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Wednesday, February 25, 2009

The IAF already knows how to get there

Syria is making efficient use of the site where Israel destroyed a nascent Syrian nuclear plant in September 2007 (satellite picture at top left is of the same site in September 2003): They have turned the site into a missile base.
Syria has revealed that it has built a missile facility over the ruins of what the US says was a nuclear reactor destroyed by IAF warplanes, diplomats said Tuesday.

The diplomats quoted Syrian nuclear chief Ibrahim Othman as saying during a closed meeting Tuesday that the new structure appeared to be a missile control center or actual launching pad. They demanded anonymity for divulging details about what Othman told the International Atomic Energy Agency's 35-nation board.

...

They quoted him as saying that when IAEA Deputy Director Olli Heinonen visited the site in June that Heinonen was asked whether the Syrians should "put a missile in position" - apparently to demonstrate its present use - with the IAEA official saying no.

One of the diplomats said the briefing was told that the finding of 80 uranium particles in the environmental samples was "significant."

But Othman played down the laboratory results, in comments outside the meeting - and denied outright that graphite was found, the diplomat said. That denial contradicted comments from UN officials familiar with the Syria probe.

"There is no graphite at all," he told reporters. As for the uranium traces, "any analysis has errors," he said. "The smaller the amount the larger the (probability of) error."

One of the two diplomats also said that inside the briefing Othman announced that Syria would no longer accept evidence of apparent nuclear activity resulting from further findings from the samples taken by the agency.

That - and Damascus' continued refusal to allow other visits to the Al Kibar sites and other ones suspected of secret nuclear activity - could cripple the agency's investigative efforts.

Expanding on an IAEA report on the Syria probe circulated to board members earlier this week, agency officials told the meeting that Damascus had apparently tried to secretly buy so-called "dual use" materials that can- but do not have to be - part of a nuclear program, said the diplomats.

Among the substances were high-grade graphite - used to control the speed of fission in some reactors - and barium sulfate, a nuclear shielding material. Syria claimed non-nuclear purposes for both substances, the diplomats said.

The briefers also said the uranium samples appeared inconsistent in shape, form and other details to back up Syrian claims that they originated from Israeli ordnance used to target the bombed site.

Israel also has denied assertions by Damascus that the uranium came from Israeli depleted uranium bombs or warheads used to destroy the Al Kibar facility. Depleted uranium is used to harden munitions and increase penetrating power.

The agency officials at the briefing repeated earlier IAEA findings that satellite images and other evidence related to the bombed site indicated that the target and related buildings were similar in shape and other characteristics to a reactor.
There's a huge silver lining in this cloud: The IAF already knows how to get there.

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