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Uranium Testing Said to Indicate Libya-Korea Link
NY Times ^ | February 2, 2005 | DAVID E. SANGER and WILLIAM J. BROAD

Posted on 02/01/2005 7:53:59 PM PST by neverdem

WASHINGTON, Feb. 1 - Scientific tests have led American intelligence agencies and government scientists to conclude with near certainty that North Korea sold processed uranium to Libya, bolstering earlier indications that the reclusive state exported sensitive fuel for atomic weapons, according to officials with access to the intelligence.

The determination, which has circulated among senior government officials in recent weeks, has touched off a hunt to determine if North Korea has also sold uranium to other countries, including Iran and Syria. So far, there is no evidence that such additional transactions took place.

Nonetheless, the conclusion about the uranium transfer to Libya, which is contained in a classified briefing that has been described to The New York Times, could alter Washington's debate about the assessment of the North Korean nuclear threat. In the past, some Bush administration officials have argued that there is time to find a diplomatic solution to the problem because there was no evidence that the government of Kim Jung Il was spreading its atomic technology abroad.

Nine months ago, international inspectors came up with the first evidence that the North may have provided Libya with nearly two tons of uranium hexaflouride, the material that can be fed into nuclear centrifuges and enriched into bomb fuel. Libya surrendered its huge cask of the highly toxic material to the United States when it dismantled its nuclear program last year.

Now, intelligence officials say, extensive testing conducted at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee over the last several months has concluded that the material did not originate in Pakistan or other suspect countries, and one official said that "with a certainty of 90 percent or better, this stuff's from North Korea."

It is unclear if there are any dissenting views in the government, though some outside experts have accused the administration of overstating intelligence on North Korea. Officials cautioned that the analysis of the uranium had been hampered by the fact that the United States has no sample of known North Korean uranium for comparison with the material recovered in Libya. The study was done by eliminating other possible sources of uranium, a result that is less certain than the nuclear equivalent of matching DNA samples.

One recently retired Pentagon official who has long experience dealing with North Korea said the new finding was "huge, because it changes the whole equation with the North."

"It suggests we don't have time to sit around and wait for the outcome of negotiations," the official said. "It's a scary conclusion because you don't know who else they may have sold to."

President Bush is expected to mention North Korea in his State of the Union address on Wednesday night. In that speech three years ago, he identified the country as part of an "Axis of Evil," along with Iran and Iraq. Two weeks ago Condoleezza Rice, in her confirmation hearings for secretary of state, included North Korea in a list of six nations that she called "outposts of tyranny," but a senior administration official said Mr. Bush was not planning to use that phrase on Wednesday evening.

On Tuesday night, a spokesman for the National Security Council, Frederick Jones, declined to comment on the report of the new North Korea findings citing "intelligence concerns."

Questions of how to deal with North Korea - through engagement and dialogue or through sanctions and pressure to crack its government - have divided the Bush administration since its first days. Vice President Dick Cheney has led the hawkish faction, declaring that "time is not on our side." While some of the officials interviewed about the most recent North Korean evidence have been involved in that policy debate, others have not been, and have either examined the scientific evidence or received intelligence briefings about its conclusions.

Some of those findings have been shared with some American allies and with the Chinese, who have long been dubious that North Korea has an active uranium program under way. There is also some skepticism in the United States: Selig Harrison, a North Korea scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center in Washington, has questioned the evidence that the North is secretly pursuing uranium weapons to complement the small arsenal it is believed to have produced out of plutonium. He wrote in the journal Foreign Affairs recently that the Bush administration has relied "on sketchy data" and "a worst-case assessment" of the North's capabilities.

The government's most recent intelligence reports, however, strongly suggest that North Korea has begun turning raw uranium, which the country mines, into uranium hexaflouride, a modestly complex process.

"This pushes along our understanding of the North Korean program," said Leonard S. Specter, the deputy director of the Center for Nonproliferation Studies at the Monterey Institute in California. "It means the North Koreans have built a facility to process uranium. And it raises the disturbing prospect that they've now made enough of it to feel comfortable selling some."

