Report: Pakistan supplied nukes to Syria
By Bill Gertz
05/13/06 "Washington
Times" -- -- WASHINGTON -- U.S.
intelligence agencies suspect Syria was offered and received
nuclear weapons technology from the covert Pakistani supplier
group headed by A.Q. Khan, according to an intelligence report.
An annual report to Congress on arms proliferation states that
Pakistani investigators have confirmed reports from the
International Atomic Energy Agency that the Khan network
"offered nuclear technology and hardware to Syria."
"We are concerned that expertise or technology could have been
transferred," said the intelligence report, which is the first
time the Bush administration has publicly linked Syria to Khan.
"We continue to monitor Syrian nuclear intentions with concern."
President Bush has said that the Khan network supplied nuclear
goods to Libya, Iran and North Korea.
The report, known as the 721 report because of the provision of
intelligence legislation that required it, covered the period of
2004. Its release was delayed by the new Office of the Director
of National Intelligence, which took control of the report from
the CIA as part of an intelligence reorganization.
The report noted that Syria is a signatory to the nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty and is required to submit to IAEA
safeguards and inspections.
Syria conducts nuclear research at three facilities located at
Dayr, Al Hajar and Dubaya, the report said.
"In 2004 Syria continued to develop civilian nuclear
capabilities, including uranium extraction technology and hot
cell facilities, which may also be potentially applicable to a
weapons program," the report said.
The report also said China is a "key supplier" of nuclear,
missile and weapons of mass destruction goods to states of
concern.
Chinese companies "continued to work with Pakistan and Iran on
ballistic missile-related projects and firms in China provided
dual-use missile-related items, raw materials, or assistance to
Libya and North Korea," the report said.
Chinese language documents found in Libya revealed that the Khan
network had supplied it with nuclear warhead design information.
China's government has not said how its warhead information made
its way from Pakistan to Libya.
China supplied most of the uranium-enrichment technology and
bomb designs that allowed Pakistan in 1998 to become a declared
nuclear power. The proliferation was a violation of China's
obligation to the NPT but Beijing was never punished for the
activities.
On missiles, the report said Syria continued to seek help in
building solid-propellant rocket motors, and that North Korea
supplied equipment and assistance to the missile program.
Syria is building its own liquid-fueled Scud missiles and is
developing a 500-mile-range Scud D and other variants with help
from North Korea and Iran, the report said.
Another key supplier is Russia, which has supplied missile
technology and goods to China, Iran, India and North Korea, as
well as nuclear technology and goods to Iran and India.
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