Posted on 12/02/2007 2:49:01 AM PST by TigerLikesRooster
Israelis hit Syrian nuclear bomb plant
Uzi Mahnaimi in Tel Aviv and Michael Sheridan in Seoul
ISRAELS top-secret air raid on Syria in September destroyed a bomb factory assembling warheads fuelled by North Korean plutonium, a leading Israeli nuclear expert has told The Sunday Times.
Professor Uzi Even of Tel Aviv University was one of the founders of the Israeli nuclear reactor at Dimona, the source of the Jewish states undeclared nuclear arsenal.
I suspect that it was a plant for processing plutonium, namely, a factory for assembling the bomb, he said. I think the DPRK [Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea] transferred to Syria weapons-grade plutonium in raw form, that is nuggets of easily transported metal in protective cans. I think the shaping and casting of the plutonium was supposed to be in Syria.
All governments concerned - even the regime in Damascus - have tried to maintain complete secrecy about the raid.
They apparently fear that forcing a confrontation on the issue could spark a war between Israel and Syria, end the Middle East peace talks and wreck Americas extremely complex negotiations to disarm North Korea of its nuclear weapons.
The political stakes could hardly be higher. Plutonium is the element which fuelled the American atomic bomb that destroyed the Japanese city of Nagasaki on August 9, 1945.
Critics in the United States say proof that North Korea supplied such nuclear weapons material to Syria, a state technically at war with Israel, would shatter congressional confidence in the Bush administrations diplomatic policy.
From beneath the veil of military censorship, western commentators have formed a consensus that the target was a nuclear reactor under construction.
But Even said that purely from scientific observation, he had reached a different conclusion - that it was a nuclear bomb factory, posing a more immediate danger to Israel. He said that satellite photos of the site, taken before the Israeli strike on September 6, showed no sign of the cooling towers and chimneys characteristic of nuclear reactors.
Syrias haste after the attack to bury the site under tons of soil suggested that hundreds of square yards were contaminated and there were fears of radiation, the professor added.
Since then the Syrians have sealed up the location, levelled the site and diverted curious journalists to a place that had not been attacked by Israel.
The professors theory fits with authoritative technical evidence about North Koreas nuclear weapons programme. The North Koreans are able to produce weapons-grade plutonium, which is electro-refined, alloyed and cast into shapes ready to be machined to fit into a warhead, according to a team of distinguished American nuclear weapons scientists who visited the countrys laboratories.
One of those scientists, Siegfried Hecker, was allowed to hold a sample and was told that it was good bomb grade plutonium, because it had a very low content of plutonium240, the isotope which reduces the overall quality of the material.
Assembly of a Nagasaki-type bomb involves mating a plutonium core with a uranium wrap and inserting a small quantity of polonium and beryllium to initiate the chain reaction.
Plutonium is highly dangerous material, explained the Israeli professor. It is easily oxidised in air unless protective measures are taken. The oxide is easily dispersed as dust in air when machining plutonium to create the pit [a hollow sphere in many nuclear weapons] and thus can be inhaled, causing a fatality in minute quantities.
Plutonium pellets are handled and machined exclusively in a large array of glove boxes, to protect the technicians and their environment. That is why you need a relatively large containment building and cannot assemble a nuclear weapon in your garage - unless you are suicidal of course.
The debris from a destructive raid on a weapons-building facility could therefore contain toxic radioactive waste. But the main danger for Syria would be the telltale exposure of the elements to surveillance and detection by America. This would explain the cover-up at the site.
North Korea, for its part, has more than enough plutonium to sell some of its stock to Syria.
The same team of visiting US scientists estimated that by late 2006 the nation had made 40-50kg (88-100lb) of the material. Between six and eight kilograms are needed for a weapon.
For the US and its allies the Syrian connection raises the deeply worrying possibility that North Korea has succeeded in building what the US scientists called a sophisticated design with smaller dimensions and mass so as to fit onto a . . . medium-range missile.
That puzzle was complicated when North Korea announced that it had tested its first nuclear bomb on October 9 last year. The yield of the blast was small - less than a 20th of the Nagasaki bomb - suggesting to some scientists that the device was sophisticated and small while others believed the North Koreans had simply not made a very good bomb.
