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Serpo
24th February 2011, 02:54 AM
4 nuclear sites found in Syria



Satellite images show Damascus established four facilities to accompany reactor bombed in 2007

Yitzhak Benhorin Published: 02.24.11, 09:18 / Israel News


http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-4033407,00.html



WASHINGTON – Syria established four additional nuclear facilities aside from the one bombed by Israel in 2007, the US Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS) reported late Wednesday.




Sources say Syria stonewalls IAEA / Reuters

UN nuclear watchdogs request access to Dair Alzour site but Damascus officials refuse visit. US suggests IAEA invoke 'special inspection'
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The report, which was published alongside a report by the German daily Sueddeutsche Zeitung, explains that Syria's nuclear program was far more advanced than previously believed and included, in addition to the reactor destroyed at al-Kibar, a uranium conversion facility and three storage sites.



The conversion facility at Marj as-Sultan, according to the report, was apparently intended for processing uranium yellowcake into uranium tetrafluoride (UF4) for the al-Kibar reactor.



The facility's current use is unknown, but the ISIS suspects that after the latter was bombed Syria attempted to disguise its operations. The institute cites commercial satellite images as proof of this.




Satellite images of site being built (Photo: Google Earth)


During this time, Syria rejected demands by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) to inspect the Marj as-Sultan site.



"With no substantial cooperation from Syria, the IAEA’s Director General should clearly conclude that Syria may have egregiously violated its safeguards agreement and call for a special inspection of these four sites," the report says.



The ISIS also published satellite photos it relied upon, showing three additional facilities apparently used for storage at Masyaf, Iskandariyah, and Marj as Sultan.



Satellite images from 2008 show operations at these sites which the ISIS has concluded to be the laying of new concrete foundations, in order to cover up any nuclear activity.



After the report was published, the Wall Street Journal speculated that its findings would lead to increasing pressure on Syria to allow IAEA inspectors to visit the suspected sites.





Inspectors visited the al-Kibar site in May of 2008, and found uranium traces indicating that the reactor had been near completion. But Syrian President Bashar Assad repeatedly denied the inspectors access to the other sites.



In an interview last month with the Wall Street Journal, Assad denied that his country had ever had a covert nuclear program.

also...........
http://www.jpost.com/MiddleEast/Article.aspx?ID=209630&R=R1

Glass
24th February 2011, 03:27 AM
looks like a fruit processing facility to me. Perhaps oranges. Olives? Who can tell. Top secret nuke facility? No perimeter, no obvious sentry points. The pictures don't have any context, either because there isn't any or the images are too cropped.



The ISIS document cites information from Sueddeutsche Zeitung revealing that among the equipment kept inside two buildings near the Marj as Sultan site, there was a scrubber, two cyclone separators, large diameter pipes, a manifold, reaction vessels made from stainless steel, and storage tanks.

Are these all specialist purpose items only useful in a facility like they are saying?

Serpo
24th February 2011, 04:01 AM
Could be all propaganda for all we know......

and besides everyone else has got them....America, Israel ect

they point the finger making these places look evil when in fact the finger pointer already has nucs themselves

mightymanx
24th February 2011, 06:43 AM
pure fake

Bildo
24th February 2011, 06:55 AM
Sure, and Colin Powell showed us during his infamous UN presentation satellite photos of non-existent "mobile bio-warfare laboratories" in Iraq.

osoab
24th February 2011, 06:57 AM
It's all good if Colin Powell presents the information. :D