Nuclear intelligence experts said the new clues that implicate North Korea as Libya's supplier involve the fingerprints of uranium isotopes, or different forms of the element. Federal analysts, they said, took samples of the Libyan uranium and compared its isotope fingerprint with those of uranium samples from other countries and, by process of elimination, concluded that the uranium had come from North Korea.

Uranium has three main isotopes. The most prevalent is U-238, which accounts for the vast majority of natural uranium. The U-235 isotope is rare, but it is prized because it easily splits to produce the bursts of atomic energy that power reactors and nuclear warheads.

To trace the origins of the Libyan uranium, the government sleuths focused on an even rarer isotope, U-234. They did so because it turns out that concentrations of that isotope vary widely among uranium deposits and mines around the world.

"The science is pretty clear," said a senior federal intelligence official knowledgeable of the secret North Korea finding.

The U-234 content "fluctuates over a wide range," the Russian scientists reported.

A nuclear scientist who consults for federal intelligence agencies but was unaware of the North Korean finding said analysts could use such U-234 information to track down the origin of a particular uranium sample, much as detectives identify fingerprints from a crime scene by matching them to samples in fingerprint archives.

He said the analysts could examine the U-234 concentrations in the Libyan sample and compare it with samples from deposits from around the world. Since Western intelligence agencies have no known samples of North Korean uranium, he added, the analysis would proceed by the process of elimination.

Therefore, the strength of the North Korea conclusion would grow in proportion to the number of samples the scientists had from around the world. It is unknown how many samples exist from various uranium deposits or how many samples the federal analysts scrutinized for signs of similarity.

A second nuclear scientist who consults for the federal government on North Korea said he suspected that Pakistani scientists had helped the North Koreans not only to make uranium centrifuges but also to build a plant that transformed the raw uranium from the country's mines into uranium hexafluoride, the form that centrifuges can enrich.

"I don't think the D.P.R.K. did it by itself," he said of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea's making the uranium plant. Another former official suggested that the components for the plant might have been purchased elsewhere, perhaps from Japan or Europe.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; Japan; News/Current Events; Russia; Technical; US: District of Columbia; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: 200406; axisofevil; centrifuge; centrifuges; cheney; china; cns; cnsmi; condoleezzarice; confirmationhearings; dickcheney; dprk; foreignaffairs; frederickjones; fredjones; harrison; iran; jones; khannetwork; leak; leaks; leonardspecter; leonardsspecter; libya; montereyinstitute; nk; nkorea; norks; northkorea; nsc; nuclearblackmarket; oakridge; outpostsoftyranny; pakistan; plutonium; processeduranium; proliferation; pyongyang; qadeerkhan; qadeerkhannetwork; republicofkorea; rice; russianscientist; russianscientists; seligharrison; sotu; specter; syria; u234; u235; u238; uranium; uraniumhexaflouride; uraniumisotopes; wmd; wmds; wwic; yellowcake

1 posted on 02/01/2005 7:53:59 PM PST by neverdem
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To: neverdem

There's no way N. Korea sold it to anybody like al-Qaeda. /sarc


2 posted on 02/01/2005 8:04:57 PM PST by Excuse_My_Bellicosity (Gun-control is a death sentence.)
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To: neverdem

The last major battle of WWII occurred 2 months after the Japanese surrendered, in Nov 1945, at an Japanese industrial area in Korea, where the Japanese were enriching Korean uranium. The Japanese fought to the last man and the Russians shortened their atomic gap with the US .... there is a reason NK is part of the "Axis of Evil".....


3 posted on 02/01/2005 8:09:14 PM PST by Yasotay
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To: neverdem

Bump


4 posted on 02/01/2005 8:11:54 PM PST by Peach
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To: neverdem
Yet another "Success Story" for Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton, and the rest of the democrats.
5 posted on 02/01/2005 8:17:58 PM PST by pillbox_girl
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To: Excuse_My_Bellicosity
Paging Madeline Albright....

North Korea, Iran and Iraq were definitely an "axis of evil" but A.Q. Kahn of Pakistan was a major player in supplying the "Axis of Evil" with very dangerous technology

6 posted on 02/01/2005 8:20:25 PM PST by MJY1288
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To: piasa

Ping.


7 posted on 02/01/2005 8:45:40 PM PST by Fedora
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To: neverdem
Re #1

Well, well, they did it, didn't they? They must be itching for countdown.

