by Ephraim Asculai , Emily B. Landau
On January 9, 2015, the German weekly Der Spiegel published an article alleging that Syria did not give up its nuclear weapons development ambitions following the destruction in 2007 of its almost completed, North Korean-constructed nuclear reactor near the town of Deir-al-Zor. Instead, according to Der Spiegel, it is in the process of erecting a new nuclear facility near the town of Qusayr, very close to Syria’s border with Lebanon. Syria has a long history of deception and lying to the international community on matters concerning its development and use of weapons of mass destruction. Therefore, any new information concerning these matters, even if highly speculative, should set the scene for further investigations, which in the past have revealed problematic Syrian intentions and activities in the chemical and nuclear realms.
Syria
has a long history of deception and lying to the international
community on matters concerning its development and use of weapons of
mass destruction (WMD). Therefore, any new information concerning these
matters, even if highly speculative, should set the scene for further
investigations, which in the past have revealed problematic Syrian
intentions and activities in the chemical and nuclear realms.
A Google Earth satellite image from
September 14, 2011 of what Der Spiegel claims is a secret nuclear site
near Qusayr, in Syria; image shown in the Christian Science Monitor,
January 11, 2015
The satellite photography shown in the
article does not present any indication as to the nature of the
facility. It could well house a relatively small underground nuclear
reactor that would be cooled by significant amounts of air that enter
through a filtering system and exit through an exhaust stack (which is
not visible in the photos) or concealed ventilation shafts. Were it to
be cooled by water, it would need a significant water pipes system and a
“heat sink” to remove the energy produced by the reactor. In the case
of a reactor it would need the supplementary reprocessing and waste
disposal facilities, in order to produce the plutonium needed for the
production of nuclear weapons. Another option is that the facility
houses a uranium enrichment facility, which does not produce energy and
does not consume much energy, and thus does not need an extensive energy
removal (cooling) system; alternatively, the necessary air-conditioning
equipment and heat removal could be concealed from sight. It could also
house auxiliary systems such as uranium conversion and storage
facilities.
On a related point, the article notes
that following the destruction of the Deir-al-Zor reactor, the equipment
and materiel that survived the 2007 attack were removed from that site,
and some of it could be used in the construction of the new facility.
The Iranian Revolutionary Guards are also mentioned as involved in the
Qusayr activities, as well as through the Iranian-led Hizbollah
organization. But in any event, an analysis of the article confirms that
the technical evidence is not sufficient to draw firm conclusions as to
the nature of the activities at the Qusayr site. A review of any
available past satellite photography and present-day heat photography
could provide the necessary information, or at least some clues as to
the nature of the site.
The article also highlights
information about the continuation of Syrian-North Korean nuclear
cooperation, although this comes from unnamed intelligence sources. The
basis for concern regarding this bilateral relationship stems from the
fact that the facility bombed in 2007 was a North Korean-style nuclear
facility, and North Korean scientists were on the ground in Syria. It
also raises again long-held concerns about the nature of probable
trilateral cooperation in the WMD realm, among three states of concern:
North Korea, Iran, and Syria. The Iranian link ties in both vis-à-vis
North Korea and Syria. Bilateral cooperation between North Korea and
Iran on ballistic missiles has been documented for years, and suspicions
have been raised that it extends to the nuclear realm as well, with
experts noting, for example, the presence of Iranian scientists at North
Korean nuclear tests. Suspicions of the trilateral link focus mainly on
the facility at Deir-al-Zor and the question of funding. North Korea
assists would-be proliferators but only those that can pay hard cash;
Iran could likely be the source of funds, in light of the very strong
strategic relationship between the two states.
While the above concerns contain an
element of speculation, relations between Syria and the international
nonproliferation regime are a matter of documented fact. Syria has lied
outright with regard to its chemical capabilities: in a 2005 report to
the UN, regarding Resolution 1540, Syria stated as a matter of fact that
it has no, and never had WMD, and has no intention of developing them
in the future. Yet seven years later, in 2012, Assad was already issuing
chemical weapons threats, and over the course of 2013 actually used
them on the Syrian population. Following its use of chemical weapons in
the summer of 2013, Syria was compelled to admit its chemical weapons
activities and to join the Chemical Weapons Convention; it then
dismantled facilities and gave up at least some of its arsenal that was
destroyed outside its territory.
Syria has also been uncooperative in
the nuclear realm. Following the 2007 attack, it has stonewalled
repeated requests from the IAEA to inspect the Deir-al-Zor site after
the one and only inspection in June 2008. Similarly, the International
Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) is almost powerless to act in a legal way to
ascertain the nature of the facility at Qusayr; its only option is to
request a “special inspection” at that site. However, such a request
will probably be refused by Syria, in the same manner as a North Korean
refusal.
If anything is to be learned from the
chemical weapons experience in Syria, it is that if enough pressure is
applied, WMD-related issues can be dealt with effectively. It certainly
will take tremendous political will and determination to do so, and in
war-torn Syria it is not at all clear that this is an international
priority, even after Assad employed chemical weapons. In the meantime,
it is imperative that when information surfaces regarding possible WMD
activities – even if highly speculative – the relevant intelligence
organizations make a concerted effort to assess the situation, due to
Syria’s highly problematic WMD track record. In this case, the Der
Spiegel article is cause to investigate further what is underway in
Syria in the nuclear realm.
Ephraim Asculai , Emily B. Landau
Source: http://www.inss.org.il/index.aspx?id=4538&articleid=8825
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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