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NIGERGATE: THE AFRICAN CONNECTION TO THE ISLAMIC ATOM BOMB
IL GIORNALE ^ | November 30, 2005 | Gian Marco Chiocci

Posted on 11/30/2005 12:25:59 PM PST by parnasokan

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To: Wristpin
I've read you need a different grade of the stuff to make a nuclear bomb.

It all starts with yellow cake (uranium oxide), though -- which has to be further refined to isolate the U-235 from the U-238.

The centrifuges are one step in this process.

41 posted on 12/01/2005 6:18:07 PM PST by okie01 (The Mainstream Media: IGNORANCE ON PARADE)
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To: genefromjersey

lol. I hazard to wonder what other "great phrases" you learned in HS "conversational" Latin. heehee... :>


42 posted on 12/01/2005 7:03:56 PM PST by Alia
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To: TBP
CNN.com

Niger guards get nuclear training

Country at center of CIA leak case

NIAMEY, Niger (Reuters) -- Customs and border guards in Niger, the African country named in a U.S. intelligence scandal over alleged Iraqi uranium purchases, are being trained to fight the smuggling of nuclear materials, the government said.

International Atomic Energy Agency specialists, along with local experts, were giving a three-day course this week in the African uranium producer on the risks of handling radioactive material and how to detect trafficking of nuclear substances.

Citing intelligence reports that have since been widely discredited, U.S. President George W. Bush referred in a 2003 State of the Union address to alleged Iraqi attempts to buy uranium from Niger. This speech, which Bush's critics say was deliberately misleading, made the case for war against Iraq.

The so-called Niger dossier is at the center of a high-profile investigation in the United States over the leak of a covert CIA agent's identity to the media.

Niger's Public Health Minister Ary Ibrahim said at the opening of the nuclear security course in Niamey on Wednesday that one of its aims was to improve cooperation to control illegal trafficking of nuclear materials like uranium.

"Their importance in the socio-economic development of our country should not make us lose sight of the risks which can derive from handling them," he said.

Niger exports around 3,000 tons of uranium a year, mostly to France, Japan and Spain.

Bush's 2003 speech mentioning Niger led to public criticism by a former U.S. career diplomat, Joseph Wilson, who accused the administration of twisting intelligence to bolster the case for war on Iraq.

Wilson based his criticism in part on a CIA-sponsored mission he made to Africa in 2002 to check reports that Iraq sought uranium from Niger. Wilson said the reports were unsubstantiated and later accused the White House of leaking the identity of his covert CIA agent wife in retaliation.

The IAEA has said the documents the United States cited to back its allegations that Iraq tried to buy uranium from Niger were false.

Find this article at:
http://edition.cnn.com/2005/WORLD/africa/12/01/niger.nuclear.ap

43 posted on 12/02/2005 4:55:09 PM PST by MilleniumBug
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To: MilleniumBug
Bush's 2003 speech mentioning Niger led to public criticism by a former U.S. career diplomat, Joseph Wilson, who accused the administration of twisting intelligence to bolster the case for war on Iraq.

Bush did not mention Niger in his speech!! Freepers are better reporters than Reuters.

Instead of lying, why don't they do some research and tell the public the truth which is that the Clinton Administration knew Iraq was trying to buy Uranium as far back as 1997.

I posted the story here.

Saddam's Shadow-The Clinton Adminitration knew about Iraq Uranium Africa Energy & Mining | June 18, 1997 | Indigo Publications

Saddam's Shadow Africa Energy & Mining June 18, 1997
Copyright 1997 Indigo Publications Africa Energy & Mining
June 18, 1997
SECTION: MINING; DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO; N. 207 LENGTH: 787 words
HEADLINE: Saddam's Shadow

BODY: It's not only diamonds and base metals that interest big mining companies and the latter are not alone in being interested in Katanga. In the delegation that the United States sent to Kinshasa on June 2 under its ambassador to the United Nations, Bill Richardson, the state department's African affairs department was represented by Marc Baas, director for Central Africa. (Susan Rice, director for African Affairs at the National Security Council, has just been appointed under secretary of state for African affairs in succession to George Moose). Baas was accompanied by a representative of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) and several Defense Department officials. The mission also visited Lubumbashi and met with officials from Gecamines and provincial authorities.

AEM's sources claim it wasn't the small research reactor that General Electric installed in 1977 at the university of Kinshasa, and which ceased operating in 1990, that interested the NRC and the military men, but rather the Shinkolobwe uranium deposit. Its resources are negligible from a commercial viewpoint when weighed against those in Namibia and Niger and new discoveries like France's Cogema has just made in western Canada. They weren't negligible from the security standpoint, however. The Americans are concerned over a visit to Katanga by the head of the Iraqi Baath party's international relations section, Shabi Al Maliki, around a year ago. He, too, showed an interest in Katanga's uranium, and last February another high-ranking Iraqi official reportedly held talks in Kinshasa with the mines minister in the last government of the Mobutu era, Banza Mukalay. The uranium is thought to have also figured in Libya's proposals in 1995 to supply oil to Zaire in exchange for ore.

Richardson said on June 7 that president Laurent Kabila had given permission for a UN mission to come to the country to investigate the plight of Hutu refugees starting from July 7. Richardson qualified the green light as "a breakthrough on the human rights and humanitarian front." For his part, Brian Atwood, director of U.S.AID, announced in Brussels on June 11 that potential donors would shortly meet for talks on aiding the Democratic Republic of Congo. But such assistance would be conditional on Congo respecting human rights, Atwood indicated. He added that Washington wanted the Kabila government to succeed because if it did not this could result in violence spreading to other countries. He issued an appeal to all governments to use their influence to halt atrocities which various reports indicate are occurring in the eastern part of the country. He said that "organized groups and independent groups" were attempting to strengthen their positions in the eastern regions.

South Africa, for its part, is putting together a team to advise Kabila on reconstructing the country and reorganizing its finances (AEM 205). Deputy president Thabo Mbeki said last week the team would be ready to leave within days and that its members would be chosen in agreement with the Congo government "to discuss a variety of matters that impact on the socioeconomic situation."

He added that Congo's leaders had asked that it consist of officials from South Africa's "Reserve Bank, the economic ministries and people dealing with infrastructure, public administration and so on." Officials said south Africa's foreign minister, Alfred Nzo, discussed Kinshasa's needs with Congo foreign minister Bizima Karaha at the recent Organization of African Unity summit in Harare. The South African mission will be headed by deputy foreign minister Aziz Pahad.

LOAD-DATE: June 20, 1997

SBD
44 posted on 12/04/2005 1:16:36 PM PST by SBD1
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To: parnasokan

Hmmmmm interesting in light of the recent fired leaker (Mary McCarthy) at the CIA.


45 posted on 04/22/2006 5:28:52 AM PDT by Just mythoughts
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