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IAEA to probe US report of Syrian atom reactor
Foreign Desk Report
VIENNA—The head of the U.N. nuclear watchdog pledged on Friday to
investigate what he called serious U.S. accusations that Syria secretly
built a nuclear reactor with North Korean help.
Syria, which denies the U.S. allegations, accused the United States of
involvement in an Israeli air attack in September that Washington says
destroyed the site of an atomic reactor in a remote part of the Arab
state.
Mohamed ElBaradei, director of the International Atomic Energy Agency,
said the allegations by U.S. intelligence against Syria would be
investigated with due vigor.
“The Agency will treat this information with the seriousness it deserves
and will investigate the veracity of the information,” ElBaradei said in
a statement.
He criticized the United States for not disclosing its intelligence
information sooner. Israel should have given IAEA inspectors a chance to
investigate any Syrian nuclear activity before bombing the site, he
added.
ElBaradei confirmed Washington had handed over information which said
that a Syrian installation destroyed by an Israeli air strike in
September was an unfinished atomic reactor.
The U.S. intelligence material, which included photographs, said the
suspected Syrian nuclear plant built with North Korean help was “nearing
operational capability in August 2007” — the month before the Israeli
strike.
ElBaradei said in his statement: “According to this information, the
reactor was not yet operational and no nuclear material had been
introduced into it.”
Thursday’s U.S. disclosure did not amount to proof of an illicit nuclear
arms program since there was no sign of a reprocessing plant needed to
convert spent fuel from the plant into bomb-grade uranium, analysts
said.
“The United States and Israel have not identified any
plutonium-separation or nuclear weaponisation facilities,” David
Albright and Paul Brannan of the Institute for Science and International
Security said in an email commentary.
“The absence of such facilities gives little confidence that the reactor
was part of an active nuclear weapons program,” they said. “The United
States does not have any indication of how Syria would fuel this
reactor..., which raises questions about when this reactor could have
operated.”
Syria compares the U.S. allegations to those made against Iraq about
illegal weapons that were never found. It accused the United States of
colluding in Israel’s air strike. “The U.S. administration was
apparently party to the execution” of the September raid by Israeli
warplanes on eastern Syria,” a Syrian government statement said, without
giving details. A U.S. official said Washington did not give Israel any
“green light” to strike the area.
Israel is widely believed to have the Middle East’s only nuclear arsenal
which experts estimate at up to 200 warheads. The Jewish state has never
declared its nuclear firepower as part of a “strategic ambiguity” policy
to deter adversaries.
ElBaradei said Syria would have been obliged under its non-proliferation
safeguards agreement with the Vienna-based IAEA to inform its inspectors
in advance of any planning and construction of a nuclear facility.
But he deplored Washington’s failure to turn the information over to the
IAEA on the alleged reactor, said to have been launched in 2001, much
earlier to help “enable us to verify its veracity and establish the
facts.”
“In light of the above, (I) view the unilateral use of force by Israel
as undermining the due process of verification that is at the heart of
the non-proliferation regime,” ElBaradei added.
Syria has belonged to the 144-nation IAEA since 1963 and has one,
declared small research reactor subject to U.N. inspection.
Diplomats close to the IAEA said Syria refused requests for agency
inspectors to visit the alleged reactor site after the air raid. Syria
subsequently razed and buried the installation and removed
“incriminating equipment,” Washington said.
The IAEA has been investigating the disputed uranium enrichment program
of Iran, Syria’s close ally, since 2003. Iran is under U.N. sanctions
for failing to prove the work is only for electricity, not atom bombs,
and refusing to halt it.
The White House said the United States was convinced that North Korea
had helped Syria to construct a clandestine nuclear reactor. The comment
came after intelligence officials briefed U.S. lawmakers about the raid.
Under a deal North Korea struck with five regional powers, it had until
the end of 2007 to disclose a complete list of its fissile material and
nuclear weaponry as well as answer U.S. suspicions of enriching uranium
and proliferating technology.
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