I think we can put to bed the suspicions about the Hasaka Spinning Factory.
The above Aug. 14, 2011, satellite image provided by GeoEye, shows a facility in Al-Hasakah, Syria. Invesigators at the U.N.'s International Atomic Energy Agency have asked Syria about this complex, in the center of the image, in the country's northwestern city of Al-Hasakah because they believe it closely matches plans for a uranium enrichment plant sold by the father of Pakistan's nuclear bomb A.Q. Khan. GeoEye Satellite Image / AP Photo
November
4, 2011
After
a four-year search for hidden atomic facilities in Syria, U.N. officials
appeared this week to have finally struck gold: News reports linked a large
factory in eastern Syria to a suspected clandestine effort to spin uranium gas
into fuel for nuclear bombs.
But
after further probing by private researchers, Syria’s mystery plant is looking
far less mysterious. A new report concludes that the facility and its thousands
of fast-spinning machines were intended to make not uranium, but cloth ~ a very
ordinary cotton-polyester.
“It
is, and always has been, a textile factory,” said one of the researchers,
Jeffrey Lewis, a nuclear policy expert at the Center for Nonproliferation
Studies and publisher of the blog Arms Control Wonk.
Lewis
and his colleagues were initially intrigued by news reports that linked Syria’s
al-Hasakah Spinning Co. to the country’s clandestine nuclear program, which
came to light four years ago when Israeli warplanes bombed a building that
turned out to be a partly completed plutonium reactor.
The
reports, citing Western diplomats and former U.N. officials, said aerial images
of the factory were being intensely studied by the U.N. nuclear watchdog, the
International Atomic Energy Agency, which has been scouring Syria for evidence
of other hidden atomic facilities.
While
the al-Hasakah plant clearly is now used as a textile mill, its size and shape
caught the attention of nuclear experts. Viewed from the air, the facility
closely resembles a uranium enrichment plant designed by Pakistani scientist
Abdul Qadeer Khan, the one-time head of an international nuclear smuggling ring.
Khan
had extensive contacts with Syrian leaders in the 1980s, and some nuclear
experts believe he provided them with blueprints for nuclear facilities. U.S.
intelligence officials say Syria eventually launched a clandestine nuclear
effort centered around the plutonium reactor that was destroyed by Israeli
bombs on Sept. 6, 2007. Syria has never acknowledged seeking atomic weapons,
and it only recently granted the IAEA limited access to other sites that the
agency believes may have been part of its secret nuclear program.
The
IAEA has never publicly identified the al-Hasakah factory as part of Syria’s
nuclear network, but the renewed focus on the plant prompted Lewis to dig into
old records and satellite photos. With help from a European colleague, he traced
the facility’s history and eventually located the 62-year-old German engineer
who supervised its construction three decades ago.
The
engineer appeared mystified by the accounts suggesting that the al-Hasakah
plant was originally designed to make enriched uranium. “He burst out, ‘I built
that thing!’ ” recalled Lewis’s colleague, German journalist Paul-Anton
Krueger, who interviewed the man.
The
engineer described how he oversaw the construction of the plant and the
installation of 75,000 machines called spindles to spin cotton and polyester
into fabric. He said he had last visited the plant in 1991 and “found the
factory working rather poorly, but it was still spinning ~ cotton, and
polyester,” Krueger wrote to Lewis in his account of the interview.
To
Lewis, the episode underscores the difficulties of ferreting out nuclear
secrets using computers and satellite imagery, but it hardly lets Syria off the
hook. The search for hidden nuclear sites continues, he said.
“This
exonerates the al-Hasakah Spinning Co.,” Lewis said. “I don’t think it
exonerates Syria.”
CLOSING THE FILE ON HOSAKA
Just for "fun":
BILL CLINTON BOMBS ASPIRIN FACTORY
CLOSING THE FILE ON HOSAKA
Just for "fun":
BILL CLINTON BOMBS ASPIRIN FACTORY
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