Damascus Deception

Two years after their reactor was destoyed, the Syrians still haven't come clean about their covert nuclear program and the world's nuclear watchdog is powerless to make them.

BY GREGORY L. SCHULTE | SEPTEMBER 2, 2009

Last Friday, Mohamed ElBaradei, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), issued a fourth report on the agency's investigation into Syria's attempts to construct a covert nuclear program with the help of North Korea. The report shows that two years after their suspected reactor was destroyed, Damascus continues to stonewall the IAEA. It also illustrates the agency's limitations in detecting and investigating clandestine activities. The reactor may no longer exist, but Syria's past pursuits and North Korea's dangerous role are still causes for concern -- as is the IAEA's inability to do anything about them.

Syria's rogue nuclear program was shrouded in secrecy from the beginning. The reactor was constructed in a remote desert canyon, its resemblance to a North Korean reactor disguised with false walls and a false ceiling, and its cooling pipes buried underground. Syria did not notify the IAEA of the reactor's construction, thereby violating its Safeguards Agreement, a standard agreement meant to allow the IAEA to verify the peaceful use of nuclear material.

After an Israeli airstrike in September 2007 destroyed the reactor, Syria went to great lengths to cover up its violation. President Bashar al-Assad denied that the destroyed facility housed a reactor, and North Korea refused to acknowledge its involvement. Incriminating components were hauled away, the facility remains were further destroyed, much of a surrounding hill was bulldozed over the site, and a new building was quickly erected on top.

When IAEA inspectors arrived at the site in June 2008, what was left of the reactor had already been removed or buried. But the inspectors still did their job: They took environmental samples, which when analyzed showed traces of man-made uranium. They asked detailed questions about the destroyed facility and suspicious Syrian procurement activities, which Syrian authorities refused to answer. Syria soon announced that IAEA inspectors were no longer welcome except at sites they had already declared.

It is now well over a year since that one and only visit to the destroyed reactor site. Syria has refused IAEA requests to visit other suspect sites. And as the director general reports, Syria "did not cooperate with the agency to confirm Syria's statements regarding the non-nuclear nature of the destroyed building." Earlier in the investigation, ElBaradei sought to highlight cooperation. Now, he reports that the agency's "ability to confirm Syria's explanation regarding the past nature of the destroyed building … is severely impeded because Syria has not provided sufficient access to information, locations, equipment or materials." "Severely impeded" is about as strong as language gets in Vienna.

Assad obviously wants to bury the investigation in the same way that Syrian bulldozers buried the reactor remains. But the IAEA cannot let this happen, both for the credibility of its safeguards regime and to ensure that leaders in Damascus, Pyongyang, and other capitals are not tempted to try again. The IAEA must keep the spotlight on Syria, insist on Syria's full cooperation, and be prepared to exercise the IAEA's full authority. Ultimately the IAEA Board must be ready to find that Syria's noncooperation constitutes noncompliance and report that noncompliance to the U.N. Security Council.

Syria is trying to limit the IAEA investigation by strictly interpreting its safeguards agreement, which focuses on accounting for nuclear material at sites that, unlike that of the destroyed reactor, were formally declared to the IAEA. However, the agreement also includes a provision for "special inspections" of any site if the agency concludes that the access and information being provided by Syria is insufficient. The director general's report suggests that this time has come.

Part of the problem in Syria is the inherent weakness of today's safeguards system. An additional protocol to the standard safeguards agreement was meant to help IAEA inspectors uncover illicit nuclear activities at undeclared sites. However, Syria is one of a group of countries -- including Egypt, Brazil, and Argentina -- that have refused to sign the additional protocol. Iran has signed a protocol but refuses to implement it. The Syrian case shows why this protocol needs to become a universal standard.

AFP/Getty Images

 SUBJECTS:
 

Ambassador Gregory L. Schulte was the U.S. permanent representative to the International Atomic Energy Agency from July 2005 to June 2009. He is now a senior visiting fellow at the Center for the Study of Weapons of Mass Destruction at the National Defense University. This contribution reflects his personal views and not those of NDU or the U.S. government.

HASS

5:21 PM ET

September 2, 2009

Iran has NOT refused the Additional Protocol

Iran, quite unlike Brazil, Argentina and Egypt (all of which had nuclear programs) not only signed the Additional Protocol and implemented it for 2 years,but has offered to ratify the Additional Protocol once its right to enrich uranium is recognized. (In fact Iran has offered to place additional restrictions on its nuclear program well beyong the Additional Protocol's requirements such as by opening the program to multinational participation)

Unfortunately, the official US position recently expressed by Sec of State Clinton is that the US will never "allow" Iran to enrich uranium even if Iran's program is fully compliant with all international safeguards. Thus, the Additional Protocol is a redherring. The US has shown that it is willing to violate its own NPT obligations and cooperate with other nation's nuclear programs regardless of the Additional Protocol.

 

HASS

5:25 PM ET

September 2, 2009

The US should have informed the IAEA as required by law

Had the US (and Israel) followed the procedures of the IAEA as required, they should have informed the IAEA Board of GOvernors of their suspicions about Syria's alleged reactor, and then the IAEA could have legally required a "special inspection" to be conducted in Syria.

However, by simply bombing the site without informing the IAEA, the US and Israel have only made it harder to determine the truth to the allegations of an Syrian nuclear reactor. IAEA director ElBaradei specifically critized the bombing of Syria for that very reason.

 

HENRYKISSINGER

6:48 PM ET

September 2, 2009

Syria should be repeatedly checked

Syria should be repeatedly checked, bombed and invaded. The US should fund Israel to invade Syria and check Syrian nuclear activities. It should only cost us under a $100 billion to have Israel invade Syria and verify Syrian nuclear status.

shalom
dr.k.

 

BETZ55

2:46 PM ET

September 3, 2009

Get the IAEA into Israel and stop the hypocrisy

Israel and the AIPAC driven fear mongering that is allowed to happen in the US media are the ones trumpeting the so called Syrian threat.

When Syrian nukes are mentioned the double standard with Israel should be immedietly pointed out.

The US needs to stop the foreign policy hypocrisy. Israel pre-emptively invades their neighbors and is the unstable, belligerent, aggressive, apartheid force in the Middle East.

Demonizing and warmongering for Syria to protect Israel is wrong. The Syrian 'issue' is 100% Israeli.

Unlike Syria, Israel simply has way too much to hide and wants to keep it that way.

When is Israel going to sign the NNPT and allow IAEA inspections ? Which Syria has done in the past..

The US and Israel want Syrian nuclear transparency? Then Israel better be just as transparent.

America's silence about Israelis nuclear weapons and lack of membership to the NPT while maintaining such harsh rhetoric towards Syria's nuclear program, which is legally allowed to enrich uranium as a NPT member is an example of the kind of outright double standard BS that the United States has been following in its foreign policy.

When will Obama hold Israel to the same standards that Israel is demanding of Syria and Iran and anyone else who threatens Israel's hegemonic agenda? Level the nuclear playing field or get rid of it.

It is in line with Israeli rhetoric to demonize Syria and/or Iran. It takes the focus off them and it’s their intention to agitate elsewhere so the world does not focus on their ulterior hegemonic motives.

Damascus Depceptions? Really? Now your just making me laugh.