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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
ElBaradei: Syria welcomes nuclear inspectors
2004-06-26
Syria has told the U.N. nuclear watchdog that its inspectors are welcome to come and verify the nature of its atomic activities, the agency’s chief said on Saturday. "The Syrians told me they would be happy if we go and verify whatever we need to verify," International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) chief Mohamed ElBaradei told reporters during a flight to Moscow for a four-day official visit. "But we haven’t gotten any piece of information on why we should be concerned about Syria." Last week, diplomats told Reuters that the IAEA considered Damascus a top candidate for being the fourth customer of the nuclear black market that supplied uranium enrichment technology to Iran, North Korea and Libya.

But ElBaradei said no country had provided any hard evidence that would implicate Syria as a customer in the black market set up by Abdul Qadeer Khan, the father of Pakistan’s atomic weapons programme. "This is something I read in the paper. Nobody came to us with any information (about Syria)," ElBaradei said. The IAEA, along with governments and intelligence agencies, has been investigating the details of Khan’s network so that it can be dismantled. The results of the investigation are classified. Syria, which has called for the creation of a Middle East free of weapons of mass destruction, has denied any interest in nuclear weapons.

Last month, diplomats and nuclear experts told Reuters that an experimental high-tech intelligence technique developed by the United States had detected what appear to be operating uranium-enrichment centrifuges in Syria. Diplomats said the centrifuges, which spin at supersonic speeds to purify uranium for use as fuel for power plants or weapons, could only have come from Khan’s network. But some U.S. officials -- as well as ElBaradei -- are sceptical about the centrifuges. "We don’t have super high-tech detectors, and if somebody detected something they’d better come to us. We are the ones who can clarify fact from fiction," ElBaradei said.
Posted by:TS(vice girl)

#5  Frank G - That was the first place I thought of too.
Posted by: Laurence of the Rats   2004-06-26 11:41:17 PM  

#4  It will happen, but maybe not how envisioned at present.
Posted by: Mark Espinola   2004-06-26 9:30:41 PM  

#3  The only thing I care to hear is "Syria welcomes our new American overlords."
Posted by: ed   2004-06-26 9:23:20 PM  

#2  What about WMD hidden in Lebanon inspectors?
Posted by: Mark Espinola   2004-06-26 9:23:04 PM  

#1  can they enter the Bekaa?
Posted by: Frank G   2004-06-26 9:12:30 PM  

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