Thursday, November 19, 2009

The art of understatement: Syria suspected of concealing nuclear activity

WASHINGTON - The International Atomic Energy Agency and Syria are walking a tightrope and appear to be headed toward a collision over two nuclear sites where undeclared uranium was recently found.

The agency found traces of uranium at the Dair Alzour nuclear site that are not included in Syria's declared inventory, according to a just released report. The Syrians said the uranium came from the Israeli missiles used to destroy the nearby al-Kibar reactor in September 2007.

The presence of uranium particles was detected at a second site near Damascus -- the Miniature Neutron Source Reactor. Syria said it came from the accumulation of samples and reference materials used in neutron activation analysis.

The IAEA is not buying either of the two explanations and is pressing Damascus for more answers and wants to know from where the uranium came. The agency has run its own tests and is certain the Syrian government is not telling the truth.

That's where the tightrope act comes in. The IAEA won't comment on what clearly appears to be evasive behavior by the Syrian government because of concern about its tenuous relationship with Syria.


The only people concerned about some kind of relationship are the IAEA. The Syrians, like the Iranians, like the Pakistanis before them, have only one end in mind. The Pakistanis however were concerend about India and only NOW are the other problems coming to the fore. For Syria and Iran the wants and the use are as obvious as Lebensraum and Poland.

For some people.

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