Professor Even believes the North Koreans have not yet perfected small warheads. The mechanical dimensioning at this stage is extremely demanding (less than 0.01mm). So is the casting of the explosives around the plutonium core and the initiation of the implosion, he said.
The question is under urgent study by nations who might one day be targets of a North Korean device sold to Syria or Iran. Iran is known to have financed missile and weapons deals between North Korea and Syria, causing concern to Israel and the US. One day after the Israeli attack, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the president of Iran, sent his nephew with a personal letter to Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian leader.
The professors theory of a clear and present danger that Damascus would get the bomb may be the only credible explanation why Israel carried out a military strike against Syria and risked an all-out conflict.
Indeed on September 6 Israel was ready for war with Syria. Israeli sources said its military chiefs assumed Syria would launch a retaliatory attack, but no reprisal came.
Meanwhile, President Bush has authorised his chief negotiator, Christopher Hill, to go on talking to North Korea in the search for a peaceful solution. Hill will visit Pyongyang this week to pursue negotiations after international technicians got to work on disabling the reactor at Yongbyon, the source of North Koreas plutonium.
The North Korean dictator Kim Jong-il is supposed to make a full declaration of his nuclear programmes by December 31. The US says that must include information on his weapons deals with Syria and Iran.
I read speculation about this about two or three weeks ago in a Jewish blog - believe it was in an article by a Member of the Knesset.
Interestingly, I refered to this in a post earlier about the "NIE" (fraud) that just came out.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1934533/posts?page=26#26
Since I believe that Iranian scientists were killed at the Syrian site when the Israeli's attacked, I think this throws great doubt on the NIE....maybe Iran has outsourced the making of a weapon, but they are still involved.
As will various pits in Iran.
It's not that easy anymore, DB. Not that it was ever easy, of course. Any over-water flights are picked-up by ATC and Military quite a ways out, and IFF is pretty rigid and unforgiving. Even more so after 9/11.
I got braced by a pair of F-4's returning from Canada many years ago. Detroit-Center said they were just taking a look. Scared-the-shit outa me.
From Mexico-way might be different considering all the drugs that are flown in, but they're down in the sand - not good for a sizeable jet ................................ FRegards
Smells like ... Friday ............................... FRegards
You have a great tagline yourself there, P8riot! ;) Thanks for the laugh. :)
I agree with you completely, Jeff. And, of course you have said it in a much more concise way than I’ve been able to up to this point — Thank you. I only hope more people will start to see what is so incredibly obvious to so many of the rest of us (at least here at FR).
Another problem best resolved with high explosives.
“Id strongly hesitate before assuming they could fit any of these to a missile warhead, where size and weight are critical restrictions.”
What about the possibility of an aircraft borne device?
You know a one way trip to somewhere and KABOOM!
I give President Bush unlimited reams of credit for his first term. I give him no credit for listening to Condi Rice led State Department or co-towing to his Mexican & big business constituents leaving our border wide open. He has acted like he has been on hallucinagenic drugs for the last 3 years. I do not like the direct insults to our President, no matter who it is. But I call a spade a spade and on this NK affair, he had it right prior to 2004 and again, listened to fools.
I honestly don't understand his flippo episodes (Dubai, immigration, Miers, etc) , but I know he's serious about the Middle East cleaning up, growing up.
2CAVTrooper wrote:
What about the possibility of an aircraft borne device?
************
Generally no.
Go back to the Trinity test site. That thing atop the tower, with all the wires, wooden scaffolding, shielding, flux meters, test mice, that’s what we’re talking about here.
Additionally, any general ordering such an attack knows he could easily get caught, earn nuclear reprisals, and have his own device fail to function properly. All the risk, none of the benefit.
Except in the case of known tested plans, like those peddled by A.Q. Khan, nuclear wanna-be’s generally require successful testing before they’re sure enough to depend on the result.
Yeah well Mymood Imonajihad doesn’t care about that because he sees it as a means for the return of the 12th imam.
And even if the bomb fails, detonating a plane load of plutonium over a major city makes it uninhabitable for a thousand years.
Think of the dispersion of the above scenario compared to a dirty bomb in a semi truck.
*’nucular’ placemarker ping*
That way the mullahs can deny having a bomb program..
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