. Typically, the 2,200-pound warhead held five conventional “cluster warheads” that could break away from the missile upon reentry and hit five entirely different targets with standard explosives. But in this version, and in the others like it being finalized around the country, the standard nose cone holding the warhead was being retrofitted to hold a single nuclear warhead and all the electronics and avionics that went with it. They were using the Pakistani designs both for the nuclear warhead itself and for its attachment to the missile, the designs the Iranian regime had purchased from Tariq Khan’s uncle for a ghastly sum.
Now Dr. Saddaji was dead. Najjar Malik had defected. Khan was missing. Zandi feared for his life, but he wasn’t sure what to do next. He knew he was supposed to report any anomalies in the program up the chain of command. He had direct access, twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, to Mohsen Jazini, commander of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps, on his personal mobile phone and on his home phone. And Jazini had been clear that if there were ever an emergency and he couldn’t reach him, he should immediately contact Ali Faridzadeh, the minister of defense, whose personal mobile, home, and office numbers Zandi had been given as well. But calling either man terrified him. They were under enormous pressure from the Twelfth Imam to deliver completed, operational missiles and to get them into the field, ready to be fueled and launched as soon as possible. It had been a miracle to get the first two missiles ready for the navy, but those were entirely different kinds of missiles and far easier to complete.