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 <http://www.spacewar.com/nukewars.html> NUKEWARS

Suspect site in Syria 'very likely' a nuclear reactor: IAEA



New US sanctions for trade with Iran, Syria, NKorea
Washington (AFP) May 24, 2011 - The United States on Tuesday imposed
sanctions against Chinese and other entities over trade with Iran, Syria and
North Korea that supports weapons of mass destruction or missiles.

The sanctions target 16 foreign entities, including those from China,
Belarus, Iran, North Korea, Syria and Venezuela, Deputy Secretary of State
James Steinberg told reporters.

by Staff Writers
Vienna (AFP) May 24, 2011
A remote desert site in Syria that was bombed by Israeli planes in September
2007 was "very likely" a nuclear reactor, the UN atomic watchdog said
Tuesday.

"Based on all the information available to the agency and its technical
evaluation of that information, the agency assesses that it is very likely
that the building destroyed at the Dair Alzour site was a nuclear reactor
which should have been declared to the agency," the International Atomic
Energy Agency said in a new restricted report, a copy of which was obtained
by AFP.

The nine-page report was the toughest ever by the IAEA since it began
investigating allegations of illicit nuclear work by Syria in 2008 and
reflects the agency's growing frustration with Damascus, diplomats said.

Indeed, it is the first time that the IAEA has publicly stated its belief
that Syria was building an undeclared reactor at Dair Alzour.

And diplomats suggest the report could now pave the way for Western powers
at the upcoming board of governors meeting next month to push for Syria to
be referred to the UN Security Council.

A senior international official familiar with the IAEA's investigation said
the agency felt it had no option but to make such an assessment after
Damascus has persistently refused to cooperate since the very beginning.

"We have given Syria ample opportunities to react, to engage with us. They
didn't do that. I think we've exhausted all the possibilites. And so now
we've made this assessment," the official said, speaking on condition of
anonymity.

Even an unprecedented letter from IAEA chief Yukiya Amano to Syria's foreign
minister late last year failed to "unblock the situation," the official
said.

Damascus has indeed stonewalled the IAEA's investigation all along, granting
inspectors access to the site only once in June 2008 and not allowing any
follow-up visits to either Dair Alzour or other possible related sites.

It maintains that Dair Alzour was a non-nuclear military installation and
that the IAEA therefore had no right to go there.

But suspicions only deepened when Syria cleared and hid all the debris from
the site.

Furthemore, at their one and only visit to Dair Alzour, UN inspectors
detected "significant" traces of man-made uranium there, as yet unexplained
by Damascus.

In its new report, the IAEA said features of the destroyed building were
"comparable to those of gas-cooled graphite-moderated reactors."

Indeed, photos of the building prior to the bombing showed a marked
resemblance to North Korea's reactor at Yongbyong, which produced plutonium
for Pyongyang's small stockpile of nuclear weapons.

The infrastructure at the site -- including its connections for cooling and
treated water -- was configured in such a way as to support the operation of
such a reactor and was "not consistent with Syria's claims regarding the
purpose of the infrastructure," the report said.

The IAEA said the circumstances relating to the Dair Alzour site were unique
"in that the building on the site has been destroyed, the debris from the
site has been cleared, several years have now passed, and Syria has not
provided the necessary cooperation required by the agency."

It was therefore forced to conclude that "after considering the initial
allegations and Syria's responses thereto and considering all information
available to the agency ... the destroyed building was very likely a nuclear
reactor and should have been declared by Syria."

 



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