May 01, 2004

This certainly isn't welcome news.

This certainly isn't welcome news.

A few days after Libya's historic pledge on Dec. 19 to
abandon the quest for nuclear weapons, Libyan intelligence officials
met with visiting U.S. diplomats to deliver some unsettling news: A
sizable quantity of nuclear equipment purchased by Libya appeared to be
missing.
The equipment -- sensitive components of machines used to enrich
uranium -- had been ordered from black-market suppliers months earlier
and was now long overdue, the Libyans disclosed. According to U.S.
officials present at the meeting, the Libyans wanted to prepare the
Americans for the possibility that more illicit nuclear shipments could
suddenly appear on Tripoli's docks.
"They clearly expected more things to turn up," said one of the U.S.
participants.
Four months later, the wait continues. Despite a search that has
spanned the globe, U.S. and international investigators are still
struggling to account for a number of sensitive parts Libya ordered for
construction of its uranium enrichment plant -- parts that potentially
could be used by other countries or groups seeking nuclear weapons.
The whereabouts of the parts is one of several mysteries that has
preoccupied officials involved in the biggest investigation of nuclear
smuggling in history -- the probe into the black-market network led by
former Pakistani nuclear scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan. U.S. and U.N.
investigators have identified many of the network's operatives and
methods and recovered tens of thousands of parts in a dragnet that has
reached from Southeast Asia to the Middle East and Europe. Yet, the
investigators believe that some of the suppliers to the network have
not yet been identified -- and perhaps some customers, as well.
"We haven't gotten to the bottom of the story," acknowledged one senior
Bush administration official involved in the investigation. "We
continue to look for, and expect to make, new discoveries. We don't
think the story is fully revealed yet."


I can't believe the Libyans actually thought they'd turn up, like a J.Crew sweater that's been backordered.

Sheesh.

Posted by: Kathy at 10:32 PM | No Comments | Add Comment
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