By Barak Ravid, Avi Issacharoff and Amos Harel, Haaretz Correspondents,
Haaretz Service and News Agencies
Former United Nations ambassador John Bolton said Sunday that Israel's
reported military operation inside Syria earlier this month should be
regarded as a 'clear message to Iran' that its nuclear efforts will not
be ignored by the international community.
"I think it would be unusual for Israel to conduct a military operation
inside Syria other than for a very high value target, and certainly a
Syrian effort in the nuclear weapons area would qualify," Bolton told
Channel 10 in an interview broadcast Sunday.
"I think this is a clear message not only to Syria, I think it's a
clear message to Iran as well, that its continued efforts to acquire
nuclear weapons are not going to go unanswered," Bolton said
Bolton, who has long called for a hard line against the Syrian and
Iranian regimes, did not indicate that he had first-hand information
about the incident.
The U.K. newspaper The Sunday Times quoted an Israeli source on Sunday
as saying that Syria had been planning a "devastating surprise" for
Israel, in the wake of reports that the Israel Air Force carried out an
air strike against a North Korean nuclear shipment to Syria.
The paper quoted Israeli sources as saying that planning for the strike
began shortly after Meir Dagan, chief of the Mossad intelligence
agency, presented Prime Minister Ehud Olmert in late spring with
evidence that Syria was seeking to buy a nuclear device from North
Korea.
Dagan apparently feared such a device could eventually be installed on
North-Korean-made Scud-C missiles, the paper reported.
"This was supposed to be a devastating Syrian surprise for Israel," the
Sunday Times quoted an Israeli source as saying. "We've known fr a long
time that Syria has deadly chemical warheads on its Scuds, but Israel
can't live with a nuclear warhead."
South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported Sunday that a senior North
Korean official denied a Washington Post report that Pyongyang was
giving nuclear expertise to Syria. The report suggested intelligence
including satellite images revealed a facility in Syria which may be
used to build nuclear warheads.
"They often say things that are groundless," Yonhap quoted deputy chief
of the North Korean mission to the United Nations Kim Myong-gil as
saying in response to the Post report.
When asked to elaborate Kim hung up the phone, Yonhap reported.
The U.K. newspaper The Observer reported Sunday that Israel's reported
strike on Syria involved as many as eight aircraft.
According to the report, the force included F-15s and F-16s equipped
with Maverick missiles and 500 pound bombs.
Flying among the warplanes at great height, The Observer reported, was
an electronic intelligence gathering aircraft.
According to the Times report, an IAF commando team that had arrived on
the ground days earlier directed laser beams at the target for the
jets.
Meanwhile, the weekly German news magazine reported Sunday that a
German intelligence ship stationed off the coast of Lebanon as part of
a United Nations peacekeeping force identified two F-15 jets entering
Syrian airspace.
Syria's ambassador to Washington over the weekend denied foreign media
reports that an Israel Air Force strike on his country 10 days ago
targeted a nuclear project being undertaken with the cooperation of
North Korea.
According to the foreign press reports, the target of the IAF raid was
a Syrian nuclear installation that was constructed in the northeastern
corner of the country, with North Korean assistance.
In an interview to Newsweek, Imad Moustapha called the reports
"absolutely, totally, fundamentally ridiculous and untrue."
"There are no nuclear North Korean-Syrian facilities whatsoever in
Syria," Moustapha said.
On Saturday, The Washington Post published an article saying the IAF
strike was aimed at a shipment that had arrived in Syria aboard a North
Korean vessel three days earlier, and may have included equipment and
materials related to nuclear technology.
Original Source
|
|
|||||||||
|
Shabbat Times
About Us
Daily Updates
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
Ex-UN envoy: IAF action in Syria is 'message to Iran' over nukes
Comments
No comments found.
Trackbacks
TrackBack URL: |
||||||||
|
|
|||||||||

![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)