By Bal(t)imoron, 19 days ago

Dayr az-Zwar Cipher

DPRK Forum creditably serves up the video facts and timeline on the Dayr az-Zwar reactor incident. :

Many facts remain contested. White House officials told Congress that the reactor had «striking similarities» to North Korea's facility at Yongbyon. Footage presented to Congress is said to show Korean faces at the Syrian site. But David Albright and Paul Brannan, in an analysis for the Institute for Science and International Security, an American think-tank, note that evidence is missing for a Syrian weaponisation programme or for plutonium-separation facilities. The North Koreans may well have helped to build the site, but they say more evidence is needed to be sure that Syria had a bomb programme.

The target of Thursday's hearing was not Syria in the main. The Bush administration is divided over North Korea. Years of efforts to get North Korea to abandon its nuclear programme have been driven both by the American government and by six-party talks that involve China, Japan, Russia, South Korea, North Korea and America. Last year North Korea agreed to dismantle the Yongbyon facility, as part of a deal agreed in 2005 that requires it to declare and dismantle all of its nuclear programmes. However progress was stalled several times, including after a row over the release of funds claimed by North Korea.

Syria2

A smooth-talking American diplomat, Christopher Hill, was deployed to persuade North Korea to take the steps needed to move ahead with the deal. North Korea has publicly acknowledged its plutonium-making but is reluctant to own up publicly to efforts to import equipment for producing uranium and about nuclear help to Syria. Mr Hill has been working on a deal that would let North Korea acknowledge America's concerns about both these activities, while pushing ahead with dismantling its plutonium-making reactor at Yongbyon. But hawks in the administration, and outside critics, dislike the idea of any concessions to North Korea and want to ensure that the country is compelled to account for and dismantle the parallel uranium programme, such as it was.

Congress began threatening to cut off funding for Mr Hill's efforts unless the administration produced all the information it had about North Korea's proliferation activity. This resulted in the hearings on Thursday. Some conspiracy theorists think that the briefing was designed to embarrass the North Koreans and to provoke them to flounce out of the deal, pleasing the hawkish types who never liked it.

But it comes at a curious time on several fronts. Another American diplomat was in North Korea as the briefing took place, and the country's news agency reported that talks were held «in a sincere and constructive manner». Jamie Metzl, a Korea expert at the Asia Society in New York (and a former National Security Council staffer under Bill Clinton), notes that the agreement with North Korea essentially forgives past sins and focuses on disarming North Korea in the future. Thus the North Koreans have an incentive to confess and get this behind them, in order to get promised aid and other concessions.

Nukes of Hazard also points readers to an :

The release of this information is likely to prompt a fresh wave of questions about North Korea's commitment to verifiably dismantle its nuclear arsenal and halt its proliferation activities. This new information confirms the need to be concerned about Syrian and North Korean actions, including their nuclear cooperation which dates back many years. However, it should not be seen as a casus belli against Syria or a reason to scuttle the progress being made at the Six Party Talks in disabling and dismantling North Korea's nuclear arsenal.

First, the United States does not have any indication of how Syria would fuel this reactor, and no information that North Korea had already, or intended to provide the reactor's fuel. This type of reactor requires a large supply of uranium fuel. The lack of any identified source of this fuel raises questions about when the reactor could have operated, despite evidence that it was nearing completion at the time of the attack.

Second, the United States and Israel have not identified any Syrian plutonium separation or nuclear weaponization facilities. The absence of such facilities gives little confidence that the reactor was part of an active nuclear weapons program. The apparent absence of fuel, whether imported or indigenously produced, also lowers confidence that Syria has an active nuclear weapons program.

If and are any indication of the useless invective with which conservatives have infused this debate, it's hard to evaluate any of this. One aspect of the A.Q. Khan investigations troubles me in this regard. CIA knew of Khan's activities as far back as the 70s before Khan even assembled a centrifuge in Pakistan. Yet, intelligence officials refused to share their evidence with international agencies, like the IAEA, whose job it is to investigate and regulate, out of simple ideological pique.

, "So, is the Bush administration genuinely concerned about proliferation and North Korea, or is this a clumsy neocon plot?" The goal then, as now, is partisan, and not on improving the international regime, or even presenting a unified national position in a diplomatic negotiation.

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4 comments

Gravatar #4. Bal(t)imoron
18 days ago

@Joshua:

If picayune reforms make the UN palatable to conservatives, so much the better. Every useful reform validates it. But, if Bolton, or the CIA, insist upon turf battles and slicing off chunks of the IAEA's authority to create a self-fulfilling prophecy, and then replace it with less effective and more manageable ad hoc organizations, like the PSI or the «League of Democracies», then any tin-pot dictator can do that. I thought Americans could persevere and outshine their opponents! Conservatives just turn tail and take their marbles elsewhere!

Gravatar #3. Joshua
18 days ago

You mean the John Bolton who created the Proliferation Security Initiative, and who almost single-handedly restored the UN to a modicum of effectiveness by shaming them into passing resolutions 1695 and 1718? Do tell. I'd take that record over al-Baradei's with, say, Ahmedinehad any day of the week.

Gravatar #2. Bal(t)imoron
18 days ago

Firstly, the IAEA is only ineffective because national intelligence agencies keep intelligence to themselves. The sresult of this was that AQ Khan operated since the 1970s while successive Democratic and Republican administrations allowed Pakistan to acquire the abilities both to make nukes and proliferate. IAEA inspectoers, which include former American officials, and congressional staffers did reasonably good job of investigating and applying sanctions, but national inteligence agencies held in many instances the smoking guns that would have allowed the IAEA really to close down several operations. Conservatives, like John Bolton, need to answer why they endangered global efforts to reduce nukes, or at least offered a pragmatic compromise that would have allowed the IAEA or other IGOs the ability to enforce international law.

The current problem is a sideshow created by this ideological pique. The US can provide the information and the IAEA can mobilize regulation and enforcement with more authority with US support. Together a global problem is solvable, not one case at a time. The one state that has too many nukes (US), and the state that hides its nukes (Israel) have little moral authority to dictate nuclear proliferation policy. That this issue has metastasized is a reflection of how the US has followed an ineffective anti-proliferation policy and refused to lead a global effort.

Gravatar #1. Joshua
18 days ago

So let me get this straight. You're alarmed that the CIA didn't share its classified intelligence with an organization as self-evidently ineffective as the IAEA, for which we have no legal recourse if they leak.

Yet you're apparently unconcerned that the House Intelligence and Foreign Affairs Committees were stonewalled for seven months.

By the way, some challenge to you as to WangKon, since you apparently adopt his theory by reference -- support, please?

Finally, given the pretty strong rhetoric from Joe Biden, Silvestre Reyes, and Lawrence Gelb, your assertion that it's «conservatives» who have infused this debate with partisanship are flimsy. But even if you didn't consider that evidence, I'm missing the partisanship in conservatives being principled enough to attack co-partisans for the same valid reasons they attacked the first Agreed Framework. Wouldn't you agree that it's the conservatives who attacked Clinton in 1994 but hold their tongues now who are being partisan?

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