You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syria's Nukes
2007-01-02
By Olivier Guitta

The Iraq Survey Group is calling for open negotiations with Syria, but new reports show that Damascus is up to no good. Indeed, while world attention is rightly focused on the nuclear capabilities of Iran and North Korea, Syria has been quietly — but quickly — advancing its own secret nuclear program.

The first signs appeared in 2003 when the Russian Foreign Ministry inadvertently revealed that a Russian-Syrian agreement for the delivery of a nuclear power plant in an undisclosed Syrian location had been signed.

In 2004, Syrian President Bashar Assad made a point to say that Syria would not dispose of its WMD program until Israel did the same. “Since some of my country is occupied,” Assad added, “Syria can legitimately use all the necessary means to liberate its territories.”

German magazine Der Spiegel revealed in March 2004 that Swedish authorities and the CIA were investigating a very likely Syrian nuclear program secretly developed in Homs in the northern part of the country. That July, investigators looking into the Pakistani nuclear network of A.Q. Khan pointed out that Syria may have procured centrifuges capable of enriching uranium to produce a bomb.

This fact was confirmed in May 2006 in a declassified report to the U.S. Congress on the acquisition of technology relating to weapons of mass destruction. Before the 2003 invasion of Iraq, Syria also got help from Saddam HusseinÂ’s regime.

Keep in mind that Syria’s economy was very dependent on Iraq’s trade, especially oil-smuggling revenues. Sunday Telegraph journalist Con Coughlin affirmed in a September 2004 article that 12 Iraqi nuclear scientists — who were transferred to Syria and given new identities before the war — were on their way to Iran to assist their counterparts there in building a nuclear weapon. “The results of the research would then be shared with Syria,” Coughlin added.

But what really broke the camel’s back was a recent report from the well-informed Kuwaiti daily newspaper Al Seyassah. It quoted European intelligence sources as saying that “Syria has an advanced nuclear program” in a secret site located in the province of Al Hassaka, close to the Turkish and Iraqi borders. British sources quoted by the paper believe that “it is President Assad’s brother, Colonel Maher Assad and his cousin Rami Makhlouf, who supervise the program.”

This nuclear weapons program is based on material that Saddam Hussein’s two sons shipped to Syria before — and during — the U.S. war against Iraq. According to the Kuwaiti newspaper, this explains why international investigative teams found no proof of Hussein’s nuclear program.

Furthermore, British sources in Brussels affirm that “Iranian nuclear experts contribute to the Syrian program along with 60 Iraqi experts who had taken refuge in Syria since 2003 and experts from the ex-Soviet republics.” British intelligence says this information is validated by their German counterparts, who were well established in the countries close to the ex- Communist block, including Syria.

Europeans fear that a focus solely on the Iranian nuclear program might facilitate a much quieter joint Iranian-Syrian program of uranium enrichment in Hassaka. The geographical choice for the Syrian nuclear site is very meaningful. Because it is located in an area with a Kurdish majority, the program evades Western suspicions. And striking against these installations would initially hurt the Kurds — who historically have sided with the West against the Baathist regimes in both Baghdad and Damascus.

In light of all these facts, it is not surprising that Syria might actually turn out to be “Plan B” for the mullahs’ regime in Tehran. This is, in fact, quite a smart strategy: While the world community focuses on Iran, Syria can continue its own nuclear program without unwelcome attention.

But because of the close links between Tehran and Damascus, sealed by an important defense agreement signed over the summer and the fact that Syria would do anything to please its benefactor, Syria getting the bomb would be exactly like Iran getting it. For proof, Al Seyassah reported on Dec. 13 that top Syrian leaders had transferred $3 billion to the Iranian central bank.

Need we say more?
Posted by:anonymous5089

#5  Iran was belabled a closet/shadow nuke state by various Perts + Pundits when it first purchased Chicom SILKWORMS, deal(s) which allegedly also included tactical nuke warheads. Ditto for Syria wid its own dual-use international purchases from mostly anti-US States. SYRIA'S PROBLEM > IRAN AS FELLOW ENEMY OF ISRAEL IS NOT ITS FRIEND, ERGO SYRIA'S WEAPONS ARE POINTING TOWARDS ISRAEL, NOT RADICAL IRAN. ANY SURREAL DEFEAT = DESTRUCTION OF ISRAEL DOES NOT MEAN SYRIA, etc, WINS.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2007-01-02 23:38  

#4  #1 - trash the oil-exporting countries around the Persian gulf and things will be all hunky-dory for the rest of the world. Not.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2007-01-02 23:21  

#3  I wish every intelligence officer and the FBI would read this article and take it to heart. They really ought to keep this site in their minds. We do better at figuring out what's going on than they do and all we have is common sense
Posted by: Pink Panther   2007-01-02 20:32  

#2  Venezuala and Syria are about to become a big headache. One has technology the other has oil money. Both are fans of Ahmadinejad. Saddam probably hid his WMD secrets in Syria. I knew Syria was a problem several years ago but no one listens to us everyday citizens that hear, see and reason things out
Posted by: Pink Panther   2007-01-02 20:27  

#1  Hmmm... Syria vs. Saudi Arabia vs. Iran in nuclear war? I can only dream.....
Posted by: DarthVader   2007-01-02 17:11  

00:00