By WILLIAM J. BROAD
The puzzling site in Syria that Israeli jets bombed in September grew
more curious on Friday with the release of a satellite photograph
showing new construction there that resembles the site’s former main
building.
Israel’s air attack was directed against what Israeli and American
intelligence analysts had judged to be a partly constructed nuclear
reactor. The Syrians vigorously denied the atomic claim.
Before the attack, satellite imagery showed a tall, square building
there measuring about 150 feet long per side.
After the attack, the Syrians wiped the area clean, with some analysis
calling the speed of the cleanup a tacit admission of guilt. The barren
site is on the eastern bank of the Euphrates, 90 miles north of the
Iraqi border.
The image released Friday came from a private company, DigitalGlobe, in
Longmont, Colo. It shows a tall, square building under construction
that appears to closely resemble the original structure, with the
exception that the roof is vaulted instead of flat. The photo was taken
from space on Wednesday.
Given the international uproar that unfolded after the bombing, “we can
assume it’s not a reactor,” said David Albright, president of the
Institute for Science and International Security, a private group in
Washington that has analyzed the Syrian site.
If international inspectors eventually get to the site, he added, they
will have a more difficult time looking for nuclear evidence. “The new
building,” he noted, “covers whatever remained of the destroyed one.”
Skeptics have criticized the nuclear accusation, saying the public
evidence that has so far come to light was ambiguous at best. They
noted, for instance, that at the time of the attack the site had no
obvious barbed wire or air defenses that would normally ring a
sensitive military facility.
The International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna recently became aware
of the new construction, a European diplomat said Friday.
“Obviously, they’re keeping an eye on the site,” he said, speaking on
the condition of anonymity because of the issue’s diplomatic delicacy.
As a signer to an agreement with the atomic agency, Syria is obligated
to report the construction of a nuclear reactor to international
inspectors. Nuclear reactors can make plutonium for the core of atom
bombs, and therefore secretive work on reactors is usually interpreted
as military in nature.
Senior Syrian officials continue to deny that a nuclear reactor was
under construction, insisting that what Israel destroyed was a largely
empty military warehouse.
Mohamed ElBaradei, who directs the atomic agency, this week told
Al-Hayat, an Arabic-language newspaper based in London, that his agency
wanted to inspect the site.
“So far, we have not received any information about any nuclear
programs in Syria,” he said, according to a transcript posted on the
newspaper’s Web site. Dr. ElBaradei said he had asked for the Syrians’
permission “to allow the agency to visit the facility and to verify
that it was not nuclear.”
He added: “The Syrian brothers did not allow us to visit and inspect
the location.”
While some analysts have suggested that the new building might slow
down international inspectors, Dr. ElBaradei said in the interview that
his agency had sensitive “technologies to assure that the location did
not host a nuclear facility.”
The satellite photographs, he added, led experts to doubt “that the
targeted construction” was in fact a nuclear reactor.
Original
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Syria Rebuilds on Site Destroyed by Israeli Bombs
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