8 posted on 02/01/2005 8:57:28 PM PST by TigerLikesRooster
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To: TigerLikesRooster; AmericanInTokyo; OahuBreeze; yonif; risk; Steel Wolf; nuconvert; MizSterious; ...

Ping!


9 posted on 02/01/2005 8:58:03 PM PST by TigerLikesRooster
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To: TigerLikesRooster

Thanx


10 posted on 02/01/2005 9:01:58 PM PST by nuconvert (No More Axis of Evil by Christmas ! TLR)
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To: neverdem

Red Line. Crossed Over.


11 posted on 02/01/2005 9:19:45 PM PST by AmericanInTokyo (Immigrants, "Those Wonderful People" in Jail Now Cost $1.4 Billion A Year To California Taxpayers)
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To: neverdem

We should inform the NK Chicoms that they have 24 hours to let us in to inspect everything or we will kill every senior official in the country, and if that takes carpet bombing, nuking, and other ass kicking as necessary, then so be it until the job is done.


12 posted on 02/01/2005 9:22:12 PM PST by Mad_Tom_Rackham (This just in from CBS: "There is no bias at CBS")
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To: Mad_Tom_Rackham

Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Pyongyang.

Now THAT is a Trifecta, and if we don't drag our feet, we will have done it all within a 60 year time span!

In a perfect universe, Maddy Halfbright would be performing her dancing midget act sequel for Kim Jong ILL at the very precise moment that the sky over Pyongyang turns exceedingly bright...


13 posted on 02/01/2005 9:46:44 PM PST by Mad Mammoth
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To: neverdem; All

I thought Quadary gave up all his uranium testing am I naive

Any type of nuke testing involving Little Kim is not cool


14 posted on 02/01/2005 9:57:16 PM PST by SevenofNine ("Not everybody , in it, for truth, justice, and the American way,"=Det Lennie Briscoe)
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To: Fedora

thanks!


15 posted on 02/02/2005 2:03:24 AM PST by piasa (Attitude Adjustments Offered Here Free of Charge)
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To: Fedora
Nonetheless, the conclusion about the uranium transfer to Libya, which is contained in a classified briefing that has been described to The New York Times

... another leak.

Now, intelligence officials say, extensive testing conducted at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee over the last several months has concluded that the material did not originate in Pakistan or other suspect countries...

... not only a leak from a briefing but more than one source, apparently. Possible motives?

another recent retired or perhaps resigned Pentagon official:

One recently retired Pentagon official who has long experience dealing with North Korea

Oh well.

North Korea may be the source but why the need to leak it early? I still keep wondering how many people in Europe, the US gov and the UN would freak out if the IAEA poster-child country and the country which sent teams to Iraq just before the war to help Iraq clean what WMD it allegedly doesn't have- South Africa- turned out to be involved instead.

16 posted on 02/02/2005 2:34:09 AM PST by piasa (Attitude Adjustments Offered Here Free of Charge)
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To: piasa

Just noting that this is NOT enriched unranium capable of nuclear fission.

It is just uranium hexaflouride, naturally ocurring uranium which has been reprocessed into a chemical compound which is gaseous. Now this uranium compound can be enriched in centrifuges but this step is extremely complex and takes billions in resources to pull off.

Uranium is sold around the world every day (sometimes uranium heaxflouride is as well) in the legitimate market.

Nevertheless, it does show that North Korea was willing to sell nuclear material and who knows what else they sold. And there is no legitimate market for any of North Korea's nuclear material.


17 posted on 02/02/2005 5:32:08 AM PST by JustDoItAlways
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To: Yasotay

I've never heard about this before - can you give us some links or additional info?


18 posted on 02/02/2005 9:08:20 AM PST by gura
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To: gura

One of the best sources is a book by Robert Wilcox called Japan's Secret War. He makes a very strong case that Japan detonated the 4th atomic bomb in Aug 45. I believe Japan was ahead of Germany in the development of an atomic bomb, but didn't make it. This is one area that is still heavily classified and we may never know the real story.


19 posted on 02/02/2005 11:25:07 AM PST by Yasotay
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To: Yasotay

Thanks!


20 posted on 02/02/2005 11:58:24 AM PST by gura
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