A State Department official said Friday that the United States had concerns
about Syria’s involvement in illicit nuclear activities and suggested that North
Korea might be aiding the Syrians in their efforts.
Andrew Semmel, a top official on countering the spread of nuclear weapons, said
that Syria may have a number of “secret suppliers” for a covert nuclear program,
and that North Korean technicians were currently operating inside Syria.
His comments, in an interview with The Associated Press in Rome, came in
response to questions about an Israeli airstrike inside Syria last week. Neither
Israel nor the United States has confirmed what targets the Israeli jets hit,
and the government in Jerusalem has imposed a blanket restriction on the Israeli
news media from reporting details about the raid.
American officials have been similarly tight-lipped, and officials who
ordinarily see intelligence reports on such issues say their access has been
restricted.
Mr. Semmel did not specify whether the technicians in Syria were specialists in
nuclear technology; North Korea has long supplied Syria with missile technology.
Some weapons experts said they were skeptical that Syria was in league with
North Korea to build a secret program.
Damascus is not thought to have made serious efforts in the past to develop
nuclear weapons, and those experts said it was unlikely that the Syrians could
afford such a program or had the technical expertise to sustain it.
The speculation about possible North Korean activities inside Syria is
heightening the Bush administration’s concern about the future of its diplomatic
efforts to dismantle North Korea’s nuclear program. The Bush administration’s
top negotiator for North Korea, Christopher R. Hill, said that the United States
still planned to go ahead with an agreement for food and fuel aid to North Korea
in exchange for its decision to dismantle its nuclear program.
“We’ve always been concerned about the issue of proliferation,” Mr. Hill told
reporters during a news conference at the State Department. “To me, this simply
is an important reminder of the need to accelerate the process which we’ve
already engaged in, to achieve denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.”
He declined to say whether the United States had sought a specific explanation
from North Korean officials, and added that the issue “does not change the goal
of what we’re aiming for.”
A Bush administration official said earlier this week that over the past several
weeks, Israel had conducted several aerial surveillance flights over Syria to
take pictures of what Israeli officials were said to believe could be possible
nuclear development installations.
North Korea’s government took the unusual step of publicly condemning the
Israeli strike. The Chinese state-run news agency Xinhua cited a North Korean
Foreign Ministry official on Tuesday as calling the Israeli strike “a very
dangerous provocation, little short of wantonly violating the sovereignty of
Syria and seriously harassing the regional peace and security.”
Some who advocate a hard-line stance toward North Korea, including former top
Bush administration officials, said that possible intelligence about North
Korea’s efforts to aid Syria should halt diplomatic talks with Pyongyang.
“It would be a big mistake for the State Department to push ahead with the
six-party process without this being resolved,” said John R. Bolton, a former
United States ambassador to the United Nations, referring to the diplomatic
talks with North Korea. “They are rushing to finish this and declare victory,
which could be a catastrophe for the president.”
New York Times