U.N.: Libya Nuke Suppliers Spanned Globe
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Saturday, May 29, 2004
VIENNA, Austria -- Suppliers for Libya's nuclear weapons
program stretched over three continents, the U.N. nuclear watchdog
agency said in an internal report Friday. Diplomats identified the
former Soviet Union and South Africa as among them.
Traces of highly enriched uranium were found at some Libyan
sites, according to the report by the International Atomic Energy
Agency made available to The Associated Press. But it suggested the
uranium entered the country on equipment purchased abroad.
The report did not name the countries involved in supplying
Libya. However, diplomats close to the agency said on condition of
anonymity that the report indicated the former Soviet Union, South
Africa, Pakistan, the United Arab Emirates and Malaysia supported
or served as bases for individuals selling nuclear components or
know-how to Libya.
Other diplomats had earlier named North Korea, as well as
individuals from Pakistan, UAE member Dubai and Malaysia as part of
the black market chain selling nuclear secrets to rogue nations.
One of the diplomats said Moscow had not been previously linked to
Libyan efforts to acquire a weapons program.
The report said Libya had been cooperative since going public
about its weapons programs in December and pledging to scrap them.
But it said more inspections were needed of its efforts to enrich
uranium _ one way to make nuclear weapons.
Its program included purchases of hundreds of centrifuges and
orders for 10,000 more. In their efforts, the Libyans bought
drawings of a nuclear warhead that diplomats identified as likely
originating in China but sold by Pakistan.
The illicit nuclear network headed by Pakistan's Abdul Qadeer
Khan remains the focal point of investigations by the Vienna-based
IAEA as it tries to trace the development of shipments to Libya,
Iran, North Korea and possibly other nations trying to acquire
illegal nuclear technology.
North Korea
North Korea was drawn deeper into the suppliers' web last week
by diplomats who said it appeared to be the source of nearly two
tons of a uranium compound that Libya handed over to Americans in
January as part of its decision to get rid of weapons of mass
destruction.
The diplomats said the "foreign counterparts ... from a nuclear
weapon state" mentioned by the report as working with Libyan
scientists between 1983 and 1986 referred to Soviet experts.
The Soviets were also the partners in a preliminary contract
signed for a uranium conversion plant that the report noted was
apparently never delivered, said the diplomat, who spoke to the AP
on condition of anonymity.
The diplomats also said that mention in the report of
"centrifuge-related training in Africa, Asia, Europe, the Middle
East and Southeast Asia," probably alluded to South Africa as well
as Pakistan, Dubai and Malaysia. South Africa had a weapons program
up to the late 1980s.
One of the diplomats suggested that the finding of traces of
enriched uranium on components in Libya could bolster arguments by
Iran _ now the main focus of an IAEA probe for suspicious nuclear
activities _ that it is not involved in trying to make weapons.
Iran has asserted that traces of enriched uranium found there came
in with equipment from Pakistan and were not produced domestically.
The Khan network is believed to have supplied both Libya and
Iran with centrifuges. But diplomats say Pakistan, which is not a
member of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, has not allowed IAEA
inspectors to take the environmental samples needed to test Libyan
and Iranian assertions that the traces of enriched uranium came in
with equipment from Pakistan and were not produced domestically.
Iran's activities are up for review later his month when the
IAEA's board meets to discuss investigations into programs that go
back nearly two decades and include covert attempts to enrich
uranium, reprocessing small amounts of plutonium and other suspect
activities with possible weapons applications.
While the United States and its allies say Tehran tried to make
weapons, the Islamic Republic says it is solely interested in
generating nuclear power